The Trentonian (Trenton, NJ)

Hunter Biden to GOP: Father not involved in business

- By Farnoush Amiri

WASHINGTON >> Hunter Biden appeared Wednesday on Capitol Hill for a closeddoor deposition with lawmakers, a critical moment for Republican­s in their impeachmen­t inquiry into his father and the family’s business affairs.

“I am here today to provide the committees with the one uncontesta­ble fact that should end the false premise of this inquiry: I did not involve my father in my business,” Hunter Biden said in an opening statement obtained by The Associated Press.

The deposition could mark a decisive point for the 14-month Republican investigat­ion into the Biden family, which has centered on Hunter Biden and his overseas work for clients in Ukraine, China, Romania and other countries. Republican­s have long questioned whether those business dealings involved corruption and influence peddling by President Joe Biden, particular­ly when he was vice president.

Yet after conducting dozens of interviews and obtaining more than 100,000 pages of documents, Republican­s have yet to produce direct evidence of misconduct by the president. Meanwhile, an FBI informant who alleged a bribery scheme involving the Bidens — a claim Republican­s had cited repeatedly to justify their probe — is facing charges from federal prosecutor­s who accuse him of fabricatin­g the story.

Despite the stakes of their investigat­ion, it remains unclear how much useful informatio­n Republican­s will be able to extract from Hunter Biden during the deposition. He is under federal investigat­ion and has been indicted on nine federal tax charges and a firearm charge in Delaware, which means he could refuse to answer some questions by asserting his Fifth Amendment rights.

The task of interviewi­ng Hunter falls primarily to Reps. James Comer and Jim Jordan, the GOP chairmen leading the impeachmen­t investigat­ion. They first subpoenaed Hunter Biden in November, demanding that he appear before lawmakers in a private setting.

Biden and his attorneys refused, warning that his testimony could be selectivel­y leaked and manipulate­d. They insisted that Hunter Biden would only testify in public.

On the day of the subpoena, Hunter Biden not only snubbed lawmakers waiting for him in a hearing room — he did also while appearing outside the Capitol, holding a press conference where he denounced the investigat­ion into his family.

Both sides ultimately agreed in January to a private deposition with a set of conditions. The interview with Hunter Biden will not be filmed and Republican­s have agreed to quickly release the transcript.

“Our committees have the opportunit­y to depose Hunter Biden, a key witness in our impeachmen­t inquiry of President Joe Biden, about this record of evidence,” Comer, chair of the House Oversight Committee, said in a statement to The Associated Press. “This deposition is not the conclusion of the impeachmen­t inquiry. There are more subpoenas and witness interviews to come.”

Hunter will be the second member of the Biden family questioned by Republican­s in recent days.

They conducted a more than eight-hour interview last week with James Biden, the president’s brother. He insisted to lawmakers that Joe Biden has “never had any involvemen­t,” financiall­y or otherwise, in his business ventures.

The informant

Looming large over the interview are developmen­ts on the other side of the country in Nevada, where federal prosecutor­s this month indicted an FBI informant, Alexander Smirnov, who claimed there was a multimilli­on-dollar bribery scheme involving the president, his son Hunter and a Ukrainian energy company. Prosecutor­s in court documents assert that Smirnov has had “extensive and extremely recent” contact with people who are aligned with Russian intelligen­ce.

Smirnov’s attorneys have said he is presumed innocent.

Republican­s pressed the FBI last summer over the informant’s claims, demanding to see the underlying documents and ultimately releasing the unverified informatio­n to the public. The claim was cited repeatedly in letters that House Republican­s sent to impeachmen­t witnesses.

Some GOP lawmakers say they have yet to see evidence of the “high crimes and misdemeano­rs” required for impeachmen­t, despite alleged efforts by members of the Biden family to leverage the last name into corporate paydays domestical­ly and abroad.

But the Republican chairmen leading the impeachmen­t effort remain undeterred by the series of setbacks to their marquee investigat­ion. Jordan, the chair of the House Judiciary Committee, said last week that the informant’s indictment “does not change the fundamenta­l facts” that the Biden family tried to benefit off the family name in several overseas businesses.

And Comer told Fox News on Tuesday that Smirnov was never “a key part of this investigat­ion.”

Both Comer and Jordan have insisted for the past year that their investigat­ion and inquiry is focused solely on Joe Biden and what actions, if any, he took while as vice president or president to benefit his family.

But at nearly every turn, their probe has had a consistent and heavy focus on Hunter Biden. Several lines of inquiry have been opened into Hunter’s internatio­nal business affairs, his artwork sales and his personal life and on-and-off battle with addiction.

Meanwhile, Hunter Biden has no shortage of legal headaches off Capitol Hill as he faces criminal charges in two states from a special counsel investigat­ion. He’s charged with firearm counts in Delaware, alleging he broke laws against drug users having guns in 2018, a period when he has acknowledg­ed struggling with addiction.

Special counsel David Weiss filed additional charges late last year, alleging he failed to pay about $1.4 million in taxes over three years.

 ?? J. SCOTT APPLEWHITE -THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Hunter Biden, left, son of President Joe Biden, arrives with attorney Abbe Lowell at the O’Neill House Office Building for a closed-door deposition in a Republican-led investigat­ion into the Biden family on Capitol Hill on Wednesday. Lawmakers from the House Oversight and Accountabi­lity Committee and the House Judiciary Committee are conducting the inquiry.
J. SCOTT APPLEWHITE -THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Hunter Biden, left, son of President Joe Biden, arrives with attorney Abbe Lowell at the O’Neill House Office Building for a closed-door deposition in a Republican-led investigat­ion into the Biden family on Capitol Hill on Wednesday. Lawmakers from the House Oversight and Accountabi­lity Committee and the House Judiciary Committee are conducting the inquiry.

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