[ad_1]
Watch CBS News
Be the first to know
Get browser notifications for breaking news, live events, and exclusive reporting.
[ad_2]

[ad_1]
Watch CBS News
Be the first to know
Get browser notifications for breaking news, live events, and exclusive reporting.
[ad_2]

[ad_1]
President Joe Biden’s son Hunter Biden has been indicted by special counsel David Weiss on felony gun charges, with two counts related to false statements in purchasing the firearm and a third count on illegally obtaining a firearm while addicted to drugs. What do you think?
“Maybe there’s one exception to my Second Amendment absolutism.”
Dennis Meier, Unemployed
“It’s shocking there were any gun laws left to charge him with.”
Lawrence Cassidy, Tantric Masseuse
“We never hear embarrassing stories like this about Beau.”
Christina Tuzco, Freelance Antagonist
[ad_2]

[ad_1]
A version of this story appeared in CNN’s What Matters newsletter. To get it in your inbox, sign up for free here.
CNN
—
Two major threats to President Joe Biden’s reelection – his son Hunter’s legal problems and the widely held perception the 80-year-old is too old for reelection – are both causing him major pain this week.
Hunter Biden was indicted on federal gun charges in Delaware on Thursday, accused of lying about his past drug abuse and violating a gun law when he bought a handgun in 2018, before his father’s presidential campaign. The weapon was later abandoned behind a grocery store by Hallie Biden, the wife of Hunter’s late brother, Beau. Hallie and Hunter were having an affair at the time.
Read an annotated version of the indictment.
That sad and sordid family drama of addiction could land the president’s son in prison, although separate investigations on tax evasion and foreign business dealings have not yet led to charges from the Delaware US attorney David Weiss, who was elevated earlier this year to special counsel to guarantee independence from the US Department of Justice.
While Weiss has found no basis to criminally charge Hunter Biden over his foreign business dealings and no direct connection has been drawn between the son’s business interests and the father’s policy positions, House Republicans plan to dig deep as they look for more evidence during an official impeachment inquiry authorized by House Speaker Kevin McCarthy earlier this week.
The impeachment may never occur, and the years of investigation may not have exposed any wrongdoing by President Biden – but the inquiry will certainly keep Hunter Biden top of mind for voters who may wonder why the president would let his family operate like this.
Any Democrats who dismiss the effort might recall that McCarthy bragged in 2015 that the exhaustive House investigations focused on Hillary Clinton wounded her politically. At the time, he was talking about investigations into the death of a US ambassador in Benghazi, Libya, while she was secretary of state. The effort by today’s GOP to tie Biden to his son could have a similar effect.
Even if there is nothing to tie President Biden to the millions of dollars Hunter Biden and other family members made from interests in China, Ukraine and elsewhere, most Americans are not convinced.
Well more than half the country, 61%, thinks Biden had some involvement in his son’s business dealings while serving as vice president, according to a CNN poll conducted by SSRS in late August, before the gun-related indictment was handed down but after a previous plea deal fell apart. Most of those people who think the president was involved back then also think the actions were illegal.
What’s not clear is whether the Hunter Biden issues will be a motivating factor outside the group of voters who already dislike the president. His low job approval rating and concerns about the economy could ultimately be more damaging in an election.
The public’s perception of his relationship with his son is not even the most concerning element for Biden in the poll. That would be his age.
“Biden’s age isn’t just a Fox News trope; it’s been the subject of dinner-table conversations across America this summer,” the Washington Post columnist David Ignatius wrote this week in calling for Biden to step aside ASAP to give someone else a shot at winning the 2024 election.
Just about a quarter of Americans in CNN’s poll said Biden has the stamina and sharpness to serve effectively, far from a ringing endorsement of a president who brought policy wins back from a trip to Asia last week but left the impression he was confused at a press conference.
Romney calls on Trump and Biden to ‘stand aside’ for younger candidates
Only a third of Democrats and Democratic-leaning registered voters in the poll said they think Biden should be the Democrats’ candidate in 2024. Two-thirds want a different candidate, although almost nobody knows who.
Ignatius had enough of the president’s respect earlier this summer to get an invite to Biden’s state dinner for the Indian prime minister in June. Hunter Biden also attended.
Ignatius is among the people who effusively say Biden has been a very good president, both “successful” and “effective.”
“What I admire most about President Biden is that in a polarized nation, he has governed from the center out, as he promised in his victory speech,” Ignatius wrote, adding plaudits for Biden’s domestic accomplishments and foreign policy leadership.
But Ignatius fears another pairing of Biden with Vice President Kamala Harris “risks undoing his greatest achievement — which was stopping Trump.”
Among Democratic voters, the most-cited concerns with Biden are his age and the need for someone younger.
The vast majority of the Democrats interested in a Biden alternative picked “just someone besides Joe Biden.” One of the most-supported specific alternatives, Sen. Bernie Sanders, is older than Biden.
The lack of confidence in Harris to take up the mantle was evident when CNN’s Anderson Cooper talked Wednesday night to former House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, who is running for reelection to Congress but stepped away from her leadership position.
Cooper asked Pelosi if Harris was the best running mate for Biden.
“He thinks so and that’s what matters,” Pelosi said, although she did commend Harris for being “politically astute.”

