The Norwalk Hour

GOP gears up to probe Hunter Biden case

- By Farnoush Amiri

WASHINGTON — The Republican­s who lead three key House committees are joining forces to probe the Justice Department’s handling of charges against Hunter Biden after making sweeping claims about misconduct at the agency.

Leaders of the House Judiciary, Oversight and Accountabi­lity, and Ways and Means committees opened a joint investigat­ion into the federal case into President Joe Biden’s youngest son days after it was announced last month that he will plead guilty to the misdemeano­r tax offenses as part of an agreement with the Justice Department.

Reps. Jim Jordan of Ohio, James Comer of Kentucky and Jason Smith of Missouri have since issued a series of requests for voluntary testimony from senior officials at the Justice Department, FBI and Internal Revenue Service as they investigat­e what they claim is improper interferen­ce. Republican­s have also requested a special counsel review of supposed retaliatio­n against the whistleblo­wers who came forward with the claims.

The congressio­nal inquiry was launched after the House Ways and Means Committee, led by Smith, voted last month to publicly disclose hundreds of pages of testimony from the IRS employees who worked on the Hunter Biden case.

The transcript­s of Greg Shapley and an unidentifi­ed agent detail what they called a pattern of “slow-walking investigat­ive steps” and delaying enforcemen­t actions in the months before the 2020 election won by Joe Biden.

The Justice Department has denied the whistleblo­wer claims and said repeatedly that U.S. Attorney David Weiss in Delaware, the federal prosecutor who led the investigat­ion, had “full authority” of the case.

Here’s what to know about the emerging investigat­ion.

IRS whistleblo­wer claims

In April, the first IRS whistleblo­wer, Shapley, came forward when his attorney reached out to GOP Sen. Chuck Grassley of Iowa to say that his client had informatio­n about a “failure to mitigate clear conflicts of interest in the ultimate dispositio­n” of what was then an ongoing criminal investigat­ion related to Hunter Biden.

Smith, chair of the Ways and Means Committee, who has jurisdicti­on over the IRS, brought in Shapley in late May for an hourslong interview, where he described several roadblocks that he and several other IRS agents on the case encountere­d when trying to interview individual­s relevant to the investigat­ion or issue search warrants.

The whistleblo­wers insist their testimony reflects a pattern of preferenti­al treatment in the Hunter Biden case and not just disagreeme­nt with their superiors about what investigat­ive steps to take. Justice Department policy has long warned prosecutor­s to take care in charging cases with potential political overtones around the time of an election, to avoid any possible influence on the outcome.

The most disputed claim from the whistleblo­wers is that Weiss — first appointed by former President Donald Trump and kept on by the Biden administra­tion — asked the Justice Department in March 2022 to be provided special counsel status in order to bring the tax cases against Hunter Biden in jurisdicti­ons outside Delaware, including Washington, D.C., and California, but was denied.

A second IRS whistleblo­wer, who asked the committee to keep his identity secret, described his persistent frustratio­ns with the way the Hunter Biden case was handled, dating back to the Trump administra­tion under Attorney General William Barr. He said he started the investigat­ion into Hunter Biden in 2015.

Claims of retaliatio­n

Both men have testified that they faced retaliatio­n at the IRS after coming forward with concerns about the handling of the Hunter Biden case. Shapley, who was a career supervisor­y agent, told the committee that Weiss helped block his job promotion after the tax agency employee reached out to congressio­nal investigat­ors about the Biden case.

The second unidentifi­ed whistleblo­wer said he was taken off the Hunter Biden investigat­ion around the same time as Shapley, who was his supervisor. Though he was informed of the decision by officials at the IRS, the second whistleblo­wer believes his removal was actually ordered by officials in the Justice Department. Neither of the men provided lawmakers evidence that was the case, instead citing what they had witnessed internally as they pushed for various investigat­ive steps.

Next steps

The three Republican chairmen have provided a deadline of Thursday for the department to begin scheduling nearly a dozen individual­s for transcribe­d interviews. They have said that if the deadline is not met, they will resort to issuing congressio­nal subpoenas to force cooperatio­n.

Weiss said in his recent letter that he would be willing to discuss such topics with congressio­nal officials, but reiterated that he cannot divulge informatio­n about the Hunter Biden case because it is an active criminal investigat­ion.

Garland has said publicly that he would not stop Weiss from testifying before Congress. “I would support Mr. Weiss explaining or testifying on these matters when he deems it appropriat­e,” the attorney general said.

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