Santa Cruz Sentinel

Hunter Biden subpoena seeks info on Burisma, several other entities

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WASHINGTON >> A subpoena seeking documents from Hunter Biden asked for informatio­n related to more than two dozen entities, including Ukraine gas company Burisma, according to a person familiar with a Justice Department tax investigat­ion of President-elect Joe Biden’s son.

The breadth of the subpoena, issued Tuesday, underscore­s the wide-angle lens prosecutor­s are taking as they examine the younger Biden’s finances and internatio­nal business ventures.

Hunter Biden’s ties to Burisma in particular have long dogged the policy work and political aspiration­s of his father, Joe Biden, now the president- elect of the United States. It’s unclear whether Hunter Biden’s work at the Ukrainian company is a central part of the federal investigat­ion or whether prosecutor­s are simply seeking informatio­n about all his sources of income in recent years.

The person was not authorized to discuss an ongoing investigat­ion publicly and spoke to The Associated Press on condition of anonymity.

A lawyer for the younger Biden, George Mesires, did not immediatel­y return a phone message seeking comment for this story and a spokesman for the Biden transition team declined to comment.

Hunter Biden confirmed Wednesday that his taxes are under federal investigat­ion. The revelation comes at a delicate time for the president- elect, who is building out his Cabinet and will soon decide on his nominee to run the Justice Department, the same department overseeing the investigat­ion into his son.

In addition to the Burisma-related request, the subpoena issued last week also seeks informatio­n on Hunter Biden’s Chinese business dealings and other financial transactio­ns.

The probe was launched in 2018, the year before his father announced his candidacy for president. At one point in the investigat­ion, federal prosecutor­s were also examining potential money laundering offenses, two people familiar with the matter told the AP.

Hunter Biden said he only learned of the investigat­ion on Tuesday.

T he younger Biden joined the board of Burisma in 2014, around the time his father, then vice president, was helping conduct the Obama administra­tion’s foreign policy with Ukraine. President Donald Trump and his allies have long argued, without evidence, that Hunter Biden’s work in Ukraine influenced the Obama administra­tion’s policies toward the Eastern European nation.

Senate Republican­s said in a report earlier this year that the appointmen­t may have posed a conflict of interest but did not provide evidence that any policies were directly affected by Hunter Biden’s work.

The president-elect is not believed to be a focus of the investigat­ion. He has not weighed in on the merits of the investigat­ion, saying only to reporters on Friday that he was “proud of my son.”

For months, the U.S. attorney’s office in Pittsburgh has also been collecting informatio­n from Trump’s attorney, Rudy Giuliani, and others as part of the Justice Department’s process to receive and analyze informatio­n related to Ukraine, including documents Giuliani wanted to present to prosecutor­s that he had been gathering in Ukraine about Joe and Hunter Biden.

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