Anderson Cooper asks Nancy Pelosi twice if she thinks Harris is best running mate for Biden
Pelosi promised that Democrats are behind Biden, and she does think he’s the best candidate to beat Trump.
“He has great experience and wisdom,” Pelosi said.
CNN’s Edward-Isaac Dovere writes that the Biden campaign is plotting a long-game strategy and that aides blame the media for “what they view as validating concerns about Biden’s age and about Republican claims of Hunter Biden’s corruption by covering those concerns, despite what they argue is a lack of evidence.”
They are banking, he writes, on a data-focused emphasis on key states to turn the moveable voters away from Trump.
He lost badly in Iowa and New Hampshire in the 2020 primary, for instance, before riding a wave of support from moderates in southern states to a dramatic upset of multiple younger candidates and those with more committed followings.
Biden emerged from a crowded pack four years ago. There’s little indication it would make sense for him to open the primary up, as Ignatius suggests, to some of those same people today.
Ultimately, there is an open question over what this election will be about.
If it’s about a referendum on an aging president whose fitness worries voters and who allowed his son to make millions in circumstances that raise suspicions even without evidence of wrongdoing, Biden will struggle.
That said, one of the few things voters might like less is a person who tried to overturn an election.
[ad_2]

[ad_1]
Watch CBS News
Be the first to know
Get browser notifications for breaking news, live events, and exclusive reporting.
[ad_2]

[ad_1]
Watch CBS News
Be the first to know
Get browser notifications for breaking news, live events, and exclusive reporting.
[ad_2]

[ad_1]
Hunter Biden’s legal team filed a lawsuit Wednesday against former Trump White House aide, Garrett Ziegler, over the publication of private photos, emails and other materials that came from a hard drive allegedly belonging to Hunter Biden.
The lawsuit is the latest in a strategy Biden’s lawyers telegraphed earlier this year, which involved an aggressive push to pursue court action against those they viewed as instigating unwarranted and invasive attacks on Biden, the son of President Joe Biden.
Ziegler has been a particularly notable figure in the effort to bring attention to Hunter Biden’s past — largely mined from the now-infamous laptop. Ziegler, a former aide to Trump White House trade adviser Peter Navarro, has operated a website dedicated in part to exposing elements of Hunter Biden’s past. The website includes links to a range of photos, text messages, emails and other documents purported to be from the president’s son.
The 13-page lawsuit alleges that Ziegler and others violated federal and California privacy laws by “accessing, tampering with, manipulating, altering, copying and damaging computer data” gathered from Hunter Biden’s purported laptop and iPhone cloud storage without consent.
The lawsuit details how Ziegler and unnamed defendants allegedly obtained sensitive materials by hacking into encrypted data on Hunter Biden’s devices and uploading them to Ziegler’s website, where it remains public. In the lawsuit, Hunter Biden’s lawyers assert that the defendants had refused requests to “cease their unlawful activity” and return private data belonging to the president’s son.
“I nor the nonprofit, Marco Polo, have been served with a lawsuit — but the one I read this morning out of the Central District of California should embarrass Winston & Strawn LLP. It’s not worth the paper it’s written on” Ziegler told CBS News in a statement. “Apart from the numerous state and federal laws and regulations which protect authors like me and the publishing that Marco Polo does, it’s not lost on us that Joe’s son filed this SLAPP one day after a so-called Impeachment Inquiry into his father was announced. The president’s son is a disgrace to our great nation.”
The reference to a SLAPP suit (a strategic lawsuit against public participation) alludes to a California law providing penalties for filing a lawsuit intended to chill the exercise of the rights to petition and free speech.
Earlier this year, Hunter Biden sued John Paul Mac Isaac, a Delaware-based computer repairman for invasion of privacy for allegedly accessing and distributing Biden’s private computer data in 2019. Attorneys for Biden also requested that the Justice Department investigate Isaac, Ziegler and others for allegedly violating Delaware laws by distributing data from Biden’s personal device.
Mac Isaac has said he obtained the information from Biden’s laptop legally and has said that Biden himself dropped it off in April 2019 and never returned to claim it. Mac Isaac has said he waited 90 days and then considered it abandoned.
In this recent suit, Hunter Biden is seeking a jury trial, damages, an injunction that would prevent access or tampering with Biden’s data and the return of any materials obtained unlawfully.
[ad_2]

