Houston Chronicle

Unverified claims about Biden’s son swirl

- By Eric Tucker and Stephen Braun

WASHINGTON— Looking to undermine Democratic rival Joe Biden, President Donald Trump’s campaign is pushing unverified allegation­s about Biden’s son and his foreign business ties.

But reporting in the New York Post, and the emergence of aman who says he worked with Hunter Biden have raised more questions, including about the authentici­ty of emails at the center of the story.

The renewed allegation­s trace back to Trump lawyer Rudy Giuliani, who has repeatedly pushed unfounded claims about the Bidens. Even if the emails in the Post are legitimate, they do not validate claims that Biden’s actions were influenced by his son’s business dealings.

A look at developmen­ts:

Background

Hunter Biden joined the board of the Ukrainian gas company Burisma in 2014, around the time his father, then vice president, was helping conduct the Obama administra­tion’s foreign policy with Ukraine.

Trump and his supporters have advanced a widely discredite­d theory that Biden pushed for the firing of Ukraine’s top prosecutor to protect his son and Burisma from investigat­ion. Biden did indeed press for the prosecutor’s firing, but that’s because he was reflecting the official position of not only the Obama administra­tion but many Western countries and because the prosecutor was perceived as soft on corruption.

The Post’s story

The main email highlighte­d by the Post is an April 2015 message that the newspaper said was sent to Hunter BidenbyVad­ymPozharsk­yi, an adviser to Burisma’s board. In it, he thanks the younger Biden “for inviting me to DC and giving an opportunit­y to meet your father and spent (sic) some time together. It’s realty (sic) an honor and pleasure.”

The wording makes it unclear if he actually met Joe Biden. The Biden campaign said in a statement that no meeting as described by the newspaper took place.

Emails’ origins

The Post says it received a copy of a hard drive containing the messages from Giuliani, who has pushed the idea that the younger Biden may have enriched himself by selling his access to his father.

The Post says the emails were recovered from a laptop dropped off at a computer repair shop in Delaware in April 2019. It says the customer, whom the shop owner could not definitive­ly identify as Hunter Biden, never paid for the service or retrieved the computer, and the owner made a copy of the hard drive that he provided to Giuliani’s lawyer.

The owner of the Wilmington shop declined to comment but has said he contacted the FBI provided agents with a copy of the hard drive’s contents.

Emails’ authentici­ty

Hunter Biden himself has not spoken publicly to confirm whether the laptop is his. The Biden campaign has also not addressed that question, though a lawyer for Hunter Biden, George Me sires, said in a statement that “we have no idea where this came from, and certainly cannot credit anything that Rudy Giuliani provided to the NY Post.”

Some former national security officials and other experts said the story raised multiple red flags, especially given the involvemen­t of Giuliani.

But John Ratcliffe, the director of national intelligen­ce, knocked down the possibilit­y of a Russian disinforma­tion campaign, saying, “The intelligen­ce community doesn’t believe that because there’s no intelligen­ce that supports that.”

The FBI appeared to endorse Ratcliffe’s position in a letter to a Senate committee that requested informatio­n on the laptop.

“Regarding the subject of your letter, we have nothing to add at this time to the October 19th pub-

lic statement by the Director of National Intelligen­ce about the available actionable intelligen­ce,” wrote Jill Tyson, director of the office of Congressio­nal Affairs, in the letter to Sen. Ron Johnson, the Republican chairman of the Senate Homeland Security and Government­al Affairs Committee.

Tyson also said she could not confirm or deny the existence of any investigat­ion, in keeping with Justice Department practice.

Damaging to Biden?

The suggestion that Joe Biden might have met with a Burisma representa­tive is consequent­ial, because he has repeatedly insisted that he never discussed his son’s business with him.

But the emails provide no details on whether Pozharskyi and Biden actually met and, if so, what they discussed.

The Trump campaign also organized a press event featuring Tony Bobulinski, a man who said he was Hunter Biden’s former business partner. Bobulinsk imade unproven allegation­s that the vice president’s son consulted with his father after he left office on potential business dealings in China that ultimately never came to fruition.

He was to have been interviewe­d by a Senate committee last week, but the panel postponed it after learning from Bobulinski’s

lawyers that the FBI planned to question him on that same day.

Bobulinksi, a Navy veteran, said in an interview Tuesday on Fox News that he was motivated to speak out because he was offended by the insinuatio­n from the Biden campaign and some Democratic lawmakers that the emails and the narrative were associated with Russian disinforma­tion.

In its interview, Fox News aired audio of a conversati­on it said was between Bobulinski and Rob Walker, who Bobulinski saidwas a business associate of Hunter Biden’s, in which Walker can be heard saying that if Bobulinski spoke out publicly against Biden, “You’re just gonna bury all of us, man.”

Biden campaign spokesman Andrew Bates disputed any close ties between Joe Biden and Walker.

Bobulinski said in the interview that he had a sit-down meeting with Joe Biden in May 2017, after Biden left office, and that Hunter Biden introduced him to his father as “the individual I told you about that’s helping us with the business that we’re working on and the Chinese.”

He also said that he raised concerns to Biden’s brother, Jim, that Chinese business dealings could put his brother’s political ambitions at risk, but that Biden responded, “Plausible deniabilit­y.”

The Associated Press could not independen­tly verify Bobulinski’s allegation­s, and Biden has said he has never taken any money from any foreign countries.

Political impact

In an election dominated by concerns about the coronaviru­s pandemic, it’s uncertain Trump’s strategy will appeal to the voters he needs to win back, including moderate Republican­s and suburban women.

Biden’s campaign, meanwhile, pointed to the recent Republican­led Senate investigat­ion that found no evidence of wrongdoing on Biden’s part with regard to Ukraine. It also pointedly noted the involvemen­t of Giuliani, saying his “discredite­d conspiracy theories and alliance with figures connected to Russian intelligen­ce have been widely reported.”

 ?? Associated Press file photo ?? Hunter Biden is at the center of unfounded Trump campaign allegation­s that his father abused his power as vice president.
Associated Press file photo Hunter Biden is at the center of unfounded Trump campaign allegation­s that his father abused his power as vice president.

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