Subpoena Dodging 101: The Clintons’ Epstein Playbook (12/17/25)


Author: Bobby Capucci December 17, 2025 Duration: 13:49
Podcast episode
Subpoena Dodging 101: The Clintons’ Epstein Playbook (12/17/25)

For the past few months, the Clintons have responded to congressional subpoenas tied to Jeffrey Epstein with a posture that suggests calculation, not cooperation. Instead of promptly appearing to answer questions under oath, their legal teams have engaged in quiet resistance—raising objections about scope, timing, and authority, and seeking delays that slow the process without triggering open defiance. It’s a well-worn Washington tactic: acknowledge the subpoena, negotiate endlessly around it, and let momentum bleed out. Even in this short span of time, the instinct is unmistakable. When accountability knocks, the door doesn’t slam shut—it’s simply never opened all the way.


What makes this especially corrosive is who we’re talking about. Bill and Hillary Clinton are not novices to congressional oversight, nor are they unaware of how subpoenas work. They’ve spent decades inside the machinery of power and know exactly how to stretch procedure to their advantage. Their reluctance to appear quickly and cleanly reinforces the same two-tiered system that has defined the Epstein scandal from the beginning—where ordinary people are compelled to testify immediately, while elites get to haggle over the terms of their own accountability. Every delay, however brief, feeds the perception that political stature still buys time, distance, and protection when the questions get uncomfortable.




to  contact me:

bobbycapucci@protonmail.com



source:

Bill, Hillary Clinton deposition in Jeffrey Epstein investigation pushed back to next month | New York Post

More episodes

Duration: 16:18
Producer Rodney “Lil Rod” Jones has accused Sean “Diddy” Combs of a pattern of sexual misconduct, coercion, and abuse, tied to their working relationship from September 2022 to November 2023. Among the key claims, Jones…

Duration: 14:39
In September 2024, Thalia Graves filed a lawsuit against Sean "Diddy" Combs, accusing him and his former head of security, Joseph Sherman, of raping her in the summer of 2001. The lawsuit claims that Graves, then 25, was…

Logo
Select station
VOL