Marin Independent Journal

Hunter Biden prosecutor cut a contentiou­s path in past

- By Eric Tucker and Juliet Linderman

>> Before being assigned to investigat­e President Joe Biden's son, Leo Wise built a reputation in Baltimore as a tough and hard-charging federal prosecutor, taking on powerful, and seemingly untouchabl­e, figures — whether a gang of corrupt cops, a police commission­er, a top local prosecutor and even a mayor.

Wise's backers call him talented and savvy, with a knack for navigating complex, headline-generating cases. To detractors, he's stubborn and uncompromi­sing as well as self-promotiona­l: he wrote a memoir about one of his major cases while still employed by the Justice Department. His approach — aggressive in a way that has won him accolades but riled other lawyers — sets the stage for a contentiou­s fight in the high-stakes prosecutio­n of Hunter Biden.

“He holds everything very close to the vest, and he takes every possible advantage that he can take,” said Gerard Martin, a Baltimore criminal defense lawyer who calls Wise a “hardass.” “He's not a guy you can go meet with and sit down and say, `Look, this is what my client says. This is what happened,'” and have that be taken into account.

Wise's track record in Baltimore is newly relevant given his position as a lead lawyer in what is already a politicall­y fraught prosecutio­n. The case, overseen by special counsel David Weiss, is poised to unfold in the heat of the president's 2024 re-election campaign and could give fresh momentum to a nascent Republican impeachmen­t inquiry while drawing the White House deeper into questions about Biden's relationsh­ip with his son.

The Justice Department declined to comment on

Wise or make him available for an interview.

The first public glimpse of Wise in the Hunter Biden case came during a fractious July plea hearing on gun and tax charges when the agreement was scuttled amid a tense dispute over the deal's terms. An indictment under federal firearms statutes followed, even though charges related to gun possession by drug users are rare, especially when not in connection with other crimes.

Hunter Biden is scheduled to be arraigned Tuesday. The Justice Department has not disclosed whether it will bring a tax indictment.

That Wise would be at the center of a media and legal vortex doesn't surprise attorneys who have tracked his career. The Harvard Law graduate and avid runner was already an experience­d prosecutor by the time he joined the U.S. attorney's office in 2010, having served on Justice Department teams that pursued the tobacco industry and executives of Enron, the financial services company

that collapsed in a notorious financial scandal.

Soon after arriving, he establishe­d a reputation as a premier public corruption prosecutor with a taste for big cases.

“Leo is an exceptiona­lly talented and extraordin­arily diligent lawyer,” Rod Rosenstein, Wise's onetime boss as U.S. attorney in Baltimore before becoming deputy attorney general, wrote in an email. He called him “impervious to political considerat­ions.”

In 2018, he secured a guilty plea from a former police chief who admitted he cheated on his taxes. The next year, former mayor Catherine Pugh pleaded guilty to conspiracy and tax evasion charges related to her self-published children's books to nonprofit organizati­ons to promote her political career.

Wise also netted highprofil­e conviction­s of members of the Baltimore Police Department's Gun Trace Task Force who'd terrorized the city, robbing drug dealers and planting narcotics and firearms on innocent people. A prosecutor

who worked with Wise on that case and others, Derek Hines, has also been assigned to the Hunter Biden prosecutio­n team.

The police case spurred two books by journalist­s who covered the investigat­ion, an HBO series and even a BBC podcast. In an unusual move for a sitting prosecutor, Wise penned his own account, titled “Who Speaks for You?” He has said he earns no compensati­on from it.

Isabel Mercedes Cumming, Baltimore's inspector general, said Wise has proven successful in court because he is extremely detail-oriented and thorough in his preparatio­n of corruption cases. He's careful and balanced, always striving for the truth, she said.

“If you look at the highest-profile cases in the Baltimore area in the last few years, Leo's done most of them,” Cumming said. “It's not personal. It's just a matter of the job you have, the job you chose, and doing it to the best of your ability.”

“Sometimes the cases make us controvers­ial,” she said. “Sometimes controvers­y comes with the job. But you just do your job.”

Wise acknowledg­ed as much in his book. He boasted how during his tenure at the Office of Congressio­nal Ethics, a law journal profile described him as on his way to “becoming one of the least-liked lawyers on Capitol Hill.” It was a “badge of honor,” he wrote.

“As I quickly learned on the job,” he wrote of the ethics position, “going after the powerful doesn't tend to make one popular.”

In Baltimore, not all of his recent prosecutio­ns have been easy, or successful.

His case against the city's former top prosecutor Marilyn Mosby — accused of perjury and mortgage fraud related to applicatio­ns for relief during the COVID-19 pandemic — has been defined by acrimony.

Mosby's former lawyer leveled incendiary accusation­s against Wise, including that he'd been motivated by personal animus in his pursuit of Mosby and had a history of targeting Black elected officials.

Wise said the claims had no merit, adding that he was only one of three prosecutor­s on the case and had no unilateral authority to seek indictment­s. During a hearing last year, he equated the attack-the-prosecutor strategy to “just like what Trump did.” Former President Donald Trump has repeatedly lashed out at federal and local prosecutor­s who have indicted him in four separate cases.

“Witch hunt, witch hunt, witch hunt,” Wise said. “That's what the politician­s always say.”

A judge sided with Wise and rejected the allegation­s. The case is set for trial later this fall.

The prosecutio­n that caused Wise the most trouble went to trial in 2021, and he's still grappling with the fallout.

The case concerned two prominent and well-regarded attorneys: Kenneth Ravenell and Joshua Treem. A year after Ravenell was indicted in a money laundering conspiracy case, Wise and colleagues charged Treem, who'd represente­d Ravenell earlier in the investigat­ion, with obstructin­g the probe and creating false documents related to a meeting he had with a witness.

The charges against Treem roiled the city's legal community, with defense lawyers aghast that a federal prosecutor would so aggressive­ly go after an attorney with some 50 years of experience and pursue a case they saw as exceptiona­lly weak.

Treem, who denied any wrongdoing and testified in his own defense, was acquitted outright. Ravenell was convicted of a single count.

The controvers­y extended beyond Treem's acquittal. A brief Wise filed in Ravenell's appeal that accused a major law firm of benefiting from laundered proceeds was swiftly withdrawn and corrected by his own office, a rarity for the Justice Department and a clear rebuke.

Andy Levy, a former law partner of Treem's, said Wise “was pretty well-respected, not just for his legal ability, but I think people thought that he was a reasonable guy that could be trusted.” But, he added, the Treem prosecutio­n was “such a colossal error of judgment” that it hurt his reputation in the legal community.

In a sign of lingering tensions, a Baltimore law club event at which Wise was slated to speak about his book was abruptly canceled in May amid opposition from Treem's supporters. Wise was quoted by the Daily Record as saying, “I find it bizarre that somebody would object to the fact that I did my job.”

 ?? DAVID MCFADDEN — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE ?? Federal prosecutor Leo Wise at the U.S. Attorney's Office in downtown Baltimore on Feb. 21, 2018.
DAVID MCFADDEN — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE Federal prosecutor Leo Wise at the U.S. Attorney's Office in downtown Baltimore on Feb. 21, 2018.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States