More dirt cascades from the Clinton cesspool, where shadows of scandal never fade and the "body count" whispers grow louder with every unearthed secret.
In a bombshell from Jeffrey Epstein's digital vault, the convicted sex trafficker's own words now smear former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton with an alleged affair that could rewrite the grim tale of Vince Foster's 1993 death.
House Democrats on the Oversight Committee released over 20,000 pages from Epstein's estate on Nov. 12, 2025, unearthing a May 25, 2016, email exchange between the financier and disgraced author Michael Wolff.
The correspondence, part of a broader subpoena response, spotlights a cryptic reply from Epstein that ties Clinton to her late colleague.
Wolff initiated the thread on May 25, 2016, querying Epstein for a "thumb nail" summary on "Nussbaum/foster."
"nussbaum white house counsel . . hillary doing naughties with vince," Epstein responded.
Jeffrey Epstein claimed that Hillary Clinton had a sexual relationship with former attorney and White House counsel Vince Foster.
— AF Post (@AFpost) November 12, 2025
Foster committed suicide in 1993.
Follow: @AFpost pic.twitter.com/MYi9ufPkQq
Bernard Nussbaum was White House counsel under President Bill Clinton.
Foster, 48, deputy counsel and Rose Law Firm partner to Hillary, was found dead July 20, 1993, in Fort Marcy Park, Virginia, a .38-caliber bullet through his mouth and out the back of his skull.

Five investigations—U.S. Park Police, independent counsels Robert Fiske and Kenneth Starr, and two congressional panels—ruled suicide, blaming depression over Travelgate and Whitewater.
Yet the scene screamed staging —no fingerprints on the gun, thumb jammed in the trigger guard—an impossible grip after recoil. Minimal blood: a trickle from mouth and nose, no pooling uphill, no skull fragments, no bullet recovered.
Blond hairs, carpet fibers, and semen stained his clothes. Shoes were clean despite a 700-foot muddy hike. Paramedics found the body prone; police photos showed it supine, head downhill.
A torn resignation note in his briefcase bore Nussbaum’s palm print; three experts called it forged, FBI said genuine.
Nussbaum blocked FBI entry to Foster’s office the day after, ordering an agent to sit while aides ransacked files.
A 1994 Orlando Sentinel editorial blasted the Fiske report on Vincent Foster's suicide, warning it left too many questions unanswered.
It highlighted unexplained carpet threads, blond hair, and semen on Foster's clothes; botched Park Police work, including missing skull fragments, bullet, and underexposed film; conflicting blood stain evidence suggesting the body was moved; and Bernard Nussbaum blocking FBI access to Foster's office while aides searched files.
The piece noted Fiske's prior ties to Nussbaum, questioned White House actions, and urged a Senate inquiry, dismissing Democratic claims of "gutter politics."
Another Clinton confidant “suicided,” another trail of lies—proof the body count climbs while the truth stays buried six feet under Arkansas mud.

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