How Hunter Biden's Plea Deal Fell Apart
A federal judge objected to two aspects of the agreement that seemed designed to shield Biden from the possibility that his father will lose reelection next year.

Hunter Biden's plea agreement, which fell apart under scrutiny by a federal judge on Wednesday, was the product of extensive negotiations between his lawyers and David Weiss, the U.S. attorney for Delaware. Yet the two sides evidently did not anticipate that U.S. District Court Judge Maryellen Noreika would object to provisions that she called "not standard," "not what I normally see," and possibly "unconstitutional." In particular, Noreika zeroed in on two highly unusual aspects of the agreement that seemed designed to shield Biden from the possibility that his father will lose reelection next year.
The original plan, which was announced last month and is now up in the air, consisted of two parts: a plea agreement and a diversion agreement. Under the former, Biden agreed that he would plead guilty to two misdemeanors involving his willful failure to pay income taxes, and prosecutors agreed to recommend a sentence of probation. Under the latter, the Justice Department agreed not to prosecute him for an illegal gun purchase if he successfully completed a two-year pretrial diversion program.
Among other things, the diversion agreement would have required Biden to avoid drugs, stay out of legal trouble, "continue or actively seek employment," and permanently relinquish his Second Amendment rights. On that last point, the agreement says Biden will not "purchase, possess, or attempt to purchase or possess, or otherwise come into possession of, a firearm…during the Diversion Period or any time thereafter." It also says Biden consents to "a permanent entry in the National Instant Criminal Background Check System," meaning he would be blocked if he tried to buy a gun from a federally licensed dealer.
Pretrial diversion is generally reserved for nonviolent offenders. In deciding which defendants qualify, the Justice Department says, a U.S. attorney "may formally or informally prioritize young offenders, those with substance abuse or mental health challenges, veterans, and others." While Biden's acknowledged drug problem fits within that description, it was also the reason he was charged with illegally buying a gun in the first place.
Under 18 USC 922(g)(3), it is a felony for an "unlawful user" of a controlled substance to "receive" or "possess" a firearm. Biden, by his own admission, was a crack cocaine user when he bought a Colt Cobra .38 Special from StarQuest Shooters, a Wilmington gun store, in 2018. That crime was punishable by up to 10 years in prison when Biden committed it, and legislation that his father signed last year raised the maximum to 15 years. But under federal sentencing guidelines, the recommended penalty for a defendant like Biden, who has no prior criminal record, would be something like 10 to 16 months.
By participating in a diversion system that favors people with drug problems, Biden could avoid any such penalty. Yet but for his drug habit, there would have been no penalty to avoid: His crack use was the justification for charging him with a felony, and it also appears to be the main justification for sparing him prosecution on that charge. That paradox just scratches the surface of the unjust, illogical, and unconstitutional mess created by arbitrary federal restrictions on gun ownership.
During Wednesday's hearing, Judge Noreika did not pause to reflect on the senselessness of Biden's situation vis-à-vis the gun charge. Instead, she focused on two puzzling provisions of the diversion agreement.
"If the United States believes that a knowing material breach of this Agreement
has occurred," the document says, "it may seek a determination by the United States District Judge for the District of Delaware with responsibility for the supervision of this Agreement." The Justice Department would ask that judge—i.e., Noreika—to determine, based on a "preponderance of the evidence," whether Biden had in fact violated the agreement, and Biden would "have the right to present evidence to rebut any such claim." If Noreika agreed with the Justice Department, prosecutors could decide to pursue the gun charge.
"Typically, the Justice Department could independently verify any breach and bring charges," The New York Times noted. "But Mr. Biden's team, concerned that the department might abuse that authority if [Donald] Trump is re-elected, successfully pushed to give that power to Judge Noreika, arguing that she would be a more neutral arbiter." Noreika thought that provision raised separation-of-powers issues by requiring her to perform a prosecutorial function.
Noreika also questioned language in the diversion agreement that shields Biden from future prosecution for certain crimes. The document says "the United States agrees not to criminally prosecute Biden, outside of the terms of this Agreement, for any federal crimes encompassed" by the statements of facts regarding his tax offenses and his illegal gun purchase.
Noreika thought it was odd to include such a promise in the diversion agreement, which according to both sets of lawyers did not require her approval, rather than the plea agreement, which does. "The judge said she couldn't find another example of a diversion agreement so broad that it shielded the defendant from charges in a different case," Politico reports. "Leo Wise, a prosecutor working for Weiss, told the judge he also was unaware of any such precedent." Noreika objected to the apparent expectation that she would "rubber stamp" that seemingly novel arrangement.
