Hunter Biden makes last-minute guilty plea in tax case
Hunter Biden has admitted guilt to all nine charges in his federal tax evasion case, surprising federal prosecutors who were preparing to start his trial.
The son of President Joe Biden had previously denied that he deliberately avoided paying $1.4 million in income tax from 2016 to 2019.
Initially, Biden, 54, intended to enter a plea that acknowledged the charges while asserting his innocence. However, he ultimately chose to plead guilty after prosecutors opposed his original plan.
Three months prior, he was convicted in a separate case involving gun possession and drug use, becoming the first son of a sitting U.S. president to be criminally convicted.
The sudden change in the tax case was announced in a Los Angeles court on Thursday, just as jury selection was set to begin.
Over 100 potential jurors had assembled for the selection process.
Biden’s attorney, Abbe Lowell, stated that his client opted to avoid a trial “for the sake of private interest,” to protect his friends and family from testifying about events that occurred during his struggle with addiction.
Judge Mark Scarsi said that in pleading guilty, Biden faces a maximum penalty of 15 years in prison and fines ranging from $500,000 to $1m.
He is due to be sentenced on 16 December, a month after the White House election and a month before his father leaves office.
President Biden has previously said he would not use executive power to pardon his son.
There is a portrait of the president in each federal courthouse in the country, and Biden – holding hands with his wife, Melissa Cohen Biden – along with his lawyers and a Secret Service detail had to walk by the picture of his father for the hearing.
The prosecution – representing President Biden’s Justice Department – said they were “shocked” by the suggested Alford plea and reluctant to agree to the deal if it allowed Hunter Biden to maintain his innocence.
They said the defendant was “not entitled to plead guilty on special terms that apply only to him”.
“Hunter Biden is not innocent. Hunter Biden is guilty,” lead prosecutor Leo Wise said in court.
“We came to court today to try this case.”
Once prosecutors finished reading aloud the entire 56-page indictment against him to the court, the judge asked Biden if he agreed that he had “committed every element of every crime charged.”
“I do,” Biden said.
Biden previously sought to have the case thrown out, arguing that the justice department’s investigation was motivated by politics and that he was targeted because Republican lawmakers were working to impeach his father.
Prosecutors had said they wanted to introduce evidence about the defendant’s overseas business dealings, which have been the focus of Republican lawmakers’ investigations into alleged influence-peddling by the Biden family. The White House denies wrongdoing.
Hunter Biden also argued that the special counsel on the case, David Weiss, had been appointed unlawfully.
These arguments were dismissed by Judge Scarsi, who was appointed by former President Donald Trump.
Biden was charged with three felony tax offenses and six misdemeanor offenses in December. These included failure to file and pay his taxes, tax evasion, and filing a false return.
The indictment detailed how Biden earned $7m in income from his foreign business dealings between 2016-19.
He spent nearly $5m during that period on “everything but his taxes”, said the indictment.
Those purchases included drugs, escorts, lavish hotels, luxury cars, and clothing, which Biden falsely labeled as business expenses.
Prosecutors said Biden’s actions amounted to “a four-year scheme”.
“In each year in which he failed to pay his taxes, the defendant had sufficient funds available to him to pay some or all of his outstanding taxes when they were due,” the indictment said. “But he chose not to pay them.”
President Biden did not respond to reporters’ questions about his son’s case as he returned to the White House on Thursday evening from an official trip to Wisconsin.
Hunter Biden first agreed to plead guilty in Delaware last year to misdemeanor tax offenses, but that agreement fell apart after another judge said elements of it were unusual.
His tax evasion case marks the second federal criminal case for him this year.
In June, he was convicted on three felony charges connected to his purchase of a revolver in 2018 while battling a drug addiction, and lying about his drug use on a federal form to buy the gun.