
Jeffrey Epstein’s sordid past continues to haunt the Democratic elite. In the latest stunning development, an unearthed email from 2016 has surfaced, allegedly linking Hillary Clinton to a sexual relationship with the late Vince Foster, a longtime Clinton confidant who died under circumstances that have long aroused suspicion.
The email, discovered among the trove of Epstein communications released by House Republicans, includes a message to disgraced journalist Michael Wolff that cryptically states, “hillary doing naughties with Vince.”
The email, dated May 25, 2016, was in response to Wolff’s request for a “thumbnail” summary on “Nussbaum/Foster,” referencing Bernard Nussbaum, the former White House Counsel, and Vince Foster, who served as Deputy White House Counsel before his untimely death in 1993. Epstein’s response strongly implies that Hillary Clinton had an inappropriate relationship with Foster while serving in the White House.
Whether salacious gossip or a glimpse into the moral depravity of Washington’s elite, the implications are deeply troubling.
Foster was a key figure in the Clinton White House and a close friend of both Hillary and Bill Clinton. His death in Fort Marcy Park, officially ruled a suicide, has been questioned for decades by conservative watchdogs and independent investigators.
For many, the lack of clarity, the inconsistencies at the crime scene, and the political proximity to the Clintons make the official story difficult to accept.
Now, with Epstein’s name in the mix, the situation becomes far more sinister. Epstein, a convicted sex offender with a web of connections spanning global elites, appears to have possessed insider knowledge of highly sensitive matters. The idea that he would so casually reference Hillary Clinton’s alleged “naughties” with Foster suggests he knew more than he was ever willing—or able—to say publicly.
Foster’s death was originally described by investigators as a textbook suicide. Yet the physical evidence told another story. Paramedics who arrived at the scene reported the body was found in an odd position, inconsistent with the force and recoil of a self-inflicted gunshot wound. The bullet was never recovered. There were no fingerprints on the gun. No brain matter at the scene. No blood pooling under his head, even though he was supposedly shot in the mouth.
Experts have long questioned how a high-powered .38 caliber revolver could leave so little evidence at the scene. Foster was reportedly found with the gun in his right hand and his thumb jammed in the trigger guard—an anatomically awkward position given the trauma his body would have sustained from the blast. Yet the media accepted the explanation without serious challenge.
Journalist Christopher Ruddy, among others, raised alarms in the 1990s, pointing out these glaring inconsistencies. He argued the crime scene looked staged and the body had been moved. Ruddy’s analysis was dismissed by the media, labeled a conspiracy theory by liberal pundits, and buried under waves of Clintonian spin. But now, with Epstein’s email casting a new light, those old questions demand new answers.
Supreme Court Could Soon Decide Fate of Same-Gender Marriage Case

The United States Supreme Court stands at a pivotal constitutional moment as it considers whether to hear a case that could fundamentally reshape the landscape of marriage equality and religious liberty in America. Former Kentucky county clerk Kim Davis, who gained national attention for her refusal to issue marriage licenses to same-sex couples, has petitioned the nation’s highest court to overturn the landmark Obergefell v. Hodges decision that established marriage equality as a constitutional right nearly a decade ago.