[ad_1]
Watch CBS News
Be the first to know
Get browser notifications for breaking news, live events, and exclusive reporting.
[ad_2]

[ad_1]
CNN
—
The White House plans to send a letter to top US news executives on Wednesday, urging them to intensify their scrutiny of House Republicans after Speaker Kevin McCarthy launched an impeachment inquiry into President Joe Biden, despite having found no evidence of a crime.
“It’s time for the media to ramp up its scrutiny of House Republicans for opening an impeachment inquiry based on lies,” Ian Sams, a spokesperson for the White House Counsel’s Office, wrote in the letter, according to a draft copy obtained by CNN.
The letter, which said an impeachment inquiry with no supporting evidence should “set off alarm bells for news organizations,” will be sent to executives helming the nation’s largest news organizations, including CNN, The New York Times, Fox News, the Associated Press, CBS News, and others, a White House official familiar with the matter said.
The correspondence comes one day after McCarthy announced that he had directed three House committees to begin an impeachment inquiry into Biden. House Republicans, most of whom have denied that disgraced former President Donald Trump committed any wrongdoing, have long sought to baselessly portray Biden as a corrupt, crime-ridden politician engaged in sinister activities.
While news organizations have published innumerable fact checks on the matter, they have also often failed to robustly call out the mis- and disinformation peddled by Republicans in their coverage, frustrating officials in the Biden White House who believe that the news media should be doing more to dispel lies that saturate the public discourse.
In its letter Wednesday, the White House will ask news organizations to be more clear-eyed in their coverage of the impeachment inquiry, and not to fall prey to the traps of false equivalency in reporting.
“Covering impeachment as a process story – Republicans say X, but the White House says Y – is a disservice to the American public who relies on the independent press to hold those in power accountable,” Sams wrote.
“And in the modern media environment, where every day liars and hucksters peddle disinformation and lies everywhere from Facebook to Fox, process stories that fail to unpack the illegitimacy of the claims on which House Republicans are basing all their actions only serve to generate confusion, put false premises in people’s feeds, and obscure the truth,” Sams added.
McCarthy launched the impeachment inquiry Tuesday without a formal House vote in a bid to appease Republicans on his far-right, including those who have threatened to oust the California Republican from his speakership if he does not move swiftly enough on such an investigation.
The Republican House-led investigations into Biden have yet to provide any direct evidence that the president financially benefited from Hunter Biden’s career overseas.
[ad_2]

[ad_1]
Watch CBS News
Be the first to know
Get browser notifications for breaking news, live events, and exclusive reporting.
[ad_2]

