San Diego Union-Tribune

HUNTER BIDEN LAWYERS: PART OF DEAL STILL VALID

Attorney says client should be spared felony gun charge

- BY LINDSAY WHITEHURST

Attorneys for Hunter Biden are pushing to keep part of a plea deal they reached with the prosecutor whose new status as special counsel has intensifie­d the tax investigat­ion into the president’s son ahead of the 2024 election.

As House Republican­s continued their own investigat­ions, Biden’s attorney argued in court documents that an agreement sparing him prosecutio­n on a felony gun charge still is in place even though the plea deal on misdemeano­r tax offenses largely unraveled during a court appearance last month.

His lawyer argues the Justice Department decided to “renege” on its end of the deal on tax charges. The agreement on the gun charge also contains an immunity clause against federal prosecutio­ns for some other potential crimes.

Biden plans to abide by the terms of that agreement, including not using drugs or alcohol, attorney Christophe­r Clark said in court papers filed late Sunday. Prosecutor­s who “largely dictated” the agreement after inviting them to begin plea negotiatio­ns in May should also be bound by it, he argued.

It’s unclear whether prosecutor­s agree that the gun agreement remains valid. U.S. District Judge Maryellen Noreika ordered them to respond by Tuesday. The Justice Department did not immediatel­y respond to a message seeking comment.

The two-part deal on tax and gun charges was supposed to have largely wrapped up the long-running investigat­ion overseen by Delaware U.S. attorney David Weiss. But it hit the skids after a judge raised questions about its terms and it appeared to have fallen apart completely when prosecutor­s said the case was instead headed toward trial in court papers Friday.

Prosecutor­s revealed the impasse as Attorney General Merrick Garland named Weiss as special counsel, a status that confers broad powers to investigat­e and report out his findings.

The government said plea negotiatio­ns had broken down, filed to dismiss the tax charges against Hunter Biden in Delaware and indicated they could charge him instead in another court, like Washington, D.C., or California.

Hunter Biden’s history of drug use and financial dealings have trailed the political career of his father, President Joe Biden. White House press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre said of the president Monday, “He loves his son, and he is proud of him overcoming his addiction and how he’s continuing to build his life.”

House Republican­s are pursuing their own congressio­nal investigat­ions into nearly every facet of Hunter Biden’s business dealings and the Justice Department’s handling of the case. They released a transcript of an interview with a former FBI agent who worked the case and said he was unable to interview Hunter Biden after FBI officials notified the Secret Service ahead of time in 2020. That underscore­d testimony from IRS agents turned whistleblo­wers and adds to Republican­s’ lack of confidence in the Justice Department and Weiss as special counsel, Oversight Committee Chairman Rep. James Comer said.

House Democrats pointed to instances where the unnamed former FBI agent testified that he has never known Weiss or any of the assistant U.S. attorneys in Delaware to make decisions based upon political influence — a point that undermines Republican claims of political interferen­ce in the Hunter Biden case.

Republican­s have denounced Hunter Biden’s plea agreement as a “sweetheart deal.” It had called for him to plead guilty to failing to pay taxes on over $1.5 million in income in both 2017 and 2018, and get probation rather than jail on the misdemeano­r counts. A separate agreement was to spare him prosecutio­n on the felony crime of being a drug user in possession of a gun in 2018 if he kept out of trouble for two years.

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