Connect with us

News

Joe Biden pardons son Hunter over gun and tax charges

Published

on

Joe Biden pardons son Hunter over gun and tax charges

Unlock the White House Watch newsletter for free

Joe Biden has pardoned his son Hunter over convictions on gun and tax charges in an extraordinary reversal of his promise not to use executive powers to benefit his son less than two months before the end of his presidency.

In a statement on Sunday night, the US president accused political opponents in Congress of “instigating” the charges against Hunter to attack him.

“No reasonable person who looks at the facts of Hunter’s cases can reach any other conclusion than Hunter was singled out only because he is my son — and that is wrong,” Biden said.

Advertisement

“From the day I took office, I said I would not interfere with the Justice Department’s decision-making, and I kept my word even as I have watched my son being selectively, and unfairly, prosecuted,” Biden added.

Hunter’s legal troubles have been a political headache for Joe Biden ever since his electoral victory in 2020, when his son disclosed he was under federal investigation.

In June this year, he was convicted on three felony counts of lying on a federal background check when purchasing a handgun. The trial featured detailed testimony about his crack cocaine addiction and his romantic relationship with his brother’s widow.

Hunter Biden also pleaded guilty to tax charges last month in a Los Angeles federal court. He was accused of evading $1.4mn in taxes, some through inappropriate business deductions. He allegedly spent the cash on items including cars, drugs, and prostitutes.

The president has issued multiple statements supporting his son, but he has also said he would not pardon him.

Advertisement

Hunter Biden was due to be sentenced on December 12 in Delaware for the firearm case and four days later in California for the tax case. 

He faced a maximum imprisonment of 25 years in the gun proceedings, prosecutors said upon indicting him. The tax charges carried a maximum of 17 years in prison. However both actual sentencings were considered likely to be less severe. 

On Sunday evening, Biden said the legal attacks were part of “an effort to break Hunter”, adding that he had reached his decision to pardon his son over the weekend.

“For my entire career I have followed a simple principle: just tell the American people the truth. They’ll be fair-minded,” Biden wrote.

“Here’s the truth: I believe in the justice system, but as I have wrestled with this, I also believe raw politics has infected this process and it led to a miscarriage of justice”.

Advertisement

Steven Cheung, Donald Trump’s communications director, suggested that Biden’s move supported Trump’s claims of a politically motivated justice system. “The failed witch hunts against President Trump have proven that the Democrat-controlled DOJ and other radical prosecutors are guilty of weaponising the justice system,” Cheung said.

Republican congressman James Comer, chair of the House Oversight Committee, said Biden had lied when he claimed he would not pardon his son, referring to the family as the “Biden Crime Family”.

In a statement, Hunter Biden said he had “admitted and taken responsibility” for “mistakes during the darkest days of my addiction — mistakes that have been exploited to publicly humiliate and shame me and my family for political sport”.

The president’s son vowed to “never take the clemency I have been given today for granted” and pledged to devote his life to “helping those who are still sick and suffering”.

The pardon applies to all offences committed by the president’s son between January 1 2014 and December 1 2024.

Advertisement

Both cases have been overseen by David Weiss, a special counsel appointed by US attorney-general Merrick Garland, due to the “extraordinary circumstances” of the proceedings.

Garland also installed special counsels to handle probes targeting Joe Biden’s handling of classified documents and Trump’s alleged meddling in the 2020 general election and retention of classified material. Joe Biden ultimately was not charged while the DoJ is seeking to dismiss Trump’s indictments based on internal policy barring prosecution of a sitting president.

Continue Reading
Advertisement
Click to comment

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

News

President Biden pardons son Hunter

Published

on

President Biden pardons son Hunter

President Biden and his son Hunter Biden walk in downtown Nantucket, Mass., on Friday.

Jose Luis Magana/AP


hide caption

toggle caption

Advertisement

Jose Luis Magana/AP

President Biden announced late Sunday that he had signed a full and unconditional pardon for his son Hunter Biden.

The pardon comes in the last weeks of President Biden’s time in office and despite his public assurances in the past that he would neither pardon nor commute his son’s sentence.

