Hunter Biden has finally admitted that his father, President Joe Biden, is the “big guy” mentioned in emails involving the first family’s corrupt schemes.
The presidential son made this indirect admission during his Feb. 28 testimony before Congress. He testified before lawmakers in a six-hour, closed-door deposition, according to Breitbart News. Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-GA) brought up the issue of “10 percent for the ‘big guy,'” which Hunter reportedly acknowledged.
“We showed him the [’10 percent’] email, and he said, “Oh, that was after my father left office,” the congresswoman recounted. Greene also mentioned that the presidential son was insistent that “there was no percentage for [his] father in the business.”
According to Greene, Hunter then attempted to excuse the 10 percent cut for his father. The presidential son allegedly quipped: “What’s wrong with having a pie-in-the-sky idea? When [Joe] left office in 2017, [I] thought he was done. I had no idea [he] was gonna run for president. What’s wrong with just some pie?”
The 10 percent cut stemmed from an email sent by Hunter’s business associate James Gillar to Tony Bobulinski, another business associate, in May 2017. As per the email, six individuals were to “receive equity” from the Chinese energy firm CEFC China Energy Co. – which has links to the Chinese Communist Party.
Hunter, Gillar, Bobulinski and Rob Walker would receive 20 percent each, while James Biden – Joe’s brother and Hunter’s uncle – would receive 10 percent. The last 10 percent would be held by Hunter “for the big guy,” who eventually turned out to be the incumbent president.
CEFC China Energy Co., which was led by Ye Jianming, eventually declared bankruptcy in March 2020. Ye, its chairman, had been under detention in China since 2018 for bribery allegations.
Hunter joined Burisma to stop “Russian aggression” – really?
The congresswoman for the Peach State also confirmed the statement of Rep. Matt Gaetz (R-FL) about Hunter’s reason for joining the board of Ukrainian energy company Burisma Holdings. “He said he was picked to serve on Burisma’s board to defend democracy and Burisma was stopping Russian aggression,” she recalled.
“There’s a really weird theme in there with the whole Russian thing,” Greene remarked. Breitbart News appeared to concur with her remarks, noting that “Hunter’s stated purpose for joining Burisma’s board is a new claim that indicates bizarre reasoning never before revealed.”
In 2015, Burisma – owned by Ukrainian oligarch Mykola Zlochevsky – was under suspicion of money laundering and public corruption. Former Ukrainian Prosecutor General Viktor Shokin investigated the case but was terminated due to pressure from the elder Biden – who was vice president at the time.
Biden threatened to withhold $1 billion in U.S. aid from Ukraine if Shokin wasn’t fired from his position, a demand Kyiv yielded to. The incumbent president later bragged about the prosecutor’s termination during a 2018 appearance at the Council on Foreign Relations.
Greene ultimately warned Republicans to “get ready” for Democrats to drum up another Russian disinformation hoax related to Hunter and the 2024 election. She explained that the potential hoax would be designed to fit the media’s narrative to both attack former President Donald Trump and protect the Biden crime family.
“I have a prediction that they’re [going to] move it to members of Congress like me and others – [Ohio Rep.] Jim Jordan, [Kentucky Rep. James] Comer – any of us that got hot and heavy on this Ukraine Burisma stuff. They’re somehow going to say that Republicans are Russian sympathizers. They’re [going to] call me that anyway, because I won’t fund the Ukraine war,” she said.
“They’re probably going to accuse us of being Russian sympathizers and falling for Russian disinformation and its election meddling. And then, Democratic members of Congress here [are] already saying they will not certify Trump’s election if he wins.”
Visit BidenCrimeFamily.news for more stories about Hunter Biden’s illegal activities.
The defence secretary has warned that the UK is in a "pre-war world", friends and foes are ramping up defence spending, yet the Treasury had nothing new for Britain's armed forces.In fact, the level of funding set out in official tables in the spring budget on Wednesday appeared to track a decline of £2.5bn in defence spending in the financial year to March 2025 compared with the previous 12 months […]
Post comments (0)