[ad_1]
Republican investigators are seeking “unrestricted special access” to President Biden’s vice presidential records to obtain any information about potential contact during that period with Hunter Biden, and other family members and their business partners.
In a letter this week to the National Archives and Records Administration (NARA), House Oversight Chairman James Comer requested “additional information regarding communications between the Office of the Vice President and Hunter Biden or his business associates.” And he also said the committee “needs to review these documents in their original format.”
Comer highlights records that were recently posted to the Archives’ website with sections redacted under the Presidential Records Act and the Freedom of information Act.
As one example, the GOP letter cites email traffic from December 2015 between a longtime Biden family business associate and a senior White House communications official.
“[O]n December 4, 2015, at 10:45 a.m.—in an email with the subject of “Quotes”—Eric Schwerin (a longtime Biden family business associate) wrote to Kate Bedingfield in the Office of the Vice President providing quotes the White House should use in response to media outreach regarding Hunter Biden’s role in Burisma, a Ukrainian energy company. Later that day—at 2:30 p.m.—Ms. Bedingfield responded to Mr. Schwerin saying, “VP signed off on this[.]”
In response, White House spokesman Ian Sams posted on social media, “As Comer tells it, then-VP Biden ‘colluded’ with this business (Burisma) by … saying he doesn’t endorse it and wasn’t involved with it? Total nonsense.” And he included a screen shot of what he said Mr. Biden had “signed off on,” highlighting a part that read, “The Vice President does not endorse any particular company and has no involvement with this company.”
A spokeswoman for Democrats on the committee dismissed the Republicans’ request as more “Burisma conspiracy 2.0.” Comer noted that NARA has already told the committee that it would neither produce nor confirm the existence of records “if NARA deems those records to be ‘personal records.’”
Claiming that the committee’s need for the records is “specific and well-documented,” Comer said the committee has been clear that their probe involves “potential abuse by then-Vice President Biden of his official duties…” and if NARA continues to withhold records that potentially respond to this probe, the Archive should provide a log including the sender, recipient and NARA’s explanation for withholding the records.
“Joe Biden never built an ‘absolute wall’ between his family’s business dealings and his official government work – his office doors were wide open to Hunter Biden’s associates,” the House Oversight chairman said in a statement.
In a response to CBS News, a spokesperson for the National Archives said, “NARA has received the request from Chairman Comer, and will respond in accordance with the Presidential Records Act (PRA), NARA’s implementing regulations, and the governing Executive Order.”
The committee’s Democrats say “House Republicans are hiding from the fact that after years of probes and conspiracy theories they have no evidence of wrongdoing by President Biden,” according to a statement by their spokeswoman.
She also said that a former business partner of Hunter Biden, Devon Archer, “repeatedly told the Committee that President Biden was never involved in his son’s business dealings.” And she also pointed to testimony by another former business associate of Hunter Biden, Eric Schwerin, who told committee staff he wasn’t aware of any involvement by Mr. Biden “in the financial conduct of the President’s relatives’ businesses.”
CBS News has reached out to Hunter Biden’s lawyers, but they did not immediately respond.
Ellis Kim contributed to this report.
[ad_2]

[ad_1]
Watch CBS News
Be the first to know
Get browser notifications for breaking news, live events, and exclusive reporting.
[ad_2]

[ad_1]
Washington — Prosecutors say they will ask a grand jury to return an indictment against Hunter Biden before Sept. 29, special counsel David Weiss informed a federal judge in Delaware on Wednesday.
The news comes after a tentative plea deal between the government and Hunter Biden’s attorneys over taxes and diversion agreement on a firearms charge fell apart this summer. The president’s son had originally been charged by two separate criminal informations with misdemeanor tax offenses and a felony firearm offense. But in open court, a federal judge questioned provisions of the tentative deal that would have allowed the president’s son to avoid prison time. After that, Hunter Biden pleaded not guilty to the three charges.
Weiss, who was elevated to special counsel last month, cited the Speedy Trial Act as the impetus for the short timeline. His filing was made in response to a federal judge’s questions about the status of the firearms case and the diversion agreement after the deal with Hunter Biden’s legal team fell through in July.
“The Speedy Trial Act requires that the government obtain the return of an indictment by a grand jury by Friday, September 29, 2023, at the earliest,” Weiss wrote. “The government intends to seek the return of an indictment in this case before that date.”
In a court filing of their own on Wednesday, Hunter Biden’s lawyers said their client has continued to abide by the parameters of the firearm diversion agreement, which called for him to remain drug-free without committing additional crimes in order to see the gun charge dismissed.
“We believe the signed and filed diversion agreement remains valid and prevents any additional charges from being filed against Mr. Biden, who has been abiding by the conditions of release under that agreement for the last several weeks, including regular visits by the probation office,” said Hunter Biden’s attorney Abbe Lowell. “We expect a fair resolution of the sprawling, 5-year investigation into Mr. Biden that was based on the evidence and the law, not outside political pressure, and we’ll do what is necessary on behalf of Mr. Biden to achieve that.”
The White House referred to Hunter Biden’s personal attorneys for comment.
Thanks for reading CBS NEWS.
Create your free account or log in
for more features.
[ad_2]

