The Palm Beach Post

Hunter Biden pleads not guilty in tax case

Plea deal for probation imploded over summer

- Stefanie Dazio and Colleen Long ASSOCIATED PRESS

LOS ANGELES – President Joe Biden’s son pleaded not guilty Thursday to federal tax charges filed after the collapse of a plea deal that could have spared him the spectacle of a criminal trial during the 2024 campaign.

Hunter Biden has been accused of nine felony and misdemeano­r tax offenses. The charges stem from what federal prosecutor­s say was a four-year scheme to skip out on paying the $1.4 million he owed to the IRS and instead use the money to fund an extravagan­t lifestyle that by his own admission included drugs and alcohol.

“We’re here today because you’ve been accused by the United States of a criminal offense,” Judge Mark Scarsi said to Biden, who entered the not guilty plea himself.

The judge set a tentative trial date of June 20 during the half-hour-long hearing.

Meanwhile, Biden has also been charged in Delaware with lying in October 2018 on a federal form for gun purchasers when he swore he wasn’t using or addicted to illegal drugs. He was addicted to crack cocaine at the time. He’s also accused of possessing the gun illegally and has pleaded not guilty in that case.

The accusation­s all come from a yearslong federal investigat­ion into Biden’s tax and business dealings that had been expected to wind down over the summer with a plea deal in which he would have gotten two years’ probation after pleading guilty to misdemeano­r tax charges. He also would have avoided prosecutio­n on the gun charge if he stayed out of trouble.

The deal unraveled when a federal judge who had been expected to approve the deal instead began to question it. Now, the tax and gun cases are moving ahead as part of an unpreceden­ted confluence of political and legal drama: As the 2024 election draws closer, the Justice Department is actively prosecutin­g both the president’s son and Donald Trump, the Republican front-runner.

Hunter Biden’s original proposed plea deal with prosecutor­s had been pilloried as a “sweetheart deal” by Republican­s, including Trump. The former president is facing his own criminal problems – 91 charges across four separate cases, including that he plotted to overturn the results of the 2020 election, which he lost to President Joe Biden, a Democrat. He too appeared in court Thursday, in New York for closing arguments in his civil fraud trial.

Hunter Biden’s attorney Abbe Lowell referenced the failed deal to the judge on Thursday, suggesting there had been Congressio­nal interferen­ce. Lowell had previously accused special counsel David Weiss of “bowing to Republican pressure.”

“We had a resolution of this case in the summer of 2023, and then things happened,” Lowell told the judge.

Weiss told the judge there was no need for additional hearings on the failed deal.

No evidence has emerged so far to prove that Joe Biden, in his current or previous office, abused his role or accepted bribes, though questions have arisen about the ethics surroundin­g the Biden family’s internatio­nal business dealings.

If convicted of the tax charges, Hunter Biden, 53, could receive a maximum of 17 years in prison. Following the collapse of the plea deal, Attorney General Merrick Garland appointed a special counsel to handle the matter. A special counsel is tapped to handle cases in which the Justice Department perceives itself as having a conflict or where it’s deemed to be in the public interest to have someone outside the government step in.

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