Author Topic: ‘On the Same Team’: DOJ Exposed for Colluding With Hunter Biden’s Legal Team Katie Pavlich  (Read 300 times)

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‘On the Same Team’: DOJ Exposed for Colluding With Hunter Biden’s Legal Team
Katie Pavlich


It's been 24-hours since Hunter Biden entered a Delaware courtroom expecting to walk away without jail time and a codification of his sweetheart plea deal offered by the Department of Justice -- wiping away felony tax fraud and a felony gun charge with minor misdemeanors and a diversion program.

“As he entered the courtroom, Mr. Biden drew a deep breath and plunged forward to greet the prosecutors who investigated him for five years with handshakes and a smile,” the New York Times reported about the scene.

But after asking just a few simple questions,  U.S. District Court Judge Maryellen Noreikam torpedoed the whole thing and exposed DOJ's collusion with the Hunter Biden legal team to evade more serious charges in the future. According to former federal prosecutor Will Scharf, this is what happened:

    Based on conversations with people who were in the courtroom today, and my experience as a former federal prosecutor, I think I know the full story of what happened with the Hunter Biden plea agreement blow-up this morning.

    Bear with me, because this is a little complicated:

    Typically, if the Government is offering to a defendant that it will either drop charges or decline to bring new charges in return for the defendant's guilty plea, the plea is structured under Federal Rule of Criminal Procedure 11(c)(1)(A).  An agreement not to prosecute Hunter for FARA violations or other crimes in return for his pleading guilty to the tax misdemeanors, for example, would usually be a (c)(1)(A) plea.  This is open, transparent, subject to judicial approval, etc.

    In Hunter's case, according to what folks in the courtroom have told me, Hunter's plea was structured under Federal Rule of Criminal Procedure 11(c)(1)(B), which is usually just a plea in return for a joint sentencing recommendation only, and contained no information on its face about other potential charges, and contained no clear agreement by DOJ to forego prosecution of other charges.

    Instead, DOJ and Hunter's lawyers effectively hid that part of the agreement in what was publicly described as a pretrial diversion agreement relating to a § 922(g)(3) gun charge against Hunter for being a drug user in possession of a firearm.

    That pretrial diversion agreement as written was actually MUCH broader than just the gun charge. If Hunter were to complete probation, the pretrial diversion agreement prevented DOJ from ever bringing charges against Hunter for any crimes relating to the offense conduct discussed in the plea agreement, which was purposely written to include his foreign influence peddling operations in China and elsewhere.

    So they put the facts in the plea agreement, but put their non-prosecution agreement in the pretrial diversion agreement, effectively hiding the full scope of what DOJ was offering and Hunter was obtaining through these proceedings.  Hunter's upside from this deal was vast immunity from further prosecution if he finished a couple years of probation, and the public wouldn't be any the wiser because none of this was clearly stated on the face of the plea agreement, as would normally be the case.

    Judge Noreika smelled a rat. She understood that the lawyers were trying to paint her into a corner and hide the ball. Instead, she backed DOJ and Hunter's lawyers into a corner by pulling all the details out into the open and then indicating that she wasn't going to approve a deal as broad as what she had discovered. 

    DOJ, attempting to save face and save its case, then stated on the record that the investigation into Hunter was ongoing and that Hunter remained susceptible to prosecution under FARA. Hunter's lawyers exploded. They clearly believed that FARA was covered under the deal, because as written, the pretrial diversion agreement language was broad enough to cover it. They blew up the deal, Hunter pled not guilty, and that's the current state of play.

    And so here we are. Hunter's lawyers and DOJ are going to go off and try to pull together a new set of agreements, likely narrower, to satisfy Judge Noreika. Fortunately, I doubt if FARA or any charges related to Hunter's foreign influence peddling will be included, which leaves open the possibility of further investigations leading to further prosecutions.

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https://townhall.com/tipsheet/katiepavlich/2023/07/27/on-the-same-team-doj-exposed-for-colluding-with-hunter-bidens-legal-team-n2626267
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Offline Maj. Bill Martin

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That all makes sense.  Great to have an actual expert lay it all out that way.

Interestingly, I saw that even Andrew Weissman, the Democrat-hack Mueller lead prosecutor, said she was right.

This must have been a truly horrific deal.  I saw in one article where the judge asked the prosecutors "is there any precedent for a deal like this", and they responded "no".

At that point, she had them.

Offline PeteS in CA

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Just to give some perspective on what Judge Noreikam accomplished, her experience is in business law, patents in particular. That expertise is a large or primary part of why Trump chose her to be a judge in a state in which many companies are incorporated. Despite her special expertise being other than criminal law, she sniffed out and slammed her fist down on the game the DOJ and Hunter's lawyers were playing. Either she did some serious self-education in the past 6 years or so, or their game was so obvious it was basically laying on the table in plain sight. With no disrespect to Judge Noreikam, I think the latter is closer to reality and the DOJ-Biden buddies expected a casual rubber-stamp approval.
If, as anti-Covid-vaxxers claim, https://www.poynter.org/fact-checking/2021/robert-f-kennedy-jr-said-the-covid-19-vaccine-is-the-deadliest-vaccine-ever-made-thats-not-true/ , https://gospelnewsnetwork.org/2021/11/23/covid-shots-are-the-deadliest-vaccines-in-medical-history/ , The Vaccine is deadly, where in the US have Pfizer and Moderna hidden the millions of bodies of those who died of "vaccine injury"? Is reality a Big Pharma Shill?

Millions now living should have died. Anti-Covid-Vaxxer ghouls hardest hit.

Offline Kamaji

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Just to give some perspective on what Judge Noreikam accomplished, her experience is in business law, patents in particular. That expertise is a large or primary part of why Trump chose her to be a judge in a state in which many companies are incorporated. Despite her special expertise being other than criminal law, she sniffed out and slammed her fist down on the game the DOJ and Hunter's lawyers were playing. Either she did some serious self-education in the past 6 years or so, or their game was so obvious it was basically laying on the table in plain sight. With no disrespect to Judge Noreikam, I think the latter is closer to reality and the DOJ-Biden buddies expected a casual rubber-stamp approval.

I suspect that what happened is that when she saw the last-minute kerfuffle about the GOP's amicus filing, and the apparent misrepresentations that Hunter's attorneys engaged in, she got suspicious and decided to read all of the moving papers connected with the plea agreement in detail - as any good judge should - and then realized that they were essentially colluding to commit what was tantamount to a fraud on the court.

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Offline Maj. Bill Martin

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I suspect that what happened is that when she saw the last-minute kerfuffle about the GOP's amicus filing, and the apparent misrepresentations that Hunter's attorneys engaged in, she got suspicious and decided to read all of the moving papers connected with the plea agreement in detail - as any good judge should - and then realized that they were essentially colluding to commit what was tantamount to a fraud on the court.

Yup.  I think the other tipoff is when she asked "is there any precedent for an agreement like this", because with six years on the bench, she's seen plenty of plea agreements and likely recognized how unusual this one was.

What's kind of interesting about this is that I'm seeing/hearing nobody claim that she got this wrong.  Sounds like pretty much anyone who knows about this stuff believes she got it correct.  And I guess when asking questions exposed the fact that the two sides were not in agreement about the scope of the agreement, it's kind of hard to argue with what she did. 

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"U.S. District Court Judge Maryellen Noreikam... "

You can bet that this gal won't be getting any promotions so long as the DCommunists are in control of things...