[ad_1]
Watch CBS News
Be the first to know
Get browser notifications for breaking news, live events, and exclusive reporting.
[ad_2]

[ad_1]
Two senior IRS officials have been subpoenaed by the GOP-led House Ways and Means Committee, according to documents obtained by CBS News, for testimony about an October 2022 meeting in which an IRS whistleblower alleged that David Weiss, who was then the U.S. attorney investigating President Joe Biden’s son, Hunter Biden, said he did not have the ultimate authority to bring charges against the president’s son.
Earlier this month, Attorney General Merrick Garland appointed Weiss as special counsel in the case, two weeks after a plea agreement between Hunter Biden and the government collapsed.
The GOP chairman of the committee, Rep. Jason Smith, sent letters to Michael Batdorf, identified as an IRS director of field operations and Darrell Waldon, an IRS Special Agent in Charge, for transcribed interviews in early September.
“The Committees requested the interview with you because you have been identified as someone who has direct knowledge of a key meeting on October 7, 2022, in which updates about the Hunter Biden investigation were discussed,” Smith wrote. “To date, the IRS has refused to voluntarily cooperate with the pending request for a transcribed interview with you. Therefore, please find attached a subpoena compelling you to sit for a deposition before the Committee on Ways and Means.”
According to a transcript of his May interview before the House Ways and Means Committee, IRS whistleblower Gary Shapley testified that the Oct. 7, 2022, session was his “red-line” meeting.
Shapley said Weiss, “senior-level managers” from the IRS, FBI and the Delaware U.S. attorney’s office participated, among others. At the meeting Shapley alleged that Weiss “surprised us by telling us on the (Hunter Biden) charges, quote: ‘I’m not the deciding official on whether charges are filed,’ unquote. He then shocked us with the earth-shattering news that the Biden-appointed D.C. U.S. Attorney Matthew Graves would not allow him to charge in Washington, D.C., where Hunter Biden lived during some of the years under investigation. To add to the surprise, U.S. Attorney Weiss stated that he subsequently asked for special counsel authority from Main DOJ at that time and was denied that authority.”
Shapley then alleged that bringing tax charges in California, where Hunter Biden now lives, was also in doubt.
“This was troubling, because he stated that, if California does not support charging, he has no authority to charge in California,” the transcript reads. “Because it had been denied, he informed us the government would not be bringing charges against Hunter Biden for the 2014-2015 tax years, for which the statute of limitations were set to expire in one month. All of our years of effort getting to the bottom of the massive amounts of foreign money Hunter Biden received from Burisma and others during that period would be for nothing.”
Shapley’s testimony included internal IRS communications. “Exhibit 10” is an email sent to Waldon and Batdorf by Shapley on Oct. 11, 2022. Asked if Shapley’s summary of the Oct. 7, 2022 meeting was accurate — including allegations that Weiss said he didn’t have the authority to charge Hunter Biden — Waldon responded, “You covered it all.”
The IRS did not immediately respond to CBS News’ request for comment. A spokesperson for Weiss in Delaware and the Justice Department declined to comment.
But Weiss told Congress in a letter on June 30 that he had been given the authority to bring charges with the matter in any district “where charges could be brought,” including Washington, D.C., or California.
Days earlier, on June 23, Attorney General Merrick Garland told reporters, “The only person with authority to make somebody a special counsel or refuse to make somebody a special counsel is the attorney general. Mr. Weiss never made that request to me. Garland also said at the time that Weiss would be permitted “to make a decision to prosecute any way in which he wanted to and in any district in which he wanted to.”
The IRS subpoenas are the latest development in the GOP’s investigations into Hunter Biden as Republicans seek to tie his controversial business dealings to the president.
Hunter Biden’s former business partner, Devon Archer, recently talked about his dealings with the Bidens in congressional testimony. He told the House Oversight and Accountability Committee that the younger Biden was selling “the brand” during Mr. Biden’s vice presidency, and it was Joe Biden who “brought the most value to the brand,” according to the transcript of Archer’s interview.
The White House has repeatedly denied that the president had any involvement in his son’s business ventures.
Democrats, noting that the GOP chairman of the committee has subpoena power without Democrats, accused the majority of “cherry-picking to build a politically-expedient narrative,” a spokesperson for the Democrats on the House Ways & Means Committee said. “The Committee has a duty to seek the whole truth related to these allegations, and when more than 59 individuals have relevant information, sending two subpoenas is premature.”
The spokesperson also noted that Ranking Member Richard Neal last month sent Chairman Smith a letter accusing committee Republicans “of rushing to release unsubstantiated allegations about the Hunter Biden probe to the public, and only interviewing 2 people out of dozens of potential witnesses.”
Ellis Kim contributed to this report.
[ad_2]

