The Riverside Press-Enterprise

Informant’s indictment may impact impeachmen­t drive

- By Luke Broadwater

The indictment of a former FBI informant on charges of making up claims that President Joe Biden and his son sought bribes from a Ukrainian energy company is the latest blow to the effort by House Republican­s to assemble a credible impeachmen­t case against the president.

Republican­s had hailed the informant, Alexander Smirnov, as “credible” and “most respected.” They asserted that he had 17 recordings to back up his story that Biden and his son Hunter had each accepted bribes of $5 million from Burisma, the Ukrainian firm that had paid Hunter Biden as much as $1 million a year for serving on its board.

But the tapes never materializ­ed, and on Thursday, the Justice Department announced that it had charged Smirnov with making it all up.

That left Democrats calling for the immediate halt of the inquiry, and Republican­s scrambling to find something else to use against the president.

“He is lying and it should be dropped and it’s just been an outrageous effort from the beginning,” Biden told reporters at the White House on Friday.

Rep. Jamie Raskin of Maryland, the top Democrat on the House Oversight Committee, said the indictment exposed the evidence being cited by Republican­s as false.

“I hope it will be the final chapter of this ludicrous wild goose chase,” Raskin said.

The charges against Smirnov are unlikely to deter Republican­s from marching forward with their investigat­ion into the president. But they deeply

undercut the foundation of the inquiry and give more weight to long-standing Democratic complaints that the impeachmen­t drive is a purely political exercise intended to put Biden on the defensive as he seeks reelection.

Smirnov, 43, is accused of falsely telling the FBI that Hunter Biden demanded the money to protect the company from an investigat­ion by the country’s prosecutor general. But those claims were false, and Smirnov’s motivation for lying appeared to have been political, prosecutor­s wrote, citing anti-biden messages he wrote during the 2020 campaign.

“They’re making an impeachmen­t inquiry based on — it looks like now — criminal conduct,” said Kimberly Wehle, a law professor at the University of Baltimore. “It’s not like where there’s smoke, there’s fire. It’s like the smoke is actually a lie and a federal felony.”

The charges against Smirnov are not the first time the central thesis of the Republican case — that Biden accepted bribes from Ukraine — has been undercut or shot down. Attempts to prove that Biden was on the take have repeatedly failed over the years, according to congressio­nal testimony.

One example stemmed from an incident in 2019, as allies of President Donald Trump were hunting for allegation­s of corruption against Biden. Lev Parnas, an associate of Rudy Giuliani, Trump’s personal lawyer at the time, secured an interview with the owner of Burisma, Mykola Zlochevsky, that the men hoped would prove a bribery allegation central their case.

But the interview backfired, undercutti­ng the claims of bribery. Giuliani became enraged and demanded that Parnas tell no one of what the Ukrainian had said, according to Parnas’ account to Congress.

“Make sure nobody sees this,” Giuliani said. “Bury this.”

Parnas concluded in a letter to Congress: “There was no evidence of bribery or extortion that anyone could find.”

Other officials who have undercut the Republican case against Biden include Petro Poroshenko, the former Ukrainian president; Kurt Volker, the Trump administra­tion’s special representa­tive for Ukraine negotiatio­ns; Gordon Sondland, Trump’s ambassador to the European Union; career U.S. State Department officials; and several of Hunter Biden’s business associates.

“To be clear, President Biden — while in office or as a private citizen — was never involved in any of the business activities we pursued,” testified Rob Walker, one of Hunter Biden’s business partners.

Upon taking over the House at the start of last year, Republican­s vowed to carry out the investigat­ion of Biden that Trump had long been seeking, in effect continuing the scrutiny of the involvemen­t of the Bidens in Ukraine that had led to Trump’s first impeachmen­t.

 ?? PETE MAROVICH THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? President Joe Biden speaks to reporters at the White House on Friday.
PETE MAROVICH THE NEW YORK TIMES President Joe Biden speaks to reporters at the White House on Friday.

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