Ex-FBI informant charged with lying about Joe Biden and his son
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[February 16, 2024]
By Kanishka Singh
WASHINGTON (Reuters) -The U.S. special counsel leading a criminal probe
into President Joe Biden's son, Hunter Biden, said a former FBI
informant was charged with lying about the pair's alleged involvement in
business dealings with Ukrainian energy company Burisma Holdings.
In a statement on Thursday, Special Counsel David Weiss said a federal
grand jury had indicted Alexander Smirnov, 43, on charges of making a
"false statement" and "creating a false and fictitious record" in
relation to an FBI probe. Smirnov faces a maximum penalty of 25 years in
prison if convicted.
Burisma and Hunter Biden's role at the company have been heavily
scrutinized following unproven claims from Republican former President
Donald Trump and others that Democrat Joe Biden improperly tried to help
his son's business interests in Ukraine. The White House has denied the
claims.
Smirnov was arrested on Wednesday at Harry Reid International Airport in
Las Vegas, Nevada, after his arrival in the U.S. from overseas, Weiss
said.
It was not immediately clear whether Smirnov had an attorney.
The indictment unsealed on Thursday appeared to deal a blow to the
Republican accusations that the U.S. president profited from his son's
business in Ukraine.
"For months we have warned that Republicans have built their
conspiracies about Hunter and his family on lies told by people with
political agendas, not facts," Hunter Biden's lawyer, Abbe Lowell, said
in a statement. "We were right and the air is out of their balloon."
In December, the Republican-controlled U.S. House of Representatives
voted to formally authorize an ongoing impeachment inquiry into the U.S.
president. Some Republicans at the time referenced Hunter Biden's prior
role at Burisma to say they were "mighty suspicious of folks from the
president's family making tens of millions of dollars in professions in
which they had no experience."
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U.S. President Joe Biden boards Marine One with his son Hunter Biden
en route to Camp David, from Joint Base Andrews, Maryland, U.S. June
24, 2023. REUTERS/Elizabeth Frantz
Separately, a source said on Thursday that Robert Hur, the U.S.
prosecutor who produced a politically explosive report that raised
questions about Joe Biden's memory, will testify in March to a House
committee playing a lead role in the chamber's impeachment inquiry
into the president.
Hunter Biden sat on the board of Burisma from 2014 to 2019. For part
of that time, his father was U.S. vice president under former
President Barack Obama.
Smirnov had claimed he spoke to the owner to Burisma in 2017 about
the energy company's efforts to buy a U.S. firm.
The indictment says that in 2020, Smirnov made false statements
recounting two meetings from 2015 or 2016 in which executives
associated with Burisma told him they had hired Hunter Biden to
"protect us, through his dad, from all kinds of problems."
The indictment adds that Smirnov also falsely claimed Burisma
executives had paid $5 million each to Joe Biden and Hunter Biden
when the former was vice president so that his son would "take care
of all those issues through his dad," referring to a criminal probe
of the energy company by the then-Ukrainian prosecutor general.
Burisma also played a central role in Trump's 2019 impeachment over
his alleged efforts to pressure Ukraine to investigate the Bidens
and help him win re-election. A Republican-majority Senate later
acquitted Trump.
(Reporting by Kanishka Singh in Washington; Additional reporting by
Andrew Goudsward in WashingtonEditing by Rami Ayyub and Matthew
Lewis)
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