Biden's son Hunter hit with gun charge, first for a US president's child
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[September 15, 2023]
By Sarah N. Lynch, Jarrett Renshaw and Andrew Goudsward
WASHINGTON (Reuters) -U.S. President Joe Biden's son Hunter Biden was
criminally charged on Thursday with deceiving a gun dealer into selling
him a firearm, in the latest sign of how the younger Biden's legal woes
may weigh on his father's re-election bid next year.
The first-ever indictment of a sitting president's child, filed in U.S.
District Court in Delaware, charged Hunter Biden with three criminal
counts related to lying about the fact he was using illegal drugs at
that time, which would have banned him under the law from owning a
firearm.
The charges ensure that courtroom drama will play an outsized role in
the 2024 U.S. presidential campaign as Joe Biden, 80, seeks reelection
in a likely rematch with his Republican predecessor Donald Trump, 77,
who faces four upcoming criminal trials of his own.
The new charges against Hunter Biden brought by recently elevated U.S.
Special Counsel David Weiss say nothing about any violations of U.S. tax
law. A prior deal under which Hunter Biden, 53, would have pleaded
guilty to two misdemeanor tax charges and enroll in a program to avoid
prosecution on the gun charge collapsed in a stunning turn in a July
hearing.
The tax investigation into Biden remains ongoing, after Weiss previously
said any possible charges would need to be brought in either the
District of Columbia or the Los Angeles-based Central District of
California.
Prosecutors accused the younger Biden of lying about his use of
narcotics when he purchased a Colt Cobra handgun in October 2018.
The move comes two days after House of Representatives Republicans
opened an impeachment inquiry of Joe Biden related to Hunter Biden's
foreign business dealings. The White House has denounced that step, made
without a vote by the full House, as unsubstantiated and politically
motivated.
"As expected, prosecutors filed charges today that they deemed were not
warranted just six weeks ago following a five-year investigation into
this case," Hunter Biden attorney Abbe Lowell said in a statement. "The
evidence in this matter has not changed in the last six weeks, but the
law has and so has MAGA Republicans' improper and partisan interference
in this process."
The White House declined to comment. A spokesperson for Weiss declined
to comment.
Some legal experts have said that any firearms-related charges against
Biden could be vulnerable to a constitutional challenge, after the U.S.
Supreme Court last year in a landmark ruling expanded gun rights under
the U.S. Constitution's Second Amendment, which protects the right to
bear arms.
Lowell referred to that dispute in his statement, noting "the recent
rulings by several federal courts that this statute is
unconstitutional."
SPECIAL COUNSEL STATUS
Weiss was elevated to special counsel status in August after
investigating Hunter Biden's business dealings for years as the U.S.
attorney in the Democratic president's home state of Delaware. Weiss was
originally nominated by Trump.
The younger Biden for years has been the focus of unrelenting attacks by
Trump and his Republican allies who have accused him of wrongdoing
relating to Ukraine and China, among other matters. Hunter Biden has
worked as a lobbyist, lawyer, investment banker and artist, and has
publicly detailed his struggles with substance abuse.
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Hunter Biden walks to the motorcade after arriving at Fort McNair,
after U.S. President Joe Biden spent the weekend at Camp David, in
Washington, U.S., July 4, 2023. REUTERS/Julia Nikhinson/File Photo
While Republican lawmakers have collected testimony that Joe Biden
at times joined calls with his son's business associates, they have
yet to produce evidence that the president personally benefited.
"Today’s charges against Hunter Biden are a very small start, but
unless U.S. Attorney Weiss investigates everyone involved in the
fraud schemes and influence peddling, it will be clear President
Biden’s DOJ is protecting Hunter Biden and the big guy," said
Republican Representative James Comer, chairman of the House
Oversight Committee, one of the three committees leading the
impeachment inquiry kicked off this week.
Hunter Biden disclosed in December 2020 that Weiss's office was
investigating his tax affairs. He has denied wrongdoing.
While most U.S. attorneys appointed by Trump were asked to step down
when Biden took office in January 2021, as is routine, the Justice
Department asked Weiss to stay on.
Hunter Biden never held a position in the White House or on his
father's campaign. The president has said he has not discussed
foreign business dealings with his son and has said his Justice
Department would have independence in any investigation of a member
of his family.
Trump and other Republicans have alleged what they called conflicts
of interest from Hunter Biden's position on the board of the
Ukrainian energy company Burisma at the time his father was vice
president to Democratic President Barack Obama. Trump in a July 2019
phone call with Ukraine's president asked him to have his government
open an investigation into Joe and Hunter Biden in the lead-up to
the U.S. presidential election.
The Democratic-led House of Representatives later voted to impeach
Trump on charges of abuse of power and obstruction of Congress
stemming from these efforts, though the Senate ultimately voted to
keep Trump in office.
Hunter Biden described in a 2021 memoir dealing with substance abuse
issues in his life including crack cocaine use and alcoholism. He
was discharged from the U.S. Navy reserve in 2014 after, sources
said at the time, testing positive for cocaine.
The president has two surviving children, Hunter Biden and daughter
Ashley Biden. His son Beau Biden died in 2015 of cancer and his
daughter Naomi Biden died as an infant after a car accident that
also killed Joe Biden's first wife.
Hunter Biden appears to be the first child of a sitting president to
be indicted, according to Aaron Crawford, who specializes in
presidential history at the University of Tennessee.
(Reporting by Sarah N. Lynch, Jarrett Renshaw and Andrew Goudsward
in Washington, additional reporting by Tom Hals in Wilmington,
Delaware and Nate Raymond in Boston; Editing by Scott Malone, Lisa
Shumaker, Alistair Bell and Daniel Wallis)
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