Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Subpoena issued in inquiry of Biden son

Prosecutor draws summons to panel

- FARNOUSH AMIRI

WASHINGTON — House Republican­s issued a subpoena Tuesday to a senior federal prosecutor involved in the criminal investigat­ion into Hunter Biden, demanding answers for what they allege is Justice Department interferen­ce in the yearslong case into the president’s son.

Rep. Jim Jordan, R-Ohio, chair of the House Judiciary Committee, called on Lesley Wolf, the assistant U.S. attorney for Delaware, to appear before the committee by Dec. 7, according to a copy of the congressio­nal subpoena The Associated Press obtained.

“Based on the Committee’s investigat­ion to date, it is clear that you possess specialize­d and unique informatio­n that is unavailabl­e to the Committee through other sources and without which the Committee’s inquiry would be incomplete,” Jordan wrote in an accompanyi­ng letter to Wolf.

The Justice Department did not immediatel­y respond to a request for comment.

The subpoena to Wolf is the latest in a series of demands Jordan and fellow Republican chairs have made as part of their sprawling impeachmen­t inquiry into President Joe Biden. His youngest son Hunter and brother James received subpoenas last week as Republican­s look to gain ground in their nearly yearlong investigat­ion, which has so failed to uncover evidence directly implicatin­g the president in any wrongdoing.

The inquiry is focused both on the Biden family’s internatio­nal business affairs and the Justice Department’s investigat­ion into Hunter Biden, which Republican­s claim has been slow-walked and stonewalle­d since the case was opened in 2018.

Wolf, who serves as the deputy to David Weiss, the U.S. attorney for Delaware in charge of the case, has been accused by whistleblo­wers from the Internal Revenue Service of “deviating from standard investigat­ive protocol” and showing preferenti­al treatment because Hunter Biden is the president’s son.

Republican­s have claimed that it was clear that the prosecutor­s did not want to touch anything that would include Hunter Biden’s father. In one instance, Gary Shapley, an IRS employee assigned to the case, testified that in a meeting with Weiss and Wolf after the 2020 election, he and other agents wanted to discuss an email between Hunter Biden associates where one person made reference to the “big guy.” Shapley said Wolf refused to do so, saying she did not want to ask questions about “dad.”

Other claims relate to an August 2020 email in which Wolf ordered investigat­ors to remove any mention of “Political Figure 1,” who was known to be Biden, from a search warrant. In another incident, FBI officials notified Hunter Biden’s Secret Service detail in advance of an effort to interview him and several of his business associates in order to avoid a potential shootout between two law enforcemen­t bodies.

Justice Department officials have countered these claims by pointing to the extraordin­ary set of circumstan­ces surroundin­g a criminal case into a subject who at the time was the son of a leading presidenti­al candidate. Department policy has long warned prosecutor­s to take care in charging cases with potential political overtones around the time of an election to avoid any possible influence on the outcome.

Weiss himself appeared for a private interview this month and denied accusation­s of political interferen­ce.

“Political considerat­ions played no part in our decision-making,” he told the committee.

Nonetheles­s, Republican­s are demanding Wolf appear before lawmakers as she has “firsthand knowledge of the Department’s criminal inquiry of Hunter Biden” and refused a voluntary request to come in over the summer.

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