Photo: Alamy
A new report alleges that FBI Director Kash Patel and Attorney General Pam Bondi have sent evidence to Congress that reportedly details potentially unsavory information about former President Bill Clinton and Hillary Clinton’s non-profit foundation.
According to Just the News, a “new cache of documents” has been sent to Congress, highlighting alleged evidence that the former First Family – titans of American politics – accepted donations from entities both foreign and domestic, in what the report suggested was potentially linked to an alleged “pay-to-play” network that was previously investigated by federal prosecutors around the same time Hillary Clinton ran for president.
The report said that officials told the outlet that these alleged documents have been handed over to the U.S. Senate Judiciary Committee and include details of possible instances of donations given to the Clintons’ charity that may be pertinent to a potential investigation:
“The officials said some of the evidence was flagged by whistleblowers who claimed such evidence was kept from a corruption investigation that was being conducted in 2015 by the Little Rock, Ark., U.S. attorney’s office before it was shut down by the Obama administration’s Justice Department.”
While this report has not been publicly confirmed by officials, this is hardly the first time the Clinton Foundation has been scrutinized or accused of corruption. Suspicions go back for years, ranging from raised eyebrows about alleged donations to the foundation from the Algerian government or questions about the Clinton Bush Haiti Foundation in 2010.
In 2018, John Solomon reported that a private firm called MDA Analytics LLC alleged, based on 6,000 pages of whistleblower-submitted evidence, that the Clinton Foundation had engaged in illegal activities linked to its multi-billion-dollar donor network.
He also noted that some of this evidence included “internal legal reviews that the foundation conducted on itself in 2008 and 2011.”
“Those reviews flagged serious concerns about legal compliance, improper commingling of personal and charity business and ‘quid pro quo’ promises made to donors while Hillary Clinton was secretary of State,” Solomon wrote in his 2018 article.
To date, the Clinton Foundation, despite allegations of suspicious activity, has never been criminally charged or convicted of wrongdoing.



