Billionaire investor Leon Black is scheduled for a Sept. 3 deposition in front of House Oversight lawmakers who want to press him under oath him about his ties to the late convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein.
A spokesperson for House Oversight Republicans said Tuesday attorneys for the co-founder of Apollo Global Management had confirmed his appearance date. Black’s legal team will also transfer at the end of next week nondisclosure agreements the investor allegedly had with women tied to Epstein, the spokesperson said, which he had previously told the committee he will not discuss.
Black has stoked high bipartisan interest in Congress’ investigation into Epstein and the government’s investigation into the late sex offender. Oversight lawmakers last month issued two subpoenas in the middle of a voluntary interview with Black after the investor refused to answer questions about the potential NDAs.
“We believe that information is vital to our investigation,” Oversight Chair James Comer had told reporters following the subpoena issuance. “We want to know, was Jeffrey Epstein involved in the NDAs? … Was he involved in awarding [of] funds to the women for the NDAs? What was the reason for the NDAs?”
Black at the June interview said he had no knowledge of Epstein’s crimes over the time frame he paid Epstein tens of millions of dollars, though he did acknowledge he was aware of Epstein’s 2008 sex crime conviction.
Unlike the voluntary interview, Black’s deposition will be videotaped and under oath.