“I signed a pardon for my son Hunter,” Biden said in a White House statement. “It is clear that Hunter was treated differently.”

Advertisement

Hunter Biden was convicted in June of federal gun charges for lying about his addiction to crack cocaine when he purchased a gun. Three months later, he entered a guilty plea to tax offenses for failing to pay at least $1.4 million in federal taxes. Sentencing was expected later this month in both cases.

Both of the prosecutions were brought by Justice Department special counsel David Weiss. The cases were rooted in a period of time when Hunter Biden was wrestling with the death of his brother, Beau, and struggling with his own addiction to crack cocaine.

In June, President Biden promised not to pardon his son and said, “I will not pardon him” after his son was convicted for three federal gun charges.

The 82-year-old seemed to address this reversal in his statement.

Advertisement

“I believe in the justice system, but as I have wrestled with this, I also believe raw politics has infected this process and it led to a miscarriage of justice,” Biden wrote.

President Biden and his son Hunter spent the Thanksgiving weekend together in Nantucket, Mass. The Biden family is known to be very close.

“In trying to break Hunter, they’ve tried to break me — and there’s no reason to believe it will stop here,” Biden said. “Enough is enough.”

Hunter Biden’s legal troubles have long been viewed as a political liability for his father, and Republicans frequently sought to tarnish President Biden.

At the time of Hunter Biden’s gun trial in Delaware in June, his father was still running for reelection in a what was seen as a tight race with Donald Trump. A bank of news cameras lined the walkway into the federal courthouse in downtown Wilmington.

Advertisement

By the time of the tax trial in early September, President Biden had dropped out of the race and the potential political impact of Hunter Biden’s criminal conduct had largely disappeared.

In a statement emailed to NPR, Hunter Biden seemed to acknowledge how his legal issues had affected his father’s political life.

“I have admitted and taken responsibility for my mistakes during the darkest days of my addiction — mistakes that have been exploited to publicly humiliate and shame me and my family for political sport.”

Continue Reading

News

Russian and Syrian warplanes seek to blunt rebel advance from Aleppo

Published

on

Russian and Syrian warplanes seek to blunt rebel advance from Aleppo

Russian and Syrian warplanes have intensified attacks on rebels who over-ran most of Aleppo, Syria’s second city, in a lightning assault that poses the biggest challenge in years to Bashar al-Assad’s regime.

Air raids struck the rebel-held city of Idlib for a second day on Sunday, while opposition media and war monitors said Russian and Syrian jets had also launched attacks near Aleppo University Hospital.

Thousands of rebels, led by Islamist group Hayat Tahrir al-Sham, entered Aleppo city, which has a population of 2mn, on Friday. Images circulating on opposition-linked social media this weekend showed them raising their flag over the city’s citadel and posing in its airport.

The rebels, who launched their assault only on Wednesday, said their fighters had advanced in multiple directions from their stronghold in Idlib province in north-western Syria, although their progress seemed to have slowed by Sunday.

HTS rebels attempted to press on to the major regime-held city of Hama, south of Aleppo, and claimed they had seized at least four towns in Hama province. The Syrian army has denied this. Rebels also said they captured the strategic town of Sheikh Najjar.

Advertisement

In his first public comments since the start of the offensive, Assad said Syria would continue to “defend its stability and its territorial integrity in the face of terrorists and their supporters”, in remarks carried by state news agency Sana.

The comments came during a call with Emirati leader Mohammed bin Zayed, an Assad ally, who “emphasised the UAE’s solidarity with Syria and its support in combating terrorism”.

Later, Assad vowed to defeat the insurgents in a phone call with the acting leader of the breakaway Georgian region of Abkhazia, Badra Ganba, saying “terrorism only understands the language of force”.

It was not clear whether Assad had returned to Syria following a visit to Moscow earlier this week.

The Syrian army denied that the rebels had secured Aleppo, but later said it was redeploying its forces as it prepared to launch a counterattack supported by Russian air strikes and strengthen its defensive lines after days of fierce fighting. Dozens of Syrian army soldiers were killed by rebel forces, the defence ministry said.

