Court records from Hunter Biden’s imperiled plea deal with the Department of Justice (DOJ) divulge details on more than $2.6 million the first son received from China and affiliates of the Chinese Communist Party (CCP).
Earlier, the DOJ announced a plea agreement with Mr. Biden, President Joe Biden’s son, whereby he would plead guilty to two misdemeanor tax crimes and would have a felony gun charge diverted.
Income received from such sources is listed as at least $2.6 million in all, however the total is likely substantially higher due to the combined way some of his income was listed in the document. Mr. Hunter Biden’s total income from foreign companies between 2017 and 2018 is confirmed by the sworn statement to have totaled roughly $4.9 million, in addition to $1 million in legal services for a CCP-affiliated Chinese national.
Though past reporting had already divulged information about Mr. Hunter Biden’s business dealings in China, the document, signed by the younger Biden himself, means that he has now affirmed having received such income under penalty of perjury.
Biden Received Millions From Chinese Firm
First, the report details that Mr. Hunter Biden in 2017 received “just under $1 million from a company he formed with the CEO of a Chinese business conglomerate.”The income flowed to Hudson West, a company Mr. Hunter Biden founded with Chinese businessman Ye Jianming in 2017.
Mr. Grassley said the goal of CEFC was “[to] expand cooperation in the international energy economy and contribute to the national development.”
“The Chinese government would be the principal beneficiary of those actions,” Mr. Grassley wrote.
More Foreign Income
In 2018, court records show, Mr. Hunter Biden received additional income from CEFC and other foreign sources.“Biden continued to earn handsomely ... in 2018,” the plea agreement exhibit says.
The report lists $2.6 million received that year jointly in “business and consulting fees” from CEFC and the Ukrainian energy firm Burisma, for which Mr. Hunter Biden served on the board of directors.
However, it does not distinguish the amounts received from each company. Payments from both companies likely flowed into Owasco, a legal and consulting firm owned by Mr. Hunter Biden.
Rather, court filings say that Mr. Hunter Biden received $500,000 in director’s fees from Burisma in 2017.
These conflicting reports, and a lack of distinction between the two income streams in the court records, leave uncertain how much Chinese cash Mr. Hunter Biden received in 2018, but indicate that the figure may lie somewhere between $1.6 million and $2.1 million. This would bring the total amount received from Chinese companies and CCP affiliates in the document to between $4.2 million and $4.7 million.
In addition to CEFC and Burisma, Mr. Hunter Biden also admitted in the court record to having received $70,000 from a Romanian business and $48,000 from a multinational law firm where he worked.
He also confirmed having made $666,666 from his domestic business activities in 2017.
Contradicts President’s Earlier Claims
The sworn court statement directly contradicts earlier statements from Mr. Joe Biden claiming that his son never made money in China.During the second general election presidential debate on Oct. 22, 2020, Mr. Joe Biden, then a candidate, was asked about his son’s foreign business ventures by debate moderator Kristen Welker.
“Vice President Biden, there have been questions about the work your son has done in China and for a Ukrainian energy company when you were vice president. In retrospect, was anything about those relationships inappropriate or unethical?” Ms. Welker asked.
“Nothing was unethical,“ Mr. Joe Biden replied. ”My son has not made money in terms of this thing about, what are you talking about, China? I have not had … the only guy who made money from China is this guy,” he said, referring to President Donald Trump.
Other Claims About Biden’s Involvement
Some associates of Mr. Hunter Biden have insisted in comments to the press that Mr. Joe Biden was more involved in his son’s business dealings than he has publicly acknowledged.In the weeks before the 2020 election, the New York Post published an email from Mr. Hunter Biden’s laptop, which has since been authenticated, detailing proposed payout packages and equity shares in Mr. Hunter Biden’s venture with CEFC and Mr. Ye.
The now-infamous email, written by Mr. Hunter Biden, states “10 held by H for the big guy?”
“In that email, there’s no question—the ‘H’ stands for ‘Hunter Biden,’ ‘the big guy’ for his father,” Mr. Bobulinski said.
“I am making this statement to set the record straight about the involvement of the Biden family—Vice President Biden, his brother Jim Biden, and his son Hunter Biden—in dealings with the Chinese,” Mr. Bobulinski said in a press conference in October 2020.
“I have heard Joe Biden say he has never discussed business with Hunter. That is false.”
Mr. Bobulinski relayed the details of his years-long involvement with the Bidens, which he said began in 2015 when he was approached by one of Mr. Hunter Biden’s business associates about getting involved in a business deal concerning the Chinese firm CEFC Energy. Mr. Bobulinski was told at the time, when Mr. Joe Biden was still the sitting vice president, that other partners would include members of “one of the most prominent families in the United States.”
“On May 2, 2017 ... I was introduced to Joe Biden by Jim Biden and Hunter Biden,” Mr. Bobulinski said.
During their hours-long conversation that night, he said, Mr. Joe Biden demonstrated a strong familiarity “at a high level” with Mr. Hunter Biden’s business dealings.
Mr. Bobulinski also indicated that Mr. Joe Biden was aware of the potential ethical concerns in being involved and said he quickly learned that Mr. Joe Biden wasn’t to be mentioned in writing or on the phone but only during face-to-face meetings.
Original Plea Agreement
The court filings were entered into the public record as part of a plea agreement that has faced scrutiny from Judge Maryellen Noreika, who oversaw the case.Judge Noreika questioned the breadth of the deal, which would have granted Mr. Hunter Biden sweeping immunity from further prosecution in the future, including potential prosecution under the Foreign Agents Registration Act. This level of immunity, Judge Noreika said during Mr. Hunter Biden’s hearing, was “nonstandard,” and she has deferred a decision on the deal to sometime in the future.
Judge Noreika indicated that the plea agreement proposed by DOJ prosecutors was unlike any she had seen, and suggested that Mr. Hunter Biden’s legal team and prosecutors were seeking to collude to protect the first son by cutting out judicial review of the deal.
Meanwhile, Republicans in the House, assisted by Mr. Grassley and others, have launched their own probes into the Bidens’ business dealings, alleging from their discoveries that the Bidens have made millions from foreign sources through the use of shell companies and other measures.
After the plea deal became public, Republicans harshly criticized it as an effort to undermine their investigations through the broad immunity the DOJ offered Mr. Hunter Biden.