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JUST IN: New Details Revealed About Clinton And Epstein

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More than two dozen private flights, over a dozen White House visits, and countless bottles of booze and young females were tallied up during the relationship between Jeffrey Epstein and former President Bill Clinton, who today denies ever having much to do with the late pedophile and financier.

But a review of their time together says otherwise. Clinton, for decades, has maintained he had “no knowledge” of Epstein’s abuse of countless underage girls, even though eyewitnesses place him in the proximity of several of questionable age.

Clinton, 78, and his wife, Hillary, are among a slew of high-profile individuals called to testify before the U.S. House Oversight Committee about what they might know about Epstein’s abuse and who else may have been involved. They were joined by former U.S. Attorney General Merrick Garland and former FBI Director and special counsel Robert Mueller, who was recently discovered to be living in a memory care facility.

The push for heightened disclosures comes after President Donald Trump took office, promising a transparent review of the government’s case. That promise backfired, however, when U.S. Attorney General Pam Bondi reneged on her claim to have seen a “client list” of powerful individuals around Epstein who partook in the abuse.

But a steady drip of revelations has kept the story in the press for months, including news that President Clinton allegedly wrote a birthday letter to Epstein in 2003 praising his “childlike curiosity.”

In addition, Clinton had been found listed in a Rolodex of close friends maintained by Epstein, and he was found to be a passenger of the financier’s notorious private jet, ignominiously dubbed the “Lolita Express.”

Virginia Giuffre, a victim of Epstein who killed herself earlier this year, previously stated that she once saw President Clinton in the presence of “two lovely girls” while he visited Epstein’s notorious compound in the U.S. Virgin Islands.

Clinton has repeatedly dismissed the accusations, claiming he and Epstein were simply acquaintances with a shared interest in philanthropy.

But as the Daily Mail reports, Clinton may have the most to fear if a full release of the Epstein files ever comes to light.

Buried in paperwork from Giuffre’s 2015 lawsuit against Ghislaine Maxwell, Epstein’s mistress, is a reference to President Clinton, whom Giuffre describes as a “key person in the lives” with the trio enjoying a “close relationship.”

Johanna Sjoberg, another Epstein victim, testified in 2018 that Epstein once confided in her, “Clinton likes them young.”

Asked about the two men’s friendship, Sjoberg stated, “I knew he had dealings with Bill Clinton.”

In the suit with Giuffre, which was settled out of court, it was alleged that Clinton once intervened to stop a magazine from publishing an exposé about Epstein that he felt would damage his image as a generous philanthropist.

According to an email by Giuffre, “It does concern me what they could want to write about me, considering that B. Clinton walked into [Vanity Fair] and threatened them not to write sex trafficking articles about his good friend JE.”

Former Vanity Fair editor Graydon Carter has insisted the incident “categorically did not happen.”

On another occasion, Giuffre recalled attending a “big dinner party” on Epstein’s private island where the guest of honor was touted as “the one and only Bill Clinton.”

“Sitting across the table from us was Bill with two lovely girls who were visiting from New York,” she wrote in her memoir.

“Bill’s wife, Hillary’s absence from the night made it easy for his apparent provocative cheeky side to come out,” she continued.

“Teasing the girls on either side of him with playful pokes and brassy comments, there was no modesty between any of them. We all finished our meals and scattered in our own different directions.

“Strolling into the darkness with two beautiful girls around either arm, Bill seemed content to retire for the evening.”