Biden's son Hunter to ask judge to dismiss tax charges as politically
motivated
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[March 27, 2024]
By Chris Kirkham and Andrew Goudsward
LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - President Joe Biden’s son Hunter will ask a U.S.
judge on Wednesday to dismiss the criminal case accusing him of evading
$1.4 million in taxes, arguing that prosecutors bowed to political
pressure from Republican lawmakers investigating his father.
Hunter Biden’s lawyers will appear before U.S. District Judge Mark
Scarsi in federal court in Los Angeles to press several legal challenges
to the charges, including an argument that he was selectively targeted
by prosecutors in response to Republican criticism over alleged earlier
lenient treatment.
Hunter Biden, 54, pleaded not guilty to failing to pay $1.4 million in
taxes between 2016 and 2019, while spending millions of dollars on
drugs, escorts, exotic cars and other big-ticket items. His lawyer has
said he paid back the money in full.
The trial is due to start in June, a few months before Americans vote in
a November presidential election that looks set to be a close and deeply
divisive contest between Joe Biden, himself the subject of an
impeachment probe, and Donald Trump, who faces four criminal trials.
Hunter Biden, the first child of a sitting president to face criminal
charges, also faces a separate criminal case in federal court in
Delaware over his alleged purchase of a handgun while he was using
illegal drugs. He has pleaded not guilty and made similar arguments to
dismiss the charges in that case.
Special Counsel David Weiss, who brought both cases, has accused Hunter
Biden’s legal team of spreading “conspiracy theories” about the
prosecution and said the justice department, under the Biden
administration, would not act at the direction of Republican lawmakers.
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Hunter Biden, son of U.S. President Joe Biden, is seen as he makes a
surprise appearance at a House Oversight Committee markup and
meeting to vote on whether to hold Biden in contempt of Congress for
failing to respond to a request to testify to the House last month,
on Capitol Hill in Washington, U.S., January 10, 2024. REUTERS/Kevin
Lamarque/File Photo
Hunter Biden’s foreign business dealings, which are detailed in the
tax indictment, are at the center of an impeachment investigation by
Republicans in the House of Representatives into whether Joe Biden
profited from his son’s activities.
The probe has so far turned up no evidence that the president
personally benefited.
Hunter Biden is also seeking to toss out the charges by arguing that
Weiss, who has investigated Hunter Biden since 2019, was improperly
appointed special counsel.
Weiss was originally nominated by Republican former President Donald
Trump as U.S. attorney in Hunter Biden's home state of Delaware. He
was named special counsel last year by Attorney General Merrick
Garland, who was nominated by Joe Biden.
Hunter Biden's defense team has also argued that the case is barred
by an earlier plea deal the president’s son struck with prosecutors.
The deal, which collapsed under questioning from a federal judge
last year, called for Biden to plead guilty to misdemeanor tax
charges. Prosecutors have said it never took effect.
(Reporting by Chris Kirkham in Los Angeles and Andrew Goudsward in
Washington; Editing by Noeleen Walder and Costas Pitas)
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