Advertisement

Social media videos showed rebel fighters driving through the streets of Aleppo, pulling down and kicking statues of Assad family members and celebrating by honking horns and firing their weapons. Videos also showed them freeing captives from Aleppo prisons.

Hundreds of civilians fled the city and its suburbs and headed for regime- or Kurdish-controlled areas, fearing a repeat of the gruelling 2016 battle that devastated their city. Those who remained in Aleppo were placed under night-time curfew by the HTS, residents told the Financial Times, adding that the streets were mostly empty on Sunday.

Assad faces increasing domestic and external pressures in a country shattered by a civil war that erupted after a 2011 popular uprising. He was able to quash the original rebellion with military backing from Russia, Iran and Iran-backed groups, including Hizbollah, the Lebanese militant movement.

Despite regaining control over two-thirds of the country, years of conflict and a deep economic crisis have left much of Syria in ruins.

The fighting had largely subsided in recent years, with the surviving rebel groups pushed into northern and north-western areas close to the Turkish border.

Advertisement

But over the past year, Israel has intensified air strikes on Iran-affiliated targets in Syria as it launched an offensive against Hizbollah in Lebanon, severely weakening groups that had played a vital role in keeping Assad in power.

<ap denoting the control of Syrian territory
G0911_24X

HTS’s ability to move deeper into Syria is a major embarrassment for Assad, underscoring the regime’s weakness. The offensive appeared to have been planned for years, and comes at a time when Assad’s allies are preoccupied with their own conflicts in Ukraine and the Middle East.

HTS leader Abu Mohammad al-Jolani said his fighters would not rest “until we reach the heart of Damascus”, in old video footage that was republished by social media networks linked to the group this weekend.

Russian warplanes bombed rebel positions in a bid to stem their advance. Russia’s defence ministry was quoted by state news agencies as saying the country’s forces had killed “at least 300 militants by missile strikes . . . on command posts, warehouses and artillery positions”.

Russian military blog Rybar, known to be close to the defence ministry, said it understood that Major General Sergei Kisel, the top commander of Russia’s forces in Syria, had been removed from his post.

He was earlier removed from his position commanding Russia’s 1st tank army in Ukraine shortly after the start of Russia’s full-scale invasion in 2022, after the supposedly elite force suffered heavy defeats in the first weeks of the war.

Advertisement

The Rybar channel also said Russian troops were forced to evacuate the Kuweires air base in the Aleppo area as the rebels advanced. The Syrian air base was regularly used by Russian forces.

Russian foreign minister Sergei Lavrov has discussed the situation in Syria with Hakan Fidan, his Turkish counterpart. Lavrov also spoke to Iran’s foreign minister Abbas Araghchi, who is expected to visit Damascus on Sunday and Ankara on Monday, as the main powers involved in Syria began a flurry of diplomacy.

Araghchi on Sunday reaffirmed Iran’s unwavering support for Assad, accusing radical Islamist factions of aligning with the interests of the US and Israel. “We will witness their defeat,” he said.

Iranian state media reported that opposition forces in Aleppo seized Iran’s consulate on Saturday, tearing down and destroying images of Iranian political and military leaders.

The Kurdish-led Syrian Democratic Forces, which are supported by the US in the fight against Isis and control swaths of Syria’s north-east, announced a general mobilisation on Sunday. They called on people to join in the defence against the rebel offensive, which they say was “orchestrated” by Turkey — their longtime foe.  

Advertisement

Additional reporting by Najmeh Bozorgmehr in Tehran

Continue Reading

News

Trump names loyalist Kash Patel to serve as FBI director

Published

on

Trump names loyalist Kash Patel to serve as FBI director
Trump names loyalist Kash Patel to serve as FBI director – CBS New York

Watch CBS News


President-elect Donald Trump named loyalist Kash Patel to serve as FBI director and replace Christopher Wray. CBS News New York’s Wendy Gillette reports.

Advertisement

Be the first to know

Get browser notifications for breaking news, live events, and exclusive reporting.


Advertisement
Continue Reading

Trending