[ad_1]
One of the biggest things that has united the Republican Party over the last several years is its insistence that Hunter Biden is a criminal mastermind, the likes of which this country has never seen. At the same time, they say, Joe Biden has weaponized the Justice Department such that his son will never actually be held accountable for any of his many alleged crimes, including ones that supposedly involve the president (which they’ll have evidence proving any day now). One thing throwing a bit of a wrench in this theory? The fact that Biden’s Justice Department is apparently attempting to blow up the plea deal his son struck in June.
In a court documents filed on Sunday night, Hunter Biden’s lawyer, Christopher Clark, told a federal judge that the Justice Department is trying to “renege on the previously agreed-upon plea agreement.” (The DOJ, as a reminder, is part of the executive branch of the federal government, which is currently run by one Joseph Robinette Biden Jr.) Specifically, Clark said, prosecutors are trying to pull out of the part of the deal that stipulates that Hunter Biden will avoid prosecution by enrolling in a diversion program for gun offenders, never owning a firearm again, and remaining drug free for two years. (The other part of the deal required him to plead guilty to two misdemeanor tax charges stemming from paying his taxes late in 2017 and 2018.)
The Sunday filing by Clark came in response to a Friday filing by government attorneys who claimed, per The New York Times, that “they and Mr. Biden were at an impasse over plea negotiations and that no agreement had been reached.” In its three-page response, Biden’s team said that wasn’t true, that Biden had signed the agreement last month, and that newly appointed special counsel David Weiss was trying to back out of a deal both parties had officially agreed to. As Clark noted, not only did Hunter Biden sign the deal in court last month, but prosecutors had as well, making it “binding” and still “in effect.”
Federal judge Maryellen Noreika, who was nominated by Donald Trump in 2017, gave Weiss until Tuesday at noon to respond. At a hearing last month, Noreika refused to sign off on the plea deal Biden and prosecutors had reached, demanding more information from both sides and saying, “I’m not in a position to accept or reject it. I need to defer.”
Now, it appears as though Hunter Biden will be headed for a criminal trial that would likely take place before the 2024 election. (Trump, who claimed last month that the first son should’ve gotten the death penalty, is already scheduled for two criminal trials prior to the election; a third could take place in January, and a potential fourth is in the offing.) And if you thought the idea of the president’s son in a courtroom in the midst of the general election would’ve been enough to keep Republicans happy for, like, at least a week, you thought wrong!
Presently, they’re extremely upset about last week’s appointment of Weiss—who has been investigating Hunter Biden since 2018—to special counsel, despite the fact that they demanded Weiss be given that exact job. Speaking to Fox News’ Sunday Morning Futures, Ted Cruz—who literally wrote a letter to Merrick Garland asking for Weiss to be given “special counsel protections and authorities to conduct the Hunter Biden investigation”—called Weiss a “wildly inappropriate” choice, boldly alleging he “either was an active participant in covering up this criminality and protecting Joe Biden in engaging in an obstruction of justice—that is option one—or option two, he wasn’t the driver, he was just complicit.” (Again, Cruz is on the record asking for Weiss to be given the very job he was handed last week.) Naturally, Cruz is not the only member of the GOP raging about Weiss.
This content can also be viewed on the site it originates from.
[ad_2]
Bess Levin
Source link

