Hunter Biden
Last updated July 17, 2017
Scandals explained: Ukraine, China, drug history and more.
From his eyebrow-raising dealings in Delaware, China and Ukraine to
controversies involving drug use and child support, Hunter Biden is no stranger
to scandal. Hunter Biden is the son of former vice president and Democratic
presidential candidate Joe Biden has faced accusations of corrupt behavior from
both sides of the political aisle, and played a starring role in the recently
concluded impeachment proceedings against President Trump.
Hunter Biden's
distinct scandals are best understood in rough chronological order because
Republicans have argued that Biden's apparently irresponsible behavior only made
it more likely that his later sweetheart gigs were obtained not through merit,
but because of connections that he could monetize.
Delaware
In 2008,
both The New York Times and The American Spectator highlighted Hunter Biden's
sweetheart gigs while his father rose in political prominence. The articles,
written as Barack Obama and John McCain vied for the White House, found that
Hunter Biden received consulting fees from the financial services company MBNA
from 2001 to 2005 while his father, then a senator, was pushing successfully for
legislation that would make it harder for consumers to file for bankruptcy
protection.
The precise amount of the payments was unclear, but a company
official once said Hunter Biden was receiving at least a $100,000 per year
retainer, the Times reported. Hunter Biden, now 49, previously had been an
executive at MBNA beginning in 1996, but the consulting fees came years after
his departure from the company as a full-time employee.
Aides to
then-presidential candidate Barack Obama at the time denied that any lobbying
had occurred, and insisted the payments were proper. However, that explanation
was immediately treated with skepticism. The Trump campaign recently posted a
contemporaneous interview in which an incredulous Tom Brokaw asked Joe Biden
whether it was "inappropriate" for the then-senator to have his son "collecting
money from this big credit card company while you were on the [Senate] floor
protecting its interests."
Hunter Biden's previous work as an executive
at MBNA from 1996 to 1998 also has raised what critics called red flags.
Rachel Mullen, a former senior personal banking officer at MBNA from 1994-2001
who later went into Republican politics, tweeted that managers referred to the
younger Biden as "Senator MBNA" after he was hired into a lucrative
management-prep track right after he graduated from Yale Law School.
An
MBNA source who previously worked at the company told Fox News that other
employees heard Hunter Biden boasting that his salary was unusually high, even
for the management-prep track which was widely seen in the company as a way to
groom and pamper well-connected executive candidates with powerful family
members.
The source said Biden's "Senator MBNA" nickname was not
politically motivated, but rather reflected a widely held belief among managers
who did not work directly with Biden that he essentially was engaged in
lobbying.
The Bidens' connections with MBNA apparently ran deep. In a
January 2008 article entitled "The Senator from MBNA," columnist Byron York
recounted how then-MBNA vice chairman John Cochran paid "top dollar" for Joe
Biden's home in February 1996, just prior to his Senate reelection bid, and that
"MBNA gave Cochran a lot of money $330,000 to help with 'expenses' related to
the move."
The $1.2M sale was a "pretty darned good deal for Hunter
Biden," York wrote, noting that "Cochran simply paid Biden's full asking price"
even though the "house needed quite a bit of work; contractors and their trucks
descended on the house for months after the purchase."
Asked how Cochran
and Hunter Biden found each other for the sale, an MBNA spokesperson told York:
"That's a very personal question."
Aside from MBNA during this period,
the younger Biden worked at a lobbying firm and served on the board of Amtrak --
a prestigious role he apparently obtained through his connections, although
Democrats claimed he deserved the post because he traveled regularly on trains.
"Hunter Biden has spent a lot of time on Amtrak trains. Like his father,
like our congressman, Mike Castle, and myself, Hunter Biden has lived in
Delaware while using Amtrak to commute to his job as we commute to our job in
Washington almost every day of the week," Democratic Delaware Sen. Tom Carper
said at a hearing on Biden's nomination to the Amtrak board in June 2006. "You
know, you learn a lot about what could work and what would work better at Amtrak
by riding trains and talking to the passengers, the commuters, the passengers,
the folks who work on the trains and make them work every day."
