Hunter Biden Cites Financial Woes In Desperate Plea To Federal Judge

Hunter Biden asked a federal judge on Wednesday to drop his lawsuit against a former Trump aide that is related to the release of information from a laptop thought to belong to the son of former President Joe Biden. Hunter Biden said that his limited funds make it difficult to continue with the case.
In papers sent to a federal court in California, Biden’s lawyers asked U.S. District Judge Hernan D. Vera to throw out the 2023 lawsuit against Garrett Ziegler. They said that Biden’s income “has dropped significantly” and that he owed a lot of money (millions of dollars).

Biden’s lawyers said that the wildfires in the Pacific Palisades made his money problems even worse because they made his rental home “unlivable for an extended period of time.”

They wrote that Biden “has had difficulty in finding a new permanent place to live as well as finding it difficult to earn a living.” They also said that Biden should use his time and resources to deal with his move, the damage to his rental house, and his family’s living costs, “rather than this litigation.”

Ziegler and the company he started, Marco Polo, were sued by Biden in September 2023. Biden said they broke state and federal laws by trying to make a searchable online database with 128,000 emails that were thought to be from Biden.

Ziegler, who worked as an assistant to Trump’s trade adviser Peter Navarro from February 2019 to January 2021, had asked the judge in charge of the case to throw out the case, but the judge had already turned it down.

Biden said in a related court document that he owes a lot of money and is “not in a position where I can borrow money.”

He said that he was looking forward to paid speaking engagements and appearances after getting feedback on his art and memoir, which his lawyers said had been his main source of income in the past, “but that has not happened.”
Biden talked about his falling profits from selling art. He said that in the two or three years before the lawsuit, he had sold 27 pieces of art for an average of $54,500 each. But since then, he had only sold one piece of art for $36,000.

It was found that Biden was guilty of federal gun charges and a federal tax case. He was set to be sentenced in December for the gun case, but President Joe Biden released him early.

Following his unconditional pardon from President Biden, Hunter Biden is also facing allegations of owing over $300,000 in unpaid rent to former landlords.

Earlier this week, Hunter Biden abandoned his case against two Internal Revenue Service whistleblowers, which he brought in September 2023.

Biden’s counsel filed a motion in the United States District Court for the District of Columbia to dismiss the complaint with prejudice, which means it cannot be re-filed in any court.

The complaint, first filed by the former first son two years ago, stated that IRS Special Agent Gary Shapley and IRS Criminal Investigator Joseph Ziegler had “targeted and sought to embarrass” Biden via media remarks divulging the specifics of a “private citizen’s” tax affairs.

Shapley and Zielger testified before the House Oversight Committee earlier that year, claiming they encountered several constraints while investigating former President Biden’s son.

“It’s always been clear that the lawsuit was an attempt to intimidate us,” Shapley and Zielger said in a statement after Hunter Biden dropped the case, according to the New York Post. “Intimidation and retaliation were never going to work. We truly wanted our day in court to provide the complete story, but it appears Mr. Biden was afraid to actually fight this case in a court of law after all.”

“His voluntary dismissal of the case tells you everything you need to know about who was right and who was wrong,” they added.

Lawyers for the two whistleblowers first emphasized how Hunter Biden “dismissed his case with prejudice – meaning he can never bring it again.”

Related Posts

JUST IN: Trump Orders Major Audit To Block Illegals From Cashing In On Benefits

JUST IN: Trump Orders Major Audit To Block Illegals From Cashing In On Benefits

The issue surrounding the distribution of taxpayer-funded benefits to illegal aliens sparks strong emotions and debate. The argument that these individuals should not access resources like Section…

JUST IN: The U.S. Senate just voted 50–46 to TERMINATE President Trump’s tariffs !!

JUST IN: The U.S. Senate just voted 50–46 to TERMINATE President Trump’s tariffs !!

JUST IN: The U.S. Senate has voted 50–46 to terminate former President Donald Trump’s tariffs on Canadian imports, marking a significant shift in U.S.-Canada trade relations. The…

JUST IN: Virginia AG Race Flips As Scandal Rocks Jay Jones’ Campaign

JUST IN: Virginia AG Race Flips As Scandal Rocks Jay Jones’ Campaign

Virginia’s Attorney General Race Takes a Sharp Turn.The race for Attorney General in Virginia has taken a dramatic twist as incumbent Jason Miyares gains a lead over…

Rogue Judge Issues Highly Questionable ‘Permanent’ Order Against Trump

Rogue Judge Issues Highly Questionable ‘Permanent’ Order Against Trump

Judge Illson of the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of California on Tuesday made a previous temporary injunction permanent, prohibiting President Donald Trump from dismissing…

Senate Leader John Thune just went NUCLEAR on Democrats over the shutdown, and it was BRUTAL

Senate Leader John Thune just went NUCLEAR on Democrats over the shutdown, and it was BRUTAL

Senate Leader John Thune just unleashed a full-on verbal assault on Democrats over the ongoing government shutdown, and it was nothing short of brutal.

Food Stamps Won’t Be Issued Nov. 1 Because Of ‘Senate Democrats,’ USDA Says

Food Stamps Won’t Be Issued Nov. 1 Because Of ‘Senate Democrats,’ USDA Says

The United States Department of Agriculture (USDA) claims that tens of millions of Americans may lose their food stamp benefits next month if Senate Democrats continue to…