Hillary Clinton was heckled during the last night of her nationwide speaking tour alongside husband Bill in Las Vegas on Sunday.

A man who identified himself online as a Trump supporter and combat veteran stood up during the opening stages of the evening, yelling: 'You're going to jail lady.'

His shouts drew a response from Hillary - 'we have some people who'd rather shout than talk and listen' - before he was escorted out by security.

Hillary Clinton appeared alongside husband Bill for the final night of their cross-country speaking tour in Vegas on Sunday

As the pair were starting the 90-minute talk a heckler shouted 'you're going to jail lady' from the crowd, before being escorted out by security

The Clintons spoke in front of an auditorium that was around two-thirds full after ticket prices were slashed at the last minute in order to fill seats

The Clintons then settled in for an evening criticizing the Trump presidency, accusing the Commander in Chief of being 'played' by Russia.

Putin's KGB training, she said, had allowed him to size up and pull the strings of Trump on issues ranging from 2016 election interference to North Korea.

'I don't understand exactly the pull out Putin has over him,' Clinton said, according to the Washington Examiner.

'A lot of these tough guys on the international scene expect you to push back. Right now, we are ceding so much territory to him.'

Clinton also bemoaned what she described as a double-standard in politics which sees women treated 'more harshly.'

'It is unfortunately still true that sexism and misogyny are alive and well in our political system,' she said.

'Women are held to a higher double standard and often more harshly, and we’ve got to get over that, my friends.'

Hillary then went after the Trump administration, accusing the President of being easily manipulated by Russia's President Putin

Bill Clinton also spoke about Russian election interference, saying that efforts to swing the vote should worry both sides of the political spectrum

The pair spoke in front of an auditorium that was around two-thirds full, after tickets priced in the hundreds of dollars were cut to a tenth of their price at the last minute in order to boost attendance.

During the Los Angeles leg of their tour, which came immediately before Vegas, seats had been selling for as little as $2.

From the start, the Clintons have struggled to fill arenas for their tour, with opening night in Toronto last fall only being at half capacity.

Since then they have appeared at 13 events around the country, and on Thursday last week they graced the stage in Vancouver where Sophia Bush moderated.

Throughout last month they carried out shows in New York, Michigan, Pennsylvania, Connecticut, Washington DC and Massachusetts.

The former Democratic presidential candidate and former president took their seats at the Fox theater in downtown Detroit April 12.

Jim Murren (right), the MGM Resorts International Chairman, introduced the Clintons as they appeared at the Park Theater, inside the MGM Park hotel

Jan Jones Blackhurst, a senior executive for Caesars casino, moderated the evening - joining a line of comperes that has included the likes of Ben Stiller and Sophia Bush

The pair shared stories of their time in political office as well as tackling some hot-button topics - though some criticized their reluctance to get into some of the more contentious debates of the day.

At each event, a special guest host has been introduced with the comedian and liberal activist Ben Stiller assuming the role for this evening.

Tony Goldwyn moderated in Boston, Nnamdi Asomugha in Philadelphia, Paul Begala in New York, Star Jones in Wallingford and Jordan Klepper in Washington DC.

While the Clintons have struggled to generate buzz for their speaking tour, Michelle Obama shows no signs of slowing down.

The former first lady continues to sell out 21,000-seat arenas as she tours Europe and North America to promote her bestselling memoir, Becoming.

Obama was in Montreal on Friday for a sold out appearance at the Bell Centre.

Her book has so far sold in excess of 10 million copies and is on track to become the most popular memoir in publishing history.