Navy
expulsion
In 2014, Hunter Biden was kicked out of the military after
testing positive for cocaine. The Navy said that Hunter Biden, a former lobbyist
who worked at a private equity firm, was discharged barely a year after he was
selected for his part-time position as a public affairs officer in the Navy
Reserve.
Two people familiar with the situation quickly told the media
that Hunter Biden was discharged because he failed a drug test in 2013. The Wall
Street Journal first reported Biden's discharge and failed drug test.
TREASURY COMPLIES WITH HUNTER BIDEN INQUIRY, HANDS OVER SENSITIVE DOCS
An
attorney by training, Hunter Biden applied to join the Navy Reserve as a public
affairs officer and was selected in 2012 one of seven candidates recommended for
a direct commission for public affairs. A board of senior Navy officers
interviewed Biden before making the recommendation.
Because he was 42 at
the time, he needed a special waiver to be accepted. Cmdr. Ryan Perry, a
spokesman for the Navy, said Hunter Biden had been assigned to the Navy Public
Affairs Support Element East, based in Norfolk, Va.
Ukraine
Hunter
Biden and and his friend Devon Archer joined the natural gas company Burisma
Holdings board in April 2014. Hunter Biden apparently cannot speak Ukrainian and
had no relevant natural gas experience.
Joe Biden has acknowledged on
camera that in spring 2016, when he was vice president and spearheading the
Obama administration's Ukraine policy, he successfully pressured Ukraine to fire
top prosecutor Viktor Shokin. At the time, Shokin was investigating the
notoriously corrupt Burisma Holdings where Hunter's role was especially
lucrative. The vice president threatened to withhold $1 billion in critical U.S.
aid if Shokin was not fired.
"Well, son of a b---h, he got fired," Biden
joked at a panel two years after leaving office. Shokin himself had already been
widely accused of corruption.
WHOOPS: BIDEN CAMPAIGN TOUTS UKRAINE
ACTIVIST WHO CALLED HUNTER'S ACTIONS 'VERY BAD'
Critics alleged Hunter
Biden might have been selling access to his father, who had pushed Ukraine to
increase its natural gas production.
Government officials have raised
similar concerns. During the House impeachment proceedings, a career State
Department employee testified that he had flagged Hunter Biden's apparent
conflict of interest, but was told essentially not to bother the vice
president's office.
"Impossible to justify $50k/month for Hunter Biden
serving on a Ukrainian energy board w zero expertise unless he promised to sell
access," political scientist Ian Bremmer previously tweeted.
Joe Biden
has said he never discussed his son's overseas business dealings -- an assertion
seemingly contradicted by both his son and a photo exclusively obtained by Fox
News.
"I know I did nothing wrong at all. Was it poor judgment to be in
the middle of something that is a swamp in many ways? Yeah," Hunter Biden said
in an exclusive sit-down with ABC's Amy Robach at his Los Angeles home last
October.
TENSIONS FLARE IN CONGRESS, AS GOP REP BRINGS UP HUNTER BIDEN'S
COCAINE USE
He acknowledged he may not have gotten the job were it not
for his connections to the vice presidency.
In the ABC News report last
year which also delved into the Bidens' China dealings, journalist Tom Llamas
called it "strange" that Ukrainian natural gas company Burisma Holdings, widely
accused of corruption, had appointed Hunter Biden to its board of directors --
and agreed to pay Hunter Biden's company "more than a million dollars a year."
"Hunter -- a lawyer, who had just been discharged from the Navy Reserves for
testing positive for cocaine," Llamas says incredulously. "He had served on
other boards, but had no known experience in Ukraine or natural gas."
Earlier this month, the Treasury Department complied with a Senate inquiry into
the younger Biden's business dealings in Ukraine and reportedly handed over
highly sensitive financial records and "evidence of questionable origin."
China
Top Republican senators recently requested travel records from the
Secret Service that might shed light on Hunter Biden's dealings in China, which
Trump has long said merit a state investigation.
