Bill Clinton caught smiling at Epstein photos mid deposition until lawyer grabs them
Bill Clinton was seen smiling while flipping through Epstein photos in a deposition before his lawyer stepped in fast
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Bill Clinton’s latest appearance tied to the Jeffrey Epstein investigation has sparked a fresh round of online reactions after footage showed the former president casually flipping through old photos of Epstein during a deposition.
The moment quickly spread across social media after clips revealed Clinton smiling and nodding while reviewing the images during questioning. The situation became noticeably awkward when his attorney suddenly stepped in and physically pulled the photos away from him mid session.
Clinton was testifying before a House Oversight Committee investigation into connections surrounding the late financier and convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein. During the deposition, investigators reportedly presented several photographs as evidence while questioning Clinton about past interactions and events linked to Epstein.
Video excerpts from the testimony showed Clinton studying the images and smiling as he flipped through them. The light reaction prompted visible concern from his legal team, who intervened and removed the pictures from his hands as questioning continued.
Clinton has repeatedly denied any knowledge of Epstein’s crimes and has insisted he cut ties with the financier years before the allegations became widely known. During testimony, he again stated that he did not witness illegal activity and would have reported it if he had been aware.
Despite those claims, the viral clip immediately ignited online debate, especially after the footage circulated widely on social platforms and forums.
“It looks more like he’s laughing at how they’re trying to portray the photos,” one user wrote while discussing the clip.
Another commenter added that Clinton might simply recognise the context behind the photos that investigators did not explain during questioning.
The deposition itself stems from the release of millions of documents tied to Epstein under the Epstein Files Transparency Act, which required the U.S. Justice Department to make investigation records publicly available.
Those records included photographs and documents involving several high profile figures who had interacted with Epstein over the years, though inclusion in the files does not necessarily imply wrongdoing.


















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