[ad_1]
Watch CBS News
Be the first to know
Get browser notifications for breaking news, live events, and exclusive reporting.
[ad_2]

[ad_1]
Watch CBS News
Be the first to know
Get browser notifications for breaking news, live events, and exclusive reporting.
[ad_2]

[ad_1]
Watch CBS News
Be the first to know
Get browser notifications for breaking news, live events, and exclusive reporting.
[ad_2]

[ad_1]
Washington — An attorney for Hunter Biden said a trial for his alleged tax-related crimes is “not inevitable” despite a plea deal falling apart last month and the appointment last week of a special counsel to oversee the investigation into President Biden’s son.
“It’s not inevitable,” Abbe Lowell told “Face the Nation” on Sunday. “We were trying to avoid [a trial] all along and so were the prosecutors, who came forward to us and were the ones to say, ‘Can there be a resolution short of a prosecution?’ So they wanted it and maybe they still do want it.”
Hunter Biden faces charges for failing to file or pay his 2017 and 2018 income taxes and for owning a handgun while he was a drug user in 2018, which is prohibited by federal law.
He had reached an agreement with the U.S. Attorney’s Office in Delaware in June to plead guilty to two misdemeanor tax charges and enter a diversion program in lieu of pleading guilty to felony gun possession. But at a court hearing in July in which Hunter Biden was set to plead guilty, a federal judge refused to sign off on the agreement after his attorneys and prosecutors disagreed on the scope of an immunity provision in the diversion agreement.
CBS News
As part of the diversion agreement, Hunter Biden would have avoided prison time if he remained drug-free for two years and didn’t break any other laws. But the prosecution and defense team disagreed on whether the Justice Department’s commitment in the diversion agreement to not prosecute Hunter Biden for other alleged crimes related to the tax plea deal granted him immunity from all future charges.
Hunter Biden pleaded not guilty to charges after the deal collapsed.
Lowell, Hunter Biden’s attorney, appeared on Sunday to question the competency of the prosecutors in explaining why the two sides were at an impasse.
“The possibilities are only, one, they wrote something and weren’t clear what they meant,” he said, noting that prosecutors “wrote the language” and “insisted on that language.”
“Two, they knew what they meant and misstated it to counsel. Or third, they changed their view as they were standing in court in Delaware,” he said.
Lowell said though the plea agreement fell through, the diversion agreement was filed in court and “has the signatures necessary for it to be binding.”
Attorney General Merrick Garland announced Friday that David Weiss, a Trump-appointed U.S. attorney overseeing the investigation into Hunter Biden, had been appointed special counsel. Justice Department lawyers then moved to withdraw the case against Biden in Delaware so that it could be refiled in Washington, D.C., and California.
“If the now special counsel decides not to go by the deal, then it will mean that he or they decided that something other than the facts and the law are coming into play,” Lowell said.
Lowell said it would be surprising if Weiss brings additional charges against Hunter Biden given a five-year investigation, which is still ongoing, had already resulted in charges.
“If anything changes from his conclusion, which was two tax misdemeanors and a diverted gun charge, the question should be asked, what infected the process that was not the facts and the law?” Lowell said, dismissing that there could be new evidence uncovered. “The only thing that will change is the scrutiny on some of the charges.”
On “Face the Nation” on Sunday, Republican Rep. Mike Turner expressed concern over Weiss’s appointment, saying that as U.S. Attorney in Delaware, Weiss allowed the statute of limitations to expire on felony charges for the tax offenses.
“Why did this occur? The IRS whistleblowers said that it was interference from the Department of Justice that allowed them to expire,” Turner said.
[ad_2]