Hillary Clinton's senate campaign finance director Gabrielle Fialkoff was named in the papers, too

Seng was involved in a fundraising scandal during the Clinton administration and Giustra has donated millions to the Clinton Foundation

Billionaires Ng Lap Seng and Frank Giustra were both named on the list

The Clintons have been linked to numerous people named in the

Bill and Hillary Clinton have been linked to numerous people named in the Panama Papers, it has been revealed.

The former president and the Democratic presidential front-runner denounced thousands of off-shore bank accounts as 'outrageous tax havens' for the ultra-wealthy when the data first came to light.

However, it is now clear the Clintons are connected to many of the people named from finance directors of campaigns to friends.

'Now some of this behavior is clearly against the law, and everyone who violates the law anywhere should be held accountable.

Bill and Hillary Clinton have been linked to numerous people named in the Panama Papers, even though the couple denounced the off-shore 'tax havens'

'But it’s also scandalous how much is actually legal,' Hillary said about the scandal.

Gabrielle Fialkoff, who served as Clinton’s finance director during her first campaign for the Senate in New York, is one of the people who is believed to have used law firm Mossack Fonseca to set up an off-shore account.

Fialkoff also has connections to New York City mayor Bill de Blasio and is director of New York City's Office of Strategic Partnership.

The Chagoury Group, an international developer based in West Africa pledged $1 billion in projects to the Clinton Foundation, the New York Post reported.

The group appeared to named, too.

Also named was Chinese billionaire Ng Lap Seng, Canadian billionaire Frank Giustra and Marc Rich.

Seng was involved with a fundraising scandal during the Clinton administration, Giustra donated $100 million to the Clinton Foundation and Rich was pardoned by Clinton when he was president.

While the Clintons themselves are not named in the Panama Papers, donors to the Clinton Foundation, former campaign advisers and a man who was pardoned when Bill Clinton was president

Nearly 40 years' worth of archives from Mossack Fonseca have been pored over by hundreds of journalists around the world since being given to a German reporter a year ago.

They have resulted in the so-called Panama Papers: a series of reports exposing politicians, celebrities and some criminals who used Mossack Fonseca's services to stash assets in offshore companies.

Mossack Fonseca's founders, lawyers Ramon Fonseca and Juergen Mossack, insist they did nothing illegal.

They stress that offshore companies in themselves are not illicit - and they were not responsible for any activities their clients did with the entities.