It also became clear that the Justice Department and Biden's lawyers disagreed about the scope of his immunity. "Wise said the agreement meant they wouldn't charge Biden with more serious crimes related to his 2017 and 2018 taxes," according to Politico, "and they wouldn't charge him for crimes related to the gun mentioned in the diversion agreement." But Wise said the federal investigation of Biden was ongoing. And when Noreika alluded to allegations that Biden had violated the Foreign Agents Registration Act through activities mentioned in the statement of facts regarding his tax crimes—which refers to income he received as a board member of the Ukrainian energy company Burisma, for example—Wise said the agreement would not preclude prosecution under that statute.
Christopher Clark, Biden's lawyer, rejected that interpretation. "Then there's no deal," Wise replied. Clark concurred: "As far as I'm concerned, the plea agreement is null and void."
That dramatic breakdown was followed by a recess during which the defense and the prosecution settled on the interpretation favored by the government. "Clark said Biden's team now agreed with the prosecutors that the scope of the agreement was charges on the gun, tax issues, and drug use," Politico reports. But that reconciliation did not allay Noreika's concerns about an overreaching diversion agreement.
The supposedly unreviewable promise regarding future prosecution, like the provision charging Noreika with deciding whether Biden had violated the diversion program's requirements, was aimed at insulating him from politically driven decisions by the Justice Department under a Republican administration. As the Times notes, the provision provides "some protection against the possibility that Mr. Trump, if re-elected, or another Republican president might seek to reopen the case."
Republicans, of course, complain that Biden received a "sweetheart deal" that would have allowed him to avoid prison and might also have protected him from prosecution for trading on his father's influence. "The Justice Department could have readily proved serious tax felonies (involving more than $10 million in income) and a gun offense carrying a potential 10-year sentence," National Review Contributing Editor Andrew C. McCarthy, a former federal prosecutor, writes in the New York Post. "Both Hunter Biden and the Biden Justice Department wanted an arrangement that would give Hunter the maximum amount of immunity from prosecution for the minimum amount of criminal admissions they thought they could get away with."
Just as it is hard to imagine that Biden could have earned a fortune for mysterious services if his father had not been vice president, it is hard to imagine that his lenient treatment as a federal defendant had nothing to do with his father's position as president. At the same time, Democrats are understandably concerned that a Republican administration's pursuit of Biden might be motivated by considerations other than justice. Both sides assume that the Justice Department's prosecutorial decisions are influenced by partisan politics, but they want us to believe that problem is peculiar to the other side.
In this context, judges like Noreika play a crucial role. They are under no obligation to approve sweetheart deals, and they can dismiss charges that are not adequately supported by the alleged facts. They also have broad discretion, within statutory limits, to impose penalties they think are commensurate with the offense. Those checks are no guarantee of justice, especially in cases involving conduct (such as Biden's gun purchase) that should not be treated as a crime at all. But in a system where largely unaccountable prosecutors wield vast power to crush defendants or let them off with a slap on the wrist, any countervailing authority is welcome.
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Judge Noreika did not pause to reflect on the senselessness of Biden's situation vis-à-vis the gun charge.
Maybe because it has nothing to do with the issue at hand? Watching Reason become a one-note symphony has been painful.
I wonder if Sullum thinks every judge reflects on every gun charge in front of their court in this manner, and how nonsensical it is in every single case.
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That is FALSE. The 'agreement' explicitly referred to the gun charge.
Also this.
https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/us/hunter-biden-s-lawyers-accused-of-scrubbing-evidence/ar-AA1erjNE?ocid=msedgntp&cvid=ebad2b0e093847aface2cc10d64c9128&ei=82
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Impersonating a member of the legislative branch to commit fraud? Meh.
I have to install an app to read that content? Nuh-uh
I like how you point out most defendants get 10 to 16 months for the gun part, but then say "Republicans say its a" and put scare quotes around “sweetheart” deal.
Cause it doesn’t even touch the tax fraud. Another couple of years. Ask Wesley Snipes
And then there was the backroom immunity from the corruption charges and the litany of other serious crimes. To Jacob it was all a couple of minor gun charges and no punishment should be forthcoming for everything he did and was a part of.
Immunity from federal criminal charges would mean that he couldn't be leveraged to testify against the big guy.
And the fact that they agreed to pretend that tax felonies were actually misdemeanors. Don't forget that.
Look, the guy was too busy smoking crack to deal with that stuff.
