Hunter Biden pleads guilty in tax case after dramatic shift ahead of jury selection

The president’s son was convicted of felony gun charges earlier this year

Katie Hawkinson
Thursday 05 September 2024 22:49 BST
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Hunter Biden arrives at court as tax trial begins in Los Angeles

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Andrew Feinberg

White House Correspondent

Hunter Biden has pleaded guilty in his federal tax case as jury selection in his trial was set to begin on Thursday.

This comes after Biden initially rejected the charges and pleaded not guilty. Now, his sentencing is scheduled for December 16 — nearly six weeks after the presidential election.

Biden testified that no one had pressured or convinced him to enter a new guilty plea, CNN reports.

President Joe Biden’s son originally planned to enter an Alford Plea, his defense attorney Abbe Lowell said in court on Thursday. This meant he would have pleaded guilty and accepted his sentencing, admitting there is enough evidence to convict.

However, Biden changed course on Thursday afternoon and entered a full guilty plea after the prosecution objected.

“I want to make something crystal clear – the United States opposes an Alford plea,” prosecutor Leo Wise said. “Hunter Biden is not innocent. Hunter Biden is guilty. He is not permitted to plead guilty on special terms.”

Hunter Biden is changing his plea in his federal tax case just ahead of jury selection
Hunter Biden is changing his plea in his federal tax case just ahead of jury selection (Copyright 2024 The Associated Press. All rights reserved)

Biden was indicted on nine tax-related criminal charges in December, three of which are felony counts. Prosecutors argued he made millions from 2016 to 2020 and engaged in an “extravagant lifestyle” all while skipping out on more than $1.4m in taxes.

Prosecutors said Biden avoided his taxes and instead spent the cash on “drugs, escorts and girlfriends, luxury hotels and rental properties, exotic cars, clothing, and other items of a personal nature.”

The president’s son initially tried to have the charges dismissed — however, Scarsi sided with the prosecution and denied his request in April.

If the judge accepts his plea, Biden will avoid a trial, during which salacious and embarrassing testimony from more than two dozen witnesses could have come to light, NBC News reports.

His tax trial was originally slated to begin June 20, but his legal team advocated for a delay, arguing that they were struggling to prepare as he faced another trial on gun charges in Delaware.

Biden was convicted earlier this year of three felony gun charges in June, marking the first time a sitting president’s child has been found guilty of a crime. Special counsel David Weiss brought three gun-related charges against him last year, claiming Biden unlawfully purchased a firearm by lying on a federal gun form about his drug use.

He is set to be sentenced in September.

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