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Hunter Biden’s hard drive shows he raked in almost $11 million from Ukraine firm accused of bribery: report

Hunter Biden and his company brought in about $11 million from 2013 through 2018, via his roles as an attorney and a board member with a Ukrainian firm accused of bribery and his work with a Chinese businessman now accused of fraud, as shown by a copy of Biden’s hard drive and iCloud account and documents released by Republicans on two Senate committees.
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Questions are being raised about national security, business ethics and potential legal exposure, as the documents and the analysis don’t show what he did to earn millions from his Chinese partners.
Biden acknowledged in a December 2020 statement, that he was the subject of a federal investigation into his taxes. An ex-business partner had warned Biden he should amend his tax returns to disclose $400,000 in income from the Ukrainian firm, Burisma.
If Republicans take back the House this fall, they’ll demand more documents and probe whether any of Biden’s income went to his father, President Joe Biden, GOP congressional sources say, per report.
A former director of the U.S. Office of Government Ethics who is now an ethics expert with the Project on Government Oversight, Walter Shaub said that “no government ethics rules apply to him.”
“It’s imperative that no one at DOJ and no one at the White House interfere with the criminal investigation in Delaware,” Shaub then added.
Questions were already been raised by Shaub before, about Hunter Biden’s new line of work, selling his own paintings, which created the potential to purchase a painting to buy perceived influence, and also because the White House became involved in the transactions, arranging that none of the buyers’ names be known to Biden, the White House or the public.
The FBI’s former assistant director for counterintelligence, Frank Figliuzzi, said there is a national security risk when foreign powers like China see an opportunity to get close to someone like Biden.
“It’s all about access and influence, and if you can compromise someone with both access and influence, that’s even better. Better still if that target has already compromised himself,” said Figliuzzi, now an NBC News contributor.
Expenditures compiled on Hunter’s hard drive show he spent more than $200,000 per month from October 2017 through February 2018 on luxury hotel rooms, Porsche payments, dental work and cash withdrawals.



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