Bill Clinton's aide furious over Epstein photo release

By 
 December 22, 2025

Shocking images of former President Bill Clinton cozying up with Jeffrey Epstein have just been unleashed by the Department of Justice, stirring up a political firestorm.

The Daily Caller reported that on Friday, the DOJ dropped thousands of documents and hundreds of photos tied to the infamous Epstein case, revealing Clinton in compromising settings and igniting a fierce backlash from his team.

This release, mandated by the Epstein Files Transparency Act, signed into law by President Donald Trump on Nov. 19, has peeled back the curtain on Clinton’s past associations with the disgraced financier.

Unveiling Clinton's Ties to Epstein

Among the photos, Clinton appears shirtless in a hot tub, laughing it up with Epstein at what looks like a dinner gathering, and even posing in a pool alongside Ghislaine Maxwell and an unidentified woman whose face was redacted.

Other snapshots show Clinton grinning next to a redacted female on a plane, as well as rubbing shoulders with celebrities like Michael Jackson and Diana Ross in seemingly unrelated settings.

While the images don’t prove wrongdoing, they paint a picture of a chummy relationship with Epstein that’s hard to ignore, especially for those of us who value transparency over political spin.

Clinton’s deputy chief of staff, Angel Ureña, didn’t waste a second blasting the White House over the timing of this bombshell drop, accusing them of using Clinton as a convenient diversion.

Ureña posted on X, claiming the administration was playing games with the release to dodge their own scrutiny, a charge that resonates with those skeptical of government overreach.

“The White House hasn’t been hiding these files for months only to dump them late on a Friday to protect Bill Clinton,” Ureña declared, dripping with sarcasm that begs the question: who’s really being protected here?

Distraction or Accountability in Play?

Let’s be real—dumping explosive files on a Friday smacks of a classic news cycle burial, but Ureña’s insistence that this is all about shielding others feels like a deflection from Clinton’s own questionable past.

He doubled down, saying, “This is about shielding themselves from what comes next, or from what they’ll try and hide forever,” a line that might stir MAGA folks who’ve long demanded full disclosure on Epstein’s network.

Ureña also argued Clinton cut ties with Epstein before the financier’s crimes surfaced, unlike others who stuck around, but that doesn’t erase the unease these photos provoke among conservatives hungry for accountability.

White House Deputy Press Secretary Abigail Jackson offered a narrow defense, stating the DOJ only redacted faces of victims or minors, a policy that’s fair but sidesteps the bigger question of timing and intent.

For many on the right, this release—while overdue—feels like a half-measure, especially when the Epstein saga still looms as a symbol of elite privilege and unpunished misdeeds.

" A free people [claim] their rights, as derived from the laws of nature."
Thomas Jefferson