How much time did Manafort get for tax crimes?
A felony conviction for lying to the feds should get Hunter's law licence lifted.
And yeah, the gun charge is pretty bogus from a libertarian point of view.
But what's more troubling is favoritism from the federal government to a politically connected family.
One is a problem with society being overly paranoid about crime and drugs. The other is banana republic stuff and makes a mockery of the idea that justice is equal for everyone. Yeah, we know that's not true, but to have it on display is bad.
^ This
Equal injustice for all.
The reason for all the drug and gun laws has nothing to do with health or safety. Since almost everyone will violate one of these at some time, it gives the government the power to arrest and imprison their enemies at anytime. If you "don't know a guy who knows a guy" you go to jail. Hunter Biden knows a guy, so he get to walk free.
If the elite thought that they could be punished for violating a law, there wouldn't be such a law.
Anybody who knows-a-guy and has money gets to walk free, not just Hunter Biden.
Hunter Biden will end up doing more time and paying more money than most charged with the same stuff in his economic class due to the publicity.
The gun *law* is troubling.
The gun *charge* is not.
Equal treatment for everyone under the law. The law should be changed, that's true. But if Corn Pop were brought up on these accusations, I doubt that he would have receive the same treatment. That's much more troubling than the other concerns.
mockery of the idea that justice is equal for everyone
Right. A mockery of justice for the favored party and a mockery of justice for everyone shot to death by the police on the premise, arrested on the charge, falsely arrested on the charge, threatened with the charge... unequal... both. sides.
""Both Hunter Biden and the Biden Justice Department wanted an arrangement that would give Hunter the maximum amount of immunity from prosecution for the minimum amount of criminal admissions they thought they could get away with.""'
Which is the opposite of how Trump and anyone associated with Trump was treated.
Yeah, no favoritism at all at the DOJ. Flynn got prosecuted, but Podesta got immunity doing the same thing.
Immunity for your political allies, prosecutions for your political enemies.
Both Hunter Biden and the Biden Justice Department wanted an arrangement that would…
A statement that perfectly illustrates the levels of corruption that exist in our executive branch.
What is it going to take to get a special council assigned to investigate the extent of Biden family corruption?
It will require a Republican in the white house to force the appointment. Then we'll get another Mueller investigation packed with Democrat prosecutors. Meanwhile the DOJ will indict anyone connected to the Republican president for violations of 19th century statutes.
Yep. Seen this film before, and the next sequel will be the same plot with mostly the same actors.
Paul Manafort is doing 7 years for working with Tony Podesta as a lobbyist. FARA violation. Something we can’t apply to Hunter, apparently
Ah, it was Manafort, not Flynn.
It was both. Flynn ended up switching to a not guilty plea only after doj fuckery became public.
https://twitter.com/TheLastRefuge2/status/1684644755437686785?t=x_LMFTiITZ4ZSYEkeOTSGA&s=19
Why Would NBC Be Stalking Members of Special Counsel Jack Smith's Grand Jury?
[Link]
The propaganda arm can also participate in intimidation.
He is charging Trump for 'deleting' his own private surveillance video.
https://twitter.com/mtracey/status/1684638179477815296?t=uB3CpvjCFeyAFLFfIZl5uw&s=19
Pretty funny that the prediction markets are giving Gavin Newsom a better chance of winning the Democratic nomination than Ron DeSantis of winning the Republican nomination
[Graphic]
There are valid options other than DeSantis. If we can get a "Back to Normalcy" candidate, I would think they would win quite handily.
Lol
So... Joe Biden.
Some of yall never learn.
Hey. Just because he wants an adult in the room doesn't mean he wants a senile adult.
Just make sure there isn’t a minor alone with joe.
I think it's in his contract.
https://twitter.com/Pro__Trading/status/1684577187322826753?t=pmjyCuQgv-tdcf-Pg6wlJQ&s=19
Who remembers when Trump was up 400k votes in Pennsylvania before voting was halted and when it restarted Biden made a miraculous comeback?
[Graphic]
What's Wisconsin, sliced cheese?
Pretrial diversion is generally reserved for nonviolent offenders. In deciding which defendants qualify, the Justice Department says, a U.S. attorney "may formally or informally prioritize young offenders, those with substance abuse or mental health challenges, veterans, and others”.
Yeah right, explain why no one’s ever heard of it until “pretrial diversion” was pulled out of their asses for Brandon Jr.
Pretrial diversion, as a concept, is not new at all. It's basically a form of probation in which, if you keep your nose clean for 12 months and follow the court's orders (ie, getting a job, avoiding associating with certain people, don't leave the state) the charges get dismissed.
