New York Daily News

No taint for Joe in new Ukraine flap

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Ukrainian authoritie­s said Saturday they intercepte­d an attempt to offer a $6 million bribe in return for the dropping of a criminal investigat­ion into the head of a natural gas company where the son of Joe Biden once held a board seat.

At a news conference, during which officials displayed large bags of seized U.S. currency, Ukraine’s anti-corruption prosecutor Nazar Kholodnits­ky said neither of the Bidens is connected to the bribe attempt.

Kholodnits­ky and the head of the national anti-corruption bureau, Artem Sytnik, said the bribe was intended to encourage their offices to close an investigat­ion of Mykola Zlochevsky, the head of the Burisma natural gas company and a former minister of ecology.

Zlochevsky is suspected of using his ministeria­l position for personal enrichment.

In a statement, Burisma said the company has nothing to do with a bribe attempt.

Burisma, one of Ukraine’s largest private gas producers, has been at the center of politicall­y tinged allegation­s in the United States, where Biden (inset) is the main challenger to President Trump in this year’s election.

Biden’s son, Hunter, joined the Burisma board in 2014, when his father was still vice president and the main figure in U.S. relations with Ukraine; he left the position in 2018.

Last year, Trump pressured new Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy to investigat­e the Bidens in a phone call that triggered his impeachmen­t.

Former Ukrainian prosecutor-general Viktor Shokin has alleged he was pushed out by Joe Biden’s delaying of a $1 billion loan to the country, to prevent him from investigat­ing Hunter Biden’s role at Burisma. But Joe Biden says he pushed for Shokin’s dismissal to encourage Ukraine’s anti-corruption efforts.

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