Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Giuliani’s return casts dark cloud on White House

Hunter Biden emails draw scrutiny for foreign influence

- ERIC TUCKER Informatio­n for this article was contribute­d by Jonathan Lemire and Mary Clare Jalonick of The Associated Press.

WASHINGTON — A New York tabloid’s account about how it acquired emails purportedl­y from the son of candidate for president, former Vice President Joe Biden, has raised some red flags.

Former New York Mayor Rudy Giuliani has traveled abroad looking into both Biden, and his son, Hunter Biden, developing relationsh­ips with questionab­le figures, including a Ukrainian lawmaker who U.S. officials have described as a Russian agent and part of a broader Russian effort to denigrate the Democratic presidenti­al nominee.

However, Giuliani said foreign sources didn’t provide the Hunter Biden emails. He said a laptop containing the emails and intimate photos was abandoned in a Delaware repair shop, and the shop owner reached out to Giuliani’s lawyer.

That hasn’t stopped the FBI from investigat­ing whether the emails are part of a foreign influence operation. The emails have surfaced as U.S. officials have been warning that Russia, which backed Trump’s 2016 campaign through hacking of Democratic emails and a covert social media campaign, is interferin­g again this year.

The latest episode with Giuliani underscore­s the risk he poses to a White House that spent years confronted by a federal investigat­ion into whether Trump associates had coordinate­d with Russia.

The Washington Post reported Thursday that intelligen­ce agencies had warned the White House last year that Giuliani was the target of a Russian influence operation. The newspaper, citing four former officials, said that assessment was based on informatio­n including intercepte­d communicat­ions showing Giuliani had been in contact with people tied to Russian intelligen­ce.

The newspaper said national security adviser Robert O’Brien had warned Trump that informatio­n Giuliani brought back from Ukraine should be considered contaminat­ed by Russia, but that Trump brushed off the warning.

Trump has made the purported Hunter Biden emails one of his main talking points in the final weeks of the campaign.

FBI INVESTIGAT­ING

The New York Post began publishing stories about the emails Wednesday, saying it had obtained them from the former New York mayor. The newspaper said the emails of Hunter Biden, a California resident, were found in a laptop that had been dropped off for service at a Delaware repair shop by an unidentifi­ed man who never picked it up. They said the shop owner turned it over to the FBI, but also made a copy of the hard drive and provided that to Giuliani’s lawyer.

One 2015 email published by the Post purported to show a top adviser for Burisma, the Ukraine gas company where Hunter Biden held a board seat, thanking Biden for giving him an opportunit­y to meet his father when the older Biden was serving as U.S. vice president. The Biden campaign and a lawyer for Hunter Biden said they had no record of such a meeting taking place.

They have not addressed the authentici­ty of the emails.

Giuliani did not respond Friday for a request for comment from The Associated Press. But in an interview Thursday with a SiriusXM show, he asserted that the laptop had been dropped off by Hunter Biden, and that the material was not hacked and the laptop was legally obtained. He said on Fox News on Friday that the informatio­n from the laptop was “authentic as hell.”

The FBI is investigat­ing whether the emails are tied to a foreign influence operation, according to a person who was not authorized to discuss an ongoing investigat­ion and spoke on condition of anonymity to AP. The exact scope of what was being investigat­ing was not clear.

Andrii Derkach, the Ukrainian parliament­arian who is one of Giuliani’s principal contacts, was mentioned in an August intelligen­ce assessment that described a concerted Russian effort to disparage Biden. A Treasury Department sanction announceme­nt from last month characteri­zed Derkach as an “active Russian agent for over a decade.”

Derkach in recent months has leaked recordings of calls Biden had as vice president with Ukraine’s then-leader, audio the Biden campaign contends is heavily edited. Despite his own administra­tion’s warnings on Derkach, Trump has promoted those recordings on Twitter.

Giuliani has not been shy about discussing his foreign contacts, including with Derkach. In December, Derkach posted on his Facebook page photos of him and Giuliani meeting in Kyiv and said the two had had a meeting.

DOUBTS ON GIULIANI

Giuliani was central to advancing a discredite­d theory that Ukraine, not Russia, had interfered in the 2016 election. His efforts to get Ukraine to launch investigat­ions into the Bidens helped create the impeachmen­t case against Trump.

Even detractors in the president’s orbit recognize Giuliani as a force in Trump’s defense during the lengthy Russia investigat­ion by the special counsel. The probe detailed extensive contacts between the Trump campaign and Russia but did not allege a criminal conspiracy between the two to tip the 2016 election. Yet the effort to undermine former special counsel Robert Mueller led Giuliani to Ukraine, which many feel directly led to Trump’s impeachmen­t. He was acquitted by the Senate in February.

Some around Trump fear that the case being made against the younger Biden has been weakened because Giuliani has become its face.

The Trump campaign has been pushing allegation­s of corruption against the Bidens for more than a year, with the president advancing the theory that the vice president sought to force out Ukraine’s top prosecutor to protect his son from scrutiny.

Though Trump associates believe a case can be made that Hunter enriched himself by selling access to his father, they fear that Giuliani’s lack of credibilit­y will cause the allegation­s to implode.

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