The promised testimony from two veteran IRS whistleblowers was heard today by members of the House Oversight and Accountability Committee. They gave details about how officials in the Justice Department slowed or impeded an investigation of Hunter Biden unpaid taxes. Republicans tried to obtain as many details as possible from the whistleblowers, while Democrats tried multiple times to bring Donald Trump into the discussion and to disparage the whistleblowers.
IRS
supervisor Gary Shapley went public several weeks ago, but IRS agent Joseph
Ziegler, from Shapley’s office, identified himself publicly for the first time
today. Among other things, Ziegler, a Democrat, called for a special counsel to
look at the plea deal made between the DOJ and Hunter Biden. The agreement says
that Hunter Biden will avoid prison by pleading guilty to two misdemeanor
counts of failure to file income taxes. The deal was reached even though there
is evidence that Hunter Biden used his father’s name to make millions of
dollars dealing with China, Ukraine, Russia, and other nations. Fred Lucas at The Daily Signal found the following highlights in the hearing today.
1. ‘Investigative Steps That Involved President
Biden.’
Rep. Gary Palmer, R-Ala., brought up an
FBI form in which a confidential informant says an executive of the Ukrainian
energy company Burisma paid a $5 million bribe to Joe Biden while he was vice
president and made a separate $5 million payment to Hunter Biden….
Shapley replied that knows only what has been
reported about that.
“I can say there were investigative steps
that involved President Biden that were not allowed to be taken,” Shapley told
the committee. “Information like this would have been really helpful to have
for investigators when we received any pushback….”
Palmer sked whether IRS investigators
weren’t allowed to see other evidence. In answering, Shapley referred to
Assistant U.S. Attorney for Delaware Lesley Wolf, who works for the official
who is supposed to be in charge of the investigation: U.S. Attorney for
Delaware David Weiss.
“One piece was the Hunter Biden laptop,”
Shapley told Palmer, then referred to previous sworn testimony in which he
mentioned his own memo that “documented contemporaneously” what Wolf told IRS
and Justice Department investigators Sept. 3, 2020.
Wolf said that “they had information from
the laptop that they were not providing to the investigators,” Shapley told
Palmer….
2. $17 Million From Foreign Interests.
House Oversight and Accountability
Chairman James Comer, R-Ky., asked Ziegler about the amount of money that
Hunter Biden and his business associates collected from foreign companies over
the years.
“How much money did Hunter Biden and his
associates receive from the Romanian company you identified?” Comer asked.
Ziegler responded: “The approximate total
transfer from the Romanian company would have been $3.1 million to everyone.”
[Comer asked Ziegler about other companies:
State Energy HK Ltd. Through the Robinson Walker LLC - $3 million; Burisma - $7.3
million]
3. ‘Who Are You Going to Believe?’
Rep. Jim Jordan, R-Ohio, a member of the
Oversight Committee who also chairs the House Judiciary Committee, noted
multiple contradictions from the Justice Department.
Jordan kept asking, “Who are you going to
believe?” in comparing the Justice Department with the IRS whistleblowers who
said the Justice Department slow-walked and impeded the investigation of Hunter
Biden….
“Who are you going to believe?” he asked. “The
Justice Department that can’t get their story straight, change three times in
33 days, or these two guys, the go-to guys in international tax evasion cases,
the A-team when it comes to these kind[s] of investigations, all over the world
they’ve done this, and have been consistent throughout?”
4. ‘Afraid to Ask Questions’
During the 2020 presidential campaign,
Ziegler said, the Justice Department used that as grounds not to follow certain
leads because of a policy against election interference. But, he said, after
Biden was elected, the investigation of his son was “hamstrung.”
“When it came to questions as a part of
the investigation, we interviewed a lot of people,” Ziegler said. “As a part of
that investigation, you want to feel free to ask questions. It should be an
open environment. [But] there was an environment when we were interviewing
witnesses when you were afraid to ask questions that could lead to the
presidential campaign. And this is after the campaign is over, it was
restricted.” ….
[Shapely was asked about who POTUS in the
fall of 2020 was.] “Joe Biden at the time was a nominee for president of the
United States. Therefore, the election clause with DOJ policy was in effect. It
wasn’t until Sept. 4, 2020, that the Department of Justice Public Integrity
[Section] said we could no longer take any action on that case. As early as
April to June of 2020, the Department of Justice, Delaware U.S. Attorney’s
Office, was already involving the election as a reason not to perform those
search warrants.”
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