Shropshire Star

Hunter Biden gun case dismissed after President Joe Biden’s sweeping pardon

Prosecutors opposed dismissing the case, arguing in court documents that a pardon should not wipe away the case ‘as if it never occurred’.

By contributor By Lindsay Whitehurst, Associated Press
Published
Hunter Biden steps into a vehicle as he leaves federal court in September in Los Angeles
Hunter Biden steps into a vehicle as he leaves federal court in September in Los Angeles (Eric Thayer/AP)

A federal judge has dismissed the gun case against Hunter Biden after US President Joe Biden issued a sweeping pardon for his son.

US District Judge Maryellen Noreika closed the case the week before Hunter Biden was to be sentenced.

He could have faced up to 25 years in prison, though as a first-time offender he was likely to have got far less time or avoided prison entirely.

President Joe Biden with his son Hunter Biden on the South Lawn of the White House in Washington in July
President Joe Biden with his son Hunter Biden on the South Lawn of the White House in Washington in July (Susan Walsh/AP)

Prosecutors opposed dismissing the case, arguing in court documents that a pardon should not wipe away the case “as if it never occurred”.

Hunter Biden was convicted on three felonies after he lied on a federal form to purchase a gun in Delaware by saying he was not a drug user in 2018, a period when he has acknowledged being addicted.

The Justice Department special counsel is also opposed to dismissing a case filed in California after he failed to pay 1.4 million dollars (£1.1 million) in taxes.

A federal judge in Los Angeles has not yet ruled in that case.

The president’s Sunday decision to go back on previous pledges and issue his son a blanket federal pardon for actions over the past 11 years has sparked a political uproar in Washington, drawing criticism from many Democrats as well as Republicans and threatening to cloud Mr Biden’s legacy as he prepares to leave office on January 20.

Hunter Biden was originally supposed to strike a plea deal with prosecutors last year that would have spared him prison time, but the agreement fell apart after Judge Noreika questioned unusual aspