Bill and Hillary refuse to appear for in-person depositions on Epstein
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Samael — 3 months ago(December 16, 2025 03:12 AM)
Trump repeatedly refused an in-person interview
with Special Counsel Robert Mueller's team, instead submitting written testimony that the report described as "incomplete".
In August 2022, Trump
refused to answer questions during a sworn deposition
as part of New York Attorney General Letitia James' civil investigation into his business practices, doing so more than 440 times.
Trump defied a subpoena from the House Select Committee
to Investigate the January 6th Attack, fighting it in federal court.
Trump Aides and Administration Officials
Dozens of aides and officials
refused to provide testimony or documents,
often at the direction of the White House, frequently citing executive privilege or Fifth Amendment rights.
Twelve top officials refused to testify, including ten in defiance of subpoenas.
Key individuals included Mick Mulvaney (Acting White House Chief of Staff), Mike Pompeo (Secretary of State), John Bolton (former National Security Advisor), Rick Perry (Energy Secretary), and Rudy Giuliani (Trump's personal lawyer).
The White House directed officials not to comply
, with one official, Michael Duffey, refusing to testify about the withholding of aid to Ukraine.
Dozens refused to show up for depositions
or declined to answer questions.
Steve Bannon (former adviser) and Peter Navarro (former trade adviser) defied subpoenas, were found in contempt of Congress by the full House, and were later indicted by the Justice Department. Bannon was convicted.
Mark Meadows (Chief of Staff) and Dan Scavino (Deputy Chief of Staff) also ceased cooperating after initial engagement and were recommended for contempt charges by the House, though the Justice Department did not pursue charges against them.
Jeffrey Clark (former Justice Dept. official) refused to answer questions, citing executive privilege and later threatening to plead the Fifth.
John Eastman (personal lawyer) invoked his Fifth Amendment right against self-incrimination.
Roger Stone (long-time adviser) invoked the Fifth Amendment for every question asked during his deposition with the committee.
Four sitting Republican House members (Kevin McCarthy, Jim Jordan, Scott Perry, and Andy Biggs) defied subpoenas, arguing the committee was illegitimate.
Don McGahn (former White House counsel) was blocked by Trump from cooperating with congressional inquiries into Russian election interference, leading to a court battle that was eventually settled, allowing him to testify to the committee in 2021.
Wilbur Ross (Commerce Secretary) and William Barr (Attorney General) were among other cabinet members who refused to provide documents or testify for various congressional inquiries.
“How this vile, disgusting, and immoral behavior has become normalized… is something our descendants will study.”