'It's Pretty Ugly': New BOMBSHELL Could Lead To Biden's Secretary of State Being Charged As Hunter Biden Investigation Heats Up

It has been no secret that Congress has been investigating the Biden family for corrupt dealings that unethically merge business and politics. Some have speculated that the president’s son, Hunter Biden, could face an indictment soon. As noted by Just the News, the more the congressional investigators dug into the evidence, the greater they became convinced that the Biden family was politically protected in the 2020 election due to the shielding of voters from the family’s merger of foreign business dealings and political connections.

Senator Ron Johnson (R-WI), who heads the Senatorial investigation into the Biden family, told the news outlet that “We've got the onion in front of us. We're painstakingly peeling back thin layer after thin layer. But the truth is being revealed. And it's pretty ugly.”

On Tuesday, Senators Ron Johnson and Chuck Grassley (R-IO) wrote a letter to Secretary Blinken accusing him of committing perjury. That letter claimed that “you did not provide truthful testimony during the interview when you denied corresponding with Hunter Biden via email when you served as Deputy Secretary of State under the Obama administration… Based on evidence now available, your above statement is patently false. Emails contained on Hunter Biden’s laptop and recent reports have revealed that you did in fact email Hunter Biden on at least two occasions, contradicting what you told congressional investigators.”

The letter continued by noting several documented instances of communication between Hunter Biden and Antony Blinken and the current secretary’s knowledge about Hunter Biden’s association with Burisma and other such businesses. The letter also noted that Blinken was allegedly the catalyst for the “October 2020 information operation” that denied “the authenticity of Hunter Biden’s laptop.”
 


The letter attacked Mr. Blinken for an “apparent willingness to deceive the public continued through December 2020 when you failed to tell the whole truth to congressional investigators about your contacts with Hunter Biden” and called for him to “preserve and provide all records” to Congress relating to the Biden family’s business dealings.

Scott Perry (R-PA), a member of the House Oversight and Accountability Committee, similarly wrote a letter to various committees about the DOJ’s probe into Hunter Biden and the Biden family’s foreign business dealings. In that letter, the lawmaker expressed concern that “…the public reporting regarding the matter at DOJ appears scant compared to later years. That reporting has some lawmakers and tax experts concerned that the DOJ knowingly and purposefully allowed the statute of limitations to expire, or that DOJ/IRS constructed an agreement extending the legal deadline - commonly known as 'tolling agreements' - specifically to avoid indictment and/or prosecution.”      

In effect, Perry was expressing concern that the Department of Justice and Internal Revenue Service were slow-walking the investigation in order to protect the Biden family rather than execute the law in an impartial manner.

Chairman of the House Oversight and Accountability, James Comer (R-KY), shared a similar concern when he told Just the News previously that “his [Hunter’s] tax problems go back to at least 2014… He owes a lot more in taxes than what I've heard they're wanting to indict him on.”

Representative Comer emphasized that “At the end of the day, if you look at all the potential charges and all the potential wrongdoing that Hunter Biden has done over the past decade, tax evasion for one or two years is a drop in the bucket. It wouldn't even be in the top five things that I think the DOJ could charge him with. This is another example of a two-tier system of justice in America.”   
READ THIS NEXT
Mayorkas Refuses To Answer Whether He Lied Under Oath About Border Being ‘Secure’
RFK Jr. Secures Ballot Access In Crucial Swing State
CNN Panel Debates Pros And Cons Of Jailing Trump: ‘Put Him In The Holding Cell’
Sign in to comment

Comments

Powered by StructureCMS™ Comments

Get Updated

© 2024 DC Enquirer, Privacy Policy