New York Post

Ears Wide Shut

Media, Dems set to ignore IRS whistleblo­wer

- JONATHAN TURLEY

‘Idon’t want to do any of this.” Those words from 14-year IRS veteran Gary Shapley may be the most important line in his CBS News interview this week. After weeks of Democrats dismissing whistleblo­wers alleging the president’s administra­tion interfered with investigat­ions of Hunter Biden, Shapley had enough. Putting his career and much of his life at risk, Shapley came forward to say he and others believe Hunter is being protected and identified the Justice Department as the source of the protection.

Shapley has every reason not to want to do any of this. After all, as President Biden stated last year, “No one f--ks with a Biden.”

For years, a Democrat-controlled Congress refused to investigat­e Biden family influencep­eddling, and the press dismissed people raising Hunter’s laptop as spreading “Russian disinforma­tion.” The media have worked hard to minimize the blowback after acknowledg­ing the laptop’s authentici­ty and the growing evidence of millions in influencep­eddling. Part of this effort at “scandal implosion” has been to dismiss any criminal charges as relatively minor tax violations unconnecte­d to the president.

Indeed, when the president recently agreed to a rare sit-down interview, the White House chose MSNBC’s Stephanie Ruhle. Before asking about Hunter’s scandal, Ruhle emphasized it was “something personal” with “no ties to you.” Many of us guffawed at the claim given multiple references on the laptop to President Biden, including possibly sharing in the proceeds from influence-peddling with foreign government­s.

The problem is Shapley suggests some uncomforta­ble questions on how Biden’s administra­tion may have worked to minimize charges against his son and, according to Shapley, “slowwalked” the investigat­ion.

His interview explains why the Justice Department can indict figures like Rep. George Santos (R-NY) on a variety of fraud and money-laundering charges in a few months while spending years investigat­ing Hunter Biden with no conclusion.

Shapley made clear he had never seen this level of interferen­ce in his long IRS service and said it was done “at the direction of the Department of Justice.” And he said the interferen­ce began as soon as he “took control of this particular investigat­ion”: “I immediatel­y saw deviations from the normal process. It was way outside the norm of what I’ve experience­d in the past.”

Shapley did not rush forward or leak to the media. Rather, after watching decision after decision made to benefit Biden, Shapley reached a breaking point in what he called his “red-line meeting” when he and his team were removed from investigat­ing the president’s son.

The interferen­ce came from a familiar source. The Justice Department under Attorney General Merrick Garland has been criticized for his refusal to appoint a special counsel to investigat­e the expanding allegation­s of Biden family influence-peddling — which include possible criminal charges from bribery to tax violations to money-laundering.

The laptop included references to Joe Biden getting a 10% cut of one Chinese deal. Biden associates are warned not to use Joe Biden’s name but to employ code names like “the Big Guy.” At the same time, the president and first lady are said to have benefited from public office and received payments from Hunter.

The emails also contradict the president’s repeated public declaratio­n that he had no knowledge of his son’s foreign dealings — including by photos with his business associates and an actual audio tape referring to the deals.

Garland refuses to appoint a special counsel who would then have the ability to write a report on the alleged massive influencep­eddling operations the Bidens run. It is all part of the “incredible shrinking Merrick Garland,” who promised to prevent any political influence over his department.

We now have multiple whistleblo­wers alleging interferen­ce from the Justice Department to slow-walk investigat­ions or shield the president’s son.

We also have questions raised by IRS agents’ visit to the home of Matt Taibbi, who helped expose the government-Twitter censorship program. They appeared on the very day Taibbi appeared before Congress and was attacked by Democratic members as a “socalled journalist.” (The subcommitt­ee’s ranking Democrat, Delaware Stacey Plaskett, later called for Taibbi’s possible arrest.) The IRS opened its probe of him on a Saturday — Christmas Eve last year, just weeks after his exposé.

With the GOP controllin­g the House, there will now be congressio­nal investigat­ion and oversight into these allegation­s. But Shapley and other whistleblo­wers will soon learn that when it comes to the many in the media and Congress, they also “don’t want to do any of this.”

 ?? ?? Going public: Gary Shapley revealed his identity in a CBS News interview.
Going public: Gary Shapley revealed his identity in a CBS News interview.
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