UPDATE: Hunter Biden’s sweetheart deal with prosecutors has unraveled, with Judge Maryellen Noreika demanding lawyers revise its terms and the First Son pleading not guilty to tax crimes.
President Joe Biden’s eldest son initially called the deal off after prosecutors, under questioning from Judge Noreika, said it would not provide him with blanket immunity from future prosecution, prompting his lawyers to declare it was therefore “null and void”.
It was salvaged during a quick recess, with Hunter agreeing he would not be immune from future prosecution for, for example, FARA violations, while the prosecution agreed that a guilty plea to two misdemeanor tax crimes would see him protected from not just a felony gun charge, but for any gun, drug, and tax crimes from 2014 to 2019.
Judge Noreika remained skeptical of the plea deal’s “unusual” terms, however, and delayed her assent to it until after it is changed to clarify the limits on Hunter’s immunity from prosecution for various business dealings. Consequently, Hunter pleaded not guilty to the tax misdemeanors he was being charged with – although he will reverse this if the deal is revised to everyone’s satisfaction.
Court reporters suggest Judge Noreika was unhappy with the deal’s “unusual” and “non-standard terms” with respect to Hunter’s “broad immunity” from other charges. Earlier in the proceedings, they said she asked prosecutors “why it had been filed under a provision that gave her no legal authority to reject it.”
Prosecutor Leo Wise, asked if there was any precedent for a deal of this nature, told the judge: “No, your honor.”
Original article below:
Hunter’s Sweetheart Deal Unravels as Judge Expresses ‘Concerns’.
President Joe Biden’s eldest son had been expected to plead guilty to two misdemeanors related to his failure to pay taxes on well over a million dollars, with prosecutors recommending he be let off with probation. A separate felony gun charge which carries a maximum sentence of 10 years in prison was to be essentially dropped altogether.
U.S. District Judge Maryellen Noreika, however, expressed “concerns” over the tax crime deal being linked to a gun crime deal, and pressed for more details on the agreement’s scope. Lawyers on both sides now say there is no longer a plea deal, and the court has been recessed.
The seeming collapse of the agreement – an extremely rare occurence – follows the judge accusing Hunter’s team of calling the court impersonating Republican lawyers who had filed an amicus brief related to alleged political interference into the Hunter investigation, in order to have it removed from the public docket.
While this issue was not directly addressed in the plea hearing, prosecutors claimed investigations into Hunter are ongoing.
This story is developing…