New York Post

Hunter ‘had words’ about Ukr. ties

- By STEVEN NELSON

Then-Second Son Hunter Biden coached then-Vice President Joe Biden’s press secretary on how to respond to media questions about him joining the board of Ukrainian natural gas company Burisma Holdings, emails reviewed by The Post show.

The May 13, 2014, exchanges between Hunter and Kendra Barkoff, which have not been previously reported, form the basis of a complaint sent to the Justice Department Friday alleging that the Biden scion, now 53, violated federal law by failing to register as a foreign agent.

“In advising the Office of the Vice President how to respond to press inquiries about his appointmen­t, Hunter Biden ‘represent[ed] the interests of [a] foreign principal before any agency or official of the Government of the United States,’” America First Legal Foundation general counsel Gene Hamilton wrote to the assistant attorney general for national security, Matthew Olsen.

Burisma announced Hunter Biden’s appointmen­t to its board of directors on May 12, 2014. The following day, according to the complaint, Barkoff sent Hunter an email saying: “Thanks for talking to me. [L]et me know who I should refer folks to.”

“What exactly are they asking?” Hunter responded. “For the time being I’d just refer them to my office. FYI I joined the board of Burisma Holdings Ltd. (Burisma.com) an independen­t/private natural gas producer in Ukraine along with the former president of Poland. I think the press release is on their website.”

Barkoff then forwarded Hunter an email from Max Seddon, then a foreign correspond­ent at BuzzFeed News.

“Russian state media is loving this press release, supposedly from a Cypriot-held Ukrainian natural gas company, claiming that the Vice President’s son has joined its board of directors,” Seddon wrote, addressing thenNation­al Security Council spokespers­on Laura Lucas Magnuson, who had forwarded it to Barkoff.

“The news seems rather odd on its face and, if true, would present a fairly glaring conflict of interest given the VP’s role on Ukraine policy – particular­ly since the company is controlled by Nikolai Zlochevsky, who was energy minister and deputy NSC chief under [former pro-Moscow Ukrainian President Viktor] Yanukovych,” the reporter added. “Is this true? What exactly is going on here?”

“Interestin­g,” Hunter wrote back. “Burisma is completely independen­t of the Ukrainian government with an independen­t board of directors. [Zlochevsky] served as Minister of Ecology and resigned in 2010. I joined the board as legal adviser and Burisma also engaged the law firm I am of counsel to Boies Schiller Flexner on matters pertaining to corporate governance, transparen­cy, and expansion. Alana Apter former head of Morgan Stanley Europe is chairman of the board.”

In addition to forwarding Seddon’s questions, Barkoff told Hunter: “Let me know who in your office” to refer media to.

“Eric he’s cc’d here,” Hunter answered, referring to one of his business partners, Eric Schwerin — who chimed in: “Kendra, I am around the next few days if you need me.”

“If anything beyond referring questions to my office is required from you or counsel you can contact Heather King at Boise Schiller,” Hunter directed Barkoff, who later sent him the statement her office was putting out to the press.

“Hunter Biden is a private citizen and a lawyer,” read the statement, which apparently met with Hunter’s approval. “The Vice President does not endorse any particular company and has no involvemen­t with this company. For any additional questions, I refer you to Hunter’s office.”

The AFL complaint also noted that Hunter wrote Barkoff on June 26 to tell her: “I am really sorry but I have to cancel call today” — suggesting, according to the organizati­on, that he “had ongoing discussion­s about the matter with the Office of Vice President that continued for nearly a month and a half.”

The America First Legal Foundation, founded by Stephen Miller, a former senior adviser to President Donald Trump, claimed the discussion­s with Barkoff showed “Hunter Biden is Burisma’s agent and subject to FARA registrati­on because he was an officer of Burisma and represente­d Burisma’s interests to the Office of the Vice President in addition to advising on a public relations matter.”

Attorneys for Hunter Biden and spokespeop­le for the Justice Department did not immediatel­y respond to The Post’s requests for comment.

FARA refers to the Foreign Agents Registrati­on Act of 1938.

Burisma hired Hunter Biden to serve as a board member in 2014 when his vice president father was leading the Obama administra­tion’s Ukraine policy and paid him up to $1 million per year, despite no relevant energy industry experience.

The statute was notably used in 2018 to indict former Trump campaign chair Paul Manafort, who later pleaded guilty to failing to register as an agent of Yanukovych’s government.

“Leftist prosecutor­s gave Paul Manafort the functional equivalent of a life sentence for providing real counsel to the Ukrainian government based on decades of experience as a top political adviser,” Miller told The Post. “Hunter Biden was acting as a foreign agent, peddling his family name, with no legitimate experience whatsoever, and yet DOJ apparently couldn’t care less.”

 ?? AP ?? TONGUE-TIED: Emails show that Hunter Biden advised dad Joe’s office about what to say concerning Hunter joining the board of Ukrainian gas company Burisma, which announced the appointmen­t in 2014.
AP TONGUE-TIED: Emails show that Hunter Biden advised dad Joe’s office about what to say concerning Hunter joining the board of Ukrainian gas company Burisma, which announced the appointmen­t in 2014.

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