New York Post

HUNTER’S IN CROSSHAIRS

GOP plans shady-biz subpoena

- By STEVEN NELSON

WASHINGTON — The Republican-led House Oversight Committee intends to subpoena first son Hunter Biden, but not his father, the panel’s incoming chairman has said.

Rep. James Comer (R-Ky.) told CNN in an interview broadcast Friday that the committee intends to use its power to compel testimony from the 52-year-old Hunter (inset) about his extensive overseas businesses.

“There’s no plans to subpoena Joe Biden,” Comer said. “There are plans to subpoena Hunter Biden.”

The lawmaker had vowed at a Thursday morning press conference that the investigat­ion of the first family’s foreign consulting work is aimed squarely at the president but told CNN that it was legally “complicate­d” to subpoena a sitting president.

“This committee will evaluate whether this president is compromise­d or swayed by foreign dollars,” Comer said. “This is an investigat­ion of Joe Biden.”

However, the Republican added that “it’s hard to get people to come in” for hearings because, as he put it, “the Democrats sent out subpoenas like junk mail.”

Hunter confirmed shortly after the 2020 election that he was under federal investigat­ion for possible tax fraud. A Hollywood attorney associated with the first son recently paid the IRS about $2 million in back taxes in an effort to head off criminal charges.

That federal probe reportedly also deals with potential money laundering and illegal foreign lobbying — and the FBI reportedly believes it has enough evidence to charge the first son with tax crimes as well as lying about his drug use on a gun-purchase form.

It’s rare for Congress to attempt to subpoena a sitting — or even former — president and such attempts can be bogged down by claims of executive privilege.

House Democrats attempted to compel testimony from former President Donald Trump about his role in last year’s Capitol riot, but Trump filed a lawsuit in an effort to quash the subpoena — a move that is expected to run out the clock on the matter before Republican­s retake power in January.

Biden has denied making any money from his son’s overseas business deals and the White House says he stands by his 2019 campaign claim that he has never even discussed the enterprise­s with his son — despite evidence that he has interacted with Hunter and first brother James Biden’s associates from China, Kazakhstan, Mexico, Russia and Ukraine.

Hunter often solicited work in countries where his father held sway as vice president — most notably Ukraine, where Hunter earned up to $1 million per year from energy company Burisma despite no relevant industry experience while his dad ran the Obama administra­tion’s Ukraine policy.

Online business records indicate the first son still holds a 10% stake in BHR Partners, a Chinese state-backed private equity firm that manages $2.1 billion in assets and takes a prominent role in acquiring overseas assets.

Joe Biden met often with his son’s business associates while vice president from 2009 to 2017 and in the period of time before he ran for president.

Hunter co-founded BHR Partners in 2013 within weeks of joining his father aboard Air Force Two on an official trip to Beijing, according to The Wall Street Journal. Hunter introduced his dad to incoming BHR CEO Jonathan Li in a hotel lobby and Joe Biden later wrote college recommenda­tion letters for Li’s children.

In a different Chinese business venture, Hunter and James Biden earned $4.8 million from CEFC China Energy — an arm of Beijing’s foreign-influence “Belt and Road” initiative — in 2017 and 2018, according to The Washington Post. A May 2017 email about the CEFC partnershi­p says the “big guy” was due a 10% cut.

Two former Hunter Biden associates, Tony Bobulinski and James Gilliar, have identified Joe Biden as the “big guy,” and Bobulinski says he met with Joe about the deal.

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