Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

AG responds in Hunter Biden case

Garland rebuts claims by whistleblo­wers, rips GOP attacks

- LINDSAY WHITEHURST Informatio­n for this article was contribute­d by Farnoush Amiri and Aamer Madhani of The Associated Press.

WASHINGTON — Attorney General Merrick Garland pushed back Friday against claims from IRS whistleblo­wers that the Justice Department interfered with the investigat­ion into Hunter Biden, saying more broadly that attacks on the department’s independen­ce are corrosive.

The Republican-led House Ways and Means Committee on Thursday released a transcript of testimony from Gary Shapley, an IRS official who, among other things, claimed Garland had denied a request from U.S. Attorney David Weiss of Delaware to be appointed special counsel. That designatio­n would have given Weiss the same status as the prosecutor leading the investigat­ion into former President Donald Trump.

Weiss never made such a request, Garland said Friday, and always had full authority to file charges wherever and however he saw fit against President Joe Biden’s son. Garland added that if Weiss — first appointed U.S. attorney by Trump — agrees to testify before Congress, the Justice Department will not stand in the way.

“He was given complete authority to make all decisions on his own,” Garland said. “I don’t know how it would be possible for anybody to block him for bringing a prosecutio­n given that he has that authority.”

More broadly, Garland forcefully rebutted criticism from Republican­s that a plea agreement for the president’s son on tax and gun charges made public this week reflects political influence in the American justice system. Republican­s have denounced the deal as evidence of a “twotiered system of justice.”

“Some have chosen to attack the integrity of the Justice Department … by claiming we do not treat like cases alike. This constitute­s an attack on an institutio­n that is essential to American democracy and essential to the safety of the American people,” Garland said. “Nothing could be further from the truth.”

In a separate statement Friday, Hunter Biden’s lawyer denounced the idea that the investigat­ion cut any corners, and said it would be “dangerousl­y misleading” to make conclusion­s based on the Shapley transcript.

The transcript included a message Biden sent to a business associate alluding to “sitting with his father,” seemingly suggesting that his father was aware of his business dealings. Shapley acknowledg­ed that the investigat­ion didn’t turn up evidence to prove that, instead finding that it was likely untrue.

Joe Biden has said he has never spoken to his son about his foreign business. Asked Friday if the president stands by those comments, White House press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre replied: “What I will say is nothing has changed. Nothing has changed, and I will leave it there.”

Weiss’ office referred requests for comments about the whistleblo­wer testimony to a June 7 letter he wrote to House Judiciary Committee Chairman Jim Jordan saying he had “ultimate authority” over the investigat­ion.

The testimony from IRS agent Shapley and a second unnamed agent who worked on the case detailed what they called a pattern of “slow-walking investigat­ive steps” and delaying enforcemen­t actions in the Hunter Biden case, though it was unclear whether the conflict they described amounted to internal disagreeme­nt or a pattern of preferenti­al treatment.

Shapley said Weiss told him and others during at an October 2022 meeting that he had been denied special counsel status.

Transcript­s released Thursday include an email with Shapley’s notes from the meeting, and a response from a supervisor saying his notes “covered it all.”

A representa­tive for Shapley called on Weiss and the Justice Department to explain the discrepanc­y.

Biden’s attorney, for his part, said claims that the investigat­ion wasn’t thorough are “prepostero­us and deeply irresponsi­ble.”

 ?? (AP/Kevin Wolf) ?? Attorney General Merrick Garland walks to the podium at a news conference to announce arrests and disruption­s of the fentanyl precursor chemical supply chain Friday in Washington.
(AP/Kevin Wolf) Attorney General Merrick Garland walks to the podium at a news conference to announce arrests and disruption­s of the fentanyl precursor chemical supply chain Friday in Washington.

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