Last night former President Bill Clinton spoke at the Democrat convention in an attempt to convince America that President Donald Trump shouldn't be reelected.
Absent from his speech was any mention of recently surfaced photos of Clinton with a sex trafficking victim associated with Jeffrey Epstein.
The photos were published online the same day as Clinton's DNC convention speech.
- Bill Clinton is seen enjoying a neck massage from a Jeffrey Epstein victim in never-before-seen photographs obtained exclusively by DailyMail.com
- The pictures are an ill-timed reminder of Clinton's links to Epstein as the former President, 72, prepares to endorse Joe Biden tonight at the Democratic Convention.
- Clinton is seen sitting comfortably and laughing as Chauntae Davies, then a 22-year-old massage therapist, rubs her hands into his shoulders
- The images show Clinton, then 56, leaning back while Davies kneels on a chair behind him, and in a second image, he seems to be smiling in relief
- The former President had complained of a stiff neck after falling asleep on Epstein's 'Lolita Express' while on a humanitarian trip to Africa in 2002
- Epstein's accused madam Ghislaine Maxwell encouraged Davies to give Clinton a massage while the group was refueling at a small airport in Portugal
- Maxwell, 58, was arrested in July and is currently in prison on charges in connection to Epstein's sex trafficking ring
- After Maxwell's insistence, Clinton asked Davies: 'Would you mind giving it a crack?'
- Clinton's office previously issued a statement in regards to his travels on the plane and denied knowing anything about the financier's crimes
Former US President Bill Clinton addresses the virtual 2020 Democratic National Convention, livestreamed online and viewed on a laptop screen from London, England, on August 19, 2020. The four-day event, initially postponed from July, is taking place almost wholly remotely in response to the coronavirus pandemic. Former US Vice President Joe Biden, formally nominated tonight, will face President Donald Trump in the US presidential election on November 3. (Photo by David Cliff/NurPhoto via Getty Images)