What's unique about this was an attempt for the court to act as the supervising authority for the conditions of the agreement, asking her to perform a law enforcement function. That's almost certainly unconstitutional.
Yep, more in-depth from the guy who may be my next state AG:
https://notthebee.com/article/this-former-federal-prosecutor-has-a-great-theory-on-what-happened-with-hunter-biden-in-court-this-week
https://twitter.com/unusual_whales/status/1684616464182247424?t=YEvA480-QBIiAKhVmu-DOA&s=19
BREAKING: Campaign finance charges on Sam Bankman-Fried of FTX have been dropped.
This is unusual.
He gave millions to politicians.
And there wasn't a list of who which politicians and groups he gave money to.
Until now.
[Link]
Think of it as a “pretrial diversion” of Bankman-Fried from prison.
fuck everything.
Prosecutorial discretion or prosecutorial misconduct. I just can't decide.
It's the latter.
Query for Reason:
Was he prosecuted for using crack or lying under oath (or whatever that term would be for a attesting as true a known falsehood) that we wasn’t illegally consuming drugs? There is a real difference there …
Perjury. Yes. He was not charged with a gun crime.
During Wednesday's hearing, Judge Noreika did not pause to reflect on the senselessness of Biden's situation vis-à-vis the gun charge. Instead, she focused on two puzzling provisions of the diversion agreement.
Really... this is the key takeaway.
Ok, here's Glenn Greenwald's reporting on this.
No fair citing an actual journalist..
I've been known to punch down.
You picked an easy target. Sullum is so broken he obviously can't defend himself.
Ultra Right wing Russian stooge is the correct nomenclature for GG.
/s
So again, Jacob the liar trying to downplay or ignore the reality of what's going on here to protect the Biden crime family. Yesterday this was all about a spurious gun charge and today it's how dare Republicans when the central components here are the corruption of the President and his son and the long list of actual felonies they are trying to sweep under the rug. But at least their classified documents were in the garage and not under guard, lock and key; the horror.
Yeah but Trump rustled papers. Let that set in.
But they were nuclear secrets!!
And he was stuffing them into an envelope addressed to Vlad Putin C/O the Kremlin.
How did classified documents get to the Penn Biden center, which officially opened its doors on February 8, 2018, with an event featuring the President of the University of Pennsylvania, Dr. Amy Gutmann, and a discussion on global affairs between Joe Biden and Andrea Mitchell?
Sure sounds like Ol' Joe violated section 1(e) of the Espionage Act.
>>extensive negotiations between his lawyers and David Weiss, the U.S. attorney for Delaware
lol like over pickleball ... they're same-team
Specially appointed to the same team.
For sound economic perspective go to https://honesteconomics.substack.com/
Fuck you, Jacob. Lock the little bastard up.
the product of extensive negotiations between his lawyers and David Weiss, the U.S. attorney for Delaware.
Corruption is the word youre looking for Jacob. Hiding the terms in the diversion program discussion to attempt to hide terms from the judge is a huge fucking tell.
"Democrats are understandably concerned that a Republican administration's pursuit of Biden might be motivated by considerations other than justice" So, let me get this straight. Democrats, informed as they are of their own corruption, were worried that future corrupt Republicans might decide to take a stripe out of Hunter's ass in retribution? So they tried to create permanent forward immunity? They think that passes the smell test? What a fucking farce.
Let’s be realistic here: Democrats were concerned that a future Republican administration might BE motivated by justice, rather than politics. Only politics are keeping Hunter out of prison at this point. Anybody who wasn’t related to the President, or at the very least a major Democratic donor, would already be behind bars with Hunter’s record.
Oh, and Hunter IS going to end up with permanent forward immunity, at least for anything done before January 20th, 2025; The DOJ were trying to spare dad the need to pardon him, but if they can't clear him themselves, Joe WILL pardon his son, regardless of the political consequences.
Unless maybe he strokes out before getting around to it.
Unfortunately, I think your take is correct...
Beyond that, if you believe a future administration might attempt to forward an unjustified prosecution, that's an easy remedy with the pardon power. You don't backdoor it like this in a hidden agreement. They don't want the optics that would come along with a pardon for the Biden administration.
Seriously, if Biden loses the election, he'll still have months to get the pardon taken care of, so the idea that this was some protection for Hunter is shitty. It's protection for Biden by trying to keep his son from having to testify about corrupt dealings with his dad.