Much of the focus
concerns Biden's position as one of nine directors at BHR -- a private-equity
company controlled by Chinese government-backed stakeholders. Senate Finance
Committee Chairman Chuck Grassley, R-Iowa, and Senate Homeland Security and
Governmental Affairs Committee Chairman Ron Johnson, R-Wis., said the
arrangement raised red flags.
"In December of 2013, one month after
Rosemont Seneca's joint venture with Bohai Capital to form BHR, Hunter Biden
reportedly flew aboard Air Force Two with then-Vice President Biden to China,"
the senators wrote. "While in China, he helped arrange for Jonathan Li, CEO of
Bohai Capital, to 'shake hands' with Vice President Biden."
"Afterward,"
they continued, "Hunter Biden met with Li for reportedly a 'social meeting.'
After the China trip, BHR's business license was approved.
Then, in 2015,
BHR joined with Aviation Industry Corporation of China (AVIC) to acquire
Henniges, which was the 'biggest Chinese investment into U.S. automotive
manufacturing assets to date.'"
The senators also sought travel records
relating to Biden's trips to Ukraine, if any.
Last year, Hunter Biden
stepped down from the board of BHR and said Hunter Biden wouldn't take similar
roles if his father won the presidency. The Wall Street Journal reported that
BHR Partners filings show that while Hunter was a director of BHR since its
founding, Hunter Biden didn't become a shareholder until October 2017.
Trump has specifically accused Biden of walking "out of China with $1.5 billion
in a fund." The Journal reported in 2014 that BHR was trying to raise that much
money to invest outside of China, but it's otherwise unclear what the president
was referencing.
Kids
In January of this year Hunter Biden agreed to
pay monthly child support retroactive to November 2018, temporarily ending a
standoff that began after the judge in his Arkansas paternity case ordered him
to appear in person for a hearing to explain why he shouldn't be held in
contempt.
But, the standoff reignited in March, when Biden apparently
failed to meet a court deadline to turn over additional financial documents.
Republicans suggested he was hiding evidence of corruption. The matter remains
pending.
Hunter Biden had previously denied paternity, before a DNA test
proved otherwise.
HUNTER BIDEN FINALLY AGREES TO PAY CHILD SUPPORT FOR
KID FATHERED WITH EX-STRIPPER
The court redacted the amount of child
support that Hunter Biden agreed to pay, pursuant to his agreement with
plaintiff Lunden Alexis Roberts, who alleged Biden was an entirely absent
father.
However, Independence County Circuit Court Judge Holly Meyer
noted that she "lacks sufficient information" to determine the appropriate
amount of "permanent" child support "based off the defendant's income," and that
modifications to the child support owed each month could be made based on
additional evidence.
Contempt proceedings over Biden's repeated failure
to turn over relevant financial documents were only delayed until March 1, and
Biden apparently has not resolved the issue.
"After months of hiding, one
has to wonder if the reason Hunter Biden continues to defy the court is because
there are financial documents could shed light on his father's massive conflicts
of interest as vice president," Republican National Committee (RNC) spokesman
Steve Guest told Fox News.
READ THE ORDER REQUIRING BIDEN TO PAY CHILD
SUPPORT
The paternity dispute has presented headaches for the elder Biden
ever since a court filing showed that DNA results indicated he was now a
grandfather. Joe Biden tangled with a Fox News reporter on camera when asked
about that development last November.
"No one has said my son has done
anything wrong."
Joe Biden
"I'm wondering if you have a comment on
this report, and court filing, out of Arkansas, that your son Hunter just made
you a grandfather again," Fox News' Peter Doocy asked.
"No, that's a
private matter and I have no comment," Biden fired back before attacking the
reporter.
"Only you would ask that," Biden said. "You're a good man.
You're a good man. Classy."
Campaigning late last year, Biden has also
lashed out at voters -- even appearing to call one man "fat" for bringing up
issues with his son's possible corruption and questioning his fitness for
office.
"You're a damn liar, man," Biden said. "Let's do
push-ups together here, man. Let's run. Let's do whatever you want to do. Let's
take an IQ test. ... No one has said my son has done anything wrong."