A private investigator in Arkansas has found what he claims are a load of documents from special prosecutor Ken Starr’s Whitewater investigation of the Clintons and has offered to sell them to the Trumps campaign.

A top Trump official has made contact with the investigator, but so far no deal has been struck.

The documents include details of questionable real-estate transactions involving the Clintons; information on the 1993 suicide of While House aide Vince Foster; and a blueprint for an indictment of Hillary Clinton — a case that was never pursued.

The documents, which bear official markings, are believed to have come from one of Starr’s top lieutenants who was using the Arkansas investigator’s services during the Whitewater probe.

Whitewater was the name of just one real-estate transaction involving the Bill and Hillary Clinton investigated by Starr in the ’90s. But there were several others Starr was looking into, including one called Flowerwood Farms and another called Castle Grande.

Most of the investigations by Starr centered around then-President Clinton, but Hillary Clinton was prominent in many of the financial transactions, including the purchase of pork-belly futures that resulted in a large gain for the family and real estate that was bought and flipped for a quick profit.

While this information is old, the scandal has become part of the Clintons’ history that is certain to come up again during the presidential campaign.

The Whitewater investigation will also become pertinent since the Democrats seem determined to look into Donald Trump’s business practices.

There was no indication whether Trump’s campaign would purchase the documents or how much the investigator was asking for them.

It was unclear if these papers are available anywhere else since the National Archives is reluctant to turn over even a small part of the Whitewater investigation.

Starr’s investigation was derailed when it came to light that Bill Clinton had been having extramarital relations in the Oval Office. At the time, Starr’s office had drafted an indictment of Hillary Clinton on financial wrongdoing, but it was pushed aside by the salaciousness surrounding the president’s affair with then-intern Monica Lewinsky.

Starr himself recently became embroiled in a scandal as the head of Bayor University, resulting in his removal as president and resignation as chancellor.

Judicial Watch, a conservative organization, is in court trying to get Hillary Clinton’s draft indictment, a copy of which is said to be housed in the National Archives.

That case has been crawling through the courts.