San Diego Union-Tribune

HUNTER BIDEN INDICTED ON GUN FELONIES

Justice Dept. charges president’s son after collapse of plea deal

- BY MICHAEL S. SCHMIDT & GLENN THRUSH

Hunter Biden, the president’s son, was charged Thursday by federal prosecutor­s with lying about his drug use when he purchased a handgun in 2018 and with illegally possessing the weapon, setting up the potential for a trial coinciding with his father’s re-election campaign.

The indictment came as House Republican­s stepped up their efforts to use Hunter Biden’s work abroad to build a case for impeaching President Joe Biden. And it puts the Biden Justice Department in the remarkable position of prosecutin­g cases against both the president’s son and former President Donald Trump, the current front-runner for the Republican Party’s 2024 presidenti­al nomination.

The gun charges are related to whether Hunter Biden had lied on a federal government form that he was required to complete when he purchased a .38 handgun in Delaware in 2018.

In response to a question on the form about whether he was using drugs, Biden had said he was not — an assertion that prosecutor­s concluded was false. Biden has publicly acknowledg­ed his struggles with addiction to crack cocaine and alcohol and had been in and out of rehab around the time of the gun purchase.

The indictment returned by a federal grand jury in Wilmington, Del., charged Biden with three felonies: lying to a federally licensed gun dealer, making a false claim on the federal firearms applicatio­n used to screen applicants and possession of an illegally obtained gun for 11 days, from Oct. 12 to Oct. 23, 2018.

“Hunter Biden possessed a firearm while knowing he was an unlawful user of or addicted to any stimulant, narcotic drug or any other controlled substance, in violation of federal law,” prosecutor­s charged in the five-page filing.

The gun was found by Hallie Biden, the widow of his brother, Beau, soon after its purchase. Hallie Biden, with whom Hunter Biden was having a romantic relationsh­ip at the time, threw the gun in a dumpster, claiming she was concerned that he might use it to take his own life.

If convicted, Biden could face up to 25 years in prison and $750,000 in fines. But nonviolent first-time offenders who have not been accused of using the weapon in another crime rarely get serious prison time for the charges.

No date has yet been set for his arraignmen­t.

Abbe Lowell, Biden’s lawyer, has argued that the indictment should be thrown out, saying that the lead prosecutor on the case, David Weiss, is still legally bound by the previous diversion agreement and accusing Weiss of caving to the pressure from Trump supporters who had called the plea agreement a sweetheart deal.

“Hunter Biden possessing an unloaded gun for 11 days was not a threat to public safety, but a prosecutor, with all the power imaginable, bending to political pressure presents a grave threat to our system of justice,” he said in a statement.

The White House declined to comment.

The decision to file criminal charges against Joe Biden’s younger son was an extraordin­ary step for the Justice Department and Weiss, whom Attorney General Merrick Garland named as a special counsel last month. Garland gave Weiss that status after the last-minute collapse of a previous deal that would have resolved the long-running investigat­ion without Biden serving prison time.

The defunct deal also would have resolved an investigat­ion into Biden’s late filing of his tax returns for several years. Prosecutor­s did not file tax charges against Biden on Thursday but could still do so.

Weiss’ team has also signaled that it continues to investigat­e other elements of Biden’s business activities, most likely including whether any of his work with foreign interests violated the Foreign Agents Registrati­on Act, which requires disclosure of lobbying activities for other countries.

Biden pursued a variety of moneymakin­g ventures around the world for several years, some of them overlappin­g with his father’s time as vice president. They included serving on the board of a Ukrainian energy company, Burisma, and pursuing investment deals in China, bringing him millions of dollars in income.

Biden’s internatio­nal business is at the heart of the efforts by House Republican­s to find evidence that would justify impeaching the president. While Republican­s have shown that Joe Biden, while vice president, had some passing interactio­ns with business associates of his son, they have yet to produce any solid evidence that he took any actions to benefit Hunter Biden or his associates or acted illegally or unethicall­y.

The incident with the gun came after Joe Biden had left the vice presidency and before he announced his 2020 presidenti­al candidacy.

Hunter Biden’s lawyers have argued to Justice Department officials that the charge will ultimately be thrown out because a series of Supreme Court and appeals court decisions have cast doubt on the constituti­onality of the federal government putting certain conditions on firearms purchases.

Weiss, who is the U.S. attorney for Delaware and was appointed to that post by

Trump, filed the gun charges in Delaware, where the handgun purchase took place. Should he file charges related to Biden’s taxes, his status as special counsel would allow him to do so in other jurisdicti­ons where Biden was living during the period when he failed to file on time, including California and Washington, D.C.

The investigat­ion of Biden appeared to have come to a conclusion this summer, when his lawyers and Weiss announced a plea deal and a hearing was scheduled at the federal courthouse in Delaware.

Biden was to plead guilty to two misdemeano­r tax charges under that agreement. Regarding the gun purchase, prosecutor­s agreed not to prosecute him on the charge under a socalled pretrial diversion agreement, which would have required Biden to admit that he was using drugs at the time of the purchase.

The deal was contingent on Biden remaining drug free for the next two years. Biden has said he has been sober since 2019.

But at the plea hearing in federal court in July, the deal unraveled. There was a major disagreeme­nt between Weiss’ prosecutor­s and Biden’s lawyer, Christophe­r Clark, about whether the deal included an immunity clause that insulated him from being prosecuted in connection with his foreign business dealings.

Judge Maryellen Noreika of U.S. District Court in Wilmington sharply questioned elements of the deal’s structure, telling the two sides repeatedly that she had no intention of being “a rubber stamp.”

Her objections centered on two elements of the proposed deal. One was a provision that would have offered Biden broad insulation against further prosecutio­n on matters scrutinize­d by federal prosecutor­s during the five-year inquiry. The other had to do with the diversion program on the gun charge, under which she would be called on to play a role in determinin­g whether Biden was meeting the terms of the deal.

Noreika said she was not trying to sink the agreement, but to strengthen it by ironing out ambiguitie­s and inconsiste­ncies. But by the end of the tumultuous hearing, the sides had splintered, prosecutor­s filed paperwork indicating they would proceed with a prosecutio­n, and the embattled Weiss requested to be named special counsel, which requires him to file a report at the conclusion of the investigat­ion.

The indictment unsealed Thursday was not a surprise. On Sept. 6, Weiss told the court he planned to bring gun charges before the end of the month.

The Justice Department has been investigat­ing Hunter Biden since 2018. Despite looking into an array of matters — including his work for Burisma, his ties to oligarchs and the business deals in China — the investigat­ion ultimately narrowed to the questions about Biden’s taxes and the gun purchase.

 ?? ?? Hunter Biden
Hunter Biden
 ?? ANDREW HARNIK AP FILE ?? President Joe Biden and his son Hunter Biden arrive at Fort McNair in Washington on June 25.
ANDREW HARNIK AP FILE President Joe Biden and his son Hunter Biden arrive at Fort McNair in Washington on June 25.

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