Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

No slap on the wrist

- HARRY LITMAN

Hunter Biden’s federal plea agreement is bound to displease partisans on both sides, which is one sign that it’s a fair and suitable dispositio­n of the long-standing investigat­ion of the president’s son.

The deal revealed in court papers Tuesday requires the younger Biden to plead guilty to two misdemeano­rs stemming from a failure to pay taxes owed for 2017 and 2018. The government also levels a felony charge that Biden lied about his drug use when he acquired a gun in 2018. Rather than require him to plead guilty to that crime, the government agrees to drop the charge if Biden keeps his nose clean for two years under a practice known as pretrial diversion.

Biden haters will assail the arrangemen­t as a sweetheart deal proving that the Justice Department is in the tank for President Joe Biden. Hater-in-chief Donald Trump has already accused the “corrupt Biden DOJ” of giving Hunter Biden a “traffic ticket.”

The charge is spurious: Delaware U.S. Attorney David Weiss, a Trump holdover, was allowed to remain in office precisely so that he could finish the case, even though new administra­tions typically appoint their own top prosecutor­s.

That arrangemen­t kept the case at arm’s length from the administra­tion but could warrant an objection from Biden’s defenders. As the late Justice Antonin Scalia once observed of special prosecutor­s, Weiss’ presence exerted a nearly irresistib­le pull toward bringing some charge against Hunter Biden. A dismissal of the case might have been plausible given an unremarkab­le defendant and a prosecutor appointed through the standard process, but it was basically off the table from the time Weiss was allowed to stay in office to oversee this case.

Biden family supporters could also note that while the charges in the proposed plea agreement are bona fide, they’re not exactly the crimes of the century. Hunter Biden has reportedly paid the more than $100,000 in taxes he allegedly failed to pay on time. That doesn’t excuse the crime, but it does distinguis­h him from the typical tax defendant.

The bottom line is that both sides had plenty to gain or lose from the Hunter Biden case, and that may well have helped produce a sensible bargain.

The proposed deal, which is subject to approval by a judge, would allow Biden to avoid going to jail and turn the page on an extremely dark chapter of his life. And it would enable Weiss and his department to obtain a conviction and avoid trying a case with dubious prospects before a jury.

None of this will prevent Trump and his congressio­nal minions from screaming about Justice Department corruption. We can only hope that it will be apparent to many observers on both sides of the aisle that literally nothing the administra­tion could do would fail to trigger the same response.

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