“Democrats are understandably concerned that a Republican administration’s pursuit of Biden might be motivated by considerations other than justice”
This is really a perfect example of how far Reason in general and Jacob Sullum in particular have completely and irretrievably completely pissed away any credibility they might have had left. Under what rule of law does any regime have the power to immunize themselves from from criminal prosecution into perpetuity? The Biden regime hasn't been reluctant to prosecute Trump. But it's reasonable to be concerned that the reprobate son of Joe Biden might have to answer for his crimes? So Jacob wants immunity for a private citizen only because he happens to be Joe Biden's son and Republicans might pounce? Do you even read the shit you write Jacob?
"Among other things, the diversion agreement would have required Biden to avoid drugs, stay out of legal trouble, "continue or actively seek employment..."
When he can sell his paintings to "anonymous" art lovers for $500,000 a pop, why does he need other employment?
It is interesting that Hunter Biden and his lawyers are concerned about a future administration, because once Joe Biden leaves office Hunter is a nobody and no one will care.
The long arm of the law may care.
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"Both sides assume that the Justice Department's prosecutorial decisions are influenced by partisan politics, but they want us to believe that problem is peculiar to the other side."
A significant difference between the two sides exists. The DOJ prosecutorial decision under the Democrats HAS been influenced by partisan politics. DOJ prosecutorial decisions MIGHT be influenced by partisan politics when a Republican wins. A bird in the hand...
Given the unethical/unlawful actions of the current DOJ the next Republican administration probably will result in revenge, but that is not a certainty.
A GOP administration couldn't do this stuff if it wanted to. Half of the investigators assigned would have the New York Times and the Washington Post on speed dial to leak anything and everything that could possibly undermine the investigation.
Trump had justifiable concerns about the Biden's business dealings in Ukraine, and he got impeached for even suggesting somebody should look into it.
Trump had justifiable concerns about the Biden’s business dealings in Ukraine, and he got impeached for even suggesting somebody should look into it.
Worse. He got impeached for assisting the DOJ investigation into it.
Thought for a moment there that we were actually going to get an article which did not include the word "Trump". Silly me. I seem to have misjudged the edibles or something.
Good explanation of the DOJ/Hunter scam that the judge exposed.
https://www.zerohedge.com/news/2023-07-27/why-hunter-bidens-doj-deal-went-smoke
"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."
“But Mr. Biden’s team, concerned that the department might abuse that authority if [Donald] Trump is re-elected, successfully pushed to give that power to Judge Noreika, arguing that she would be a more neutral arbiter.” Noreika thought that provision raised separation-of-powers issues by requiring her to perform a prosecutorial function.
OMG if Trump gets elected he might do to us what we are doing to him, he might the DOJ might abuse that authority if [Donald] Trump is re-elected or might reopen the case (as we have read about the Biden Adimistration doing right here on Reason to a Trump supporter)! How awful – abuse that authority.
Ultra Right wing Russian stooge is the correct nomenclature for GG.
/s
What a tangled web we weave…So the slicksters from the DOJ felt cozy entering Noreika’s courtroom, all giddy over the chance to play a little three-card monte with her, and with Lady Justice.
Weiss would lead the con. The plan was simple enough: Look official, serve up some legal doubletalk and reassure the judge that the plea deal was status quo. This was Delaware, folks, where Biden Law prevails, and everyone pledges allegiance.
Oops. The pigeon in robes wasn’t in the mood. A few minor details got stuck in her craw. Maybe it was the part about immunity-in-perpetuity, which was like asking her to shield Hunter from snorting another line of coke.
Or maybe it was the part about camouflaging their scheme with a double-secret probation, which only added to the Animal House spectacle she was exposing.
Weiss and Hunter soon got caught, then sooner spanked. Noreika served up the best flavor of justice and exactly what these bastards deserved: poetic justice.
Anybody who knows-a-guy and has money gets to walk free, not just Hunter Biden.
Hunter Biden will end up doing more time and paying more money than most charged with the same stuff in his economic class due to the publicity.
Bullshit. See Flynn, Manafort etc.
In no possible outcome of this does Hunter go to prison. The best outcome would be that continued investigation of Hunter will lead to charges against The Big Guy.
A libertarian (none to be found at Reason, of course) could make the same argument about the tax charges as Sullum does about the gun charges. All taxation is theft, therefore why didn't the judge say anything about the unfairness of the tax laws Hunter Biden violated?
Both gun and tax laws are unjust, but the idea that a judge is going to talk about either when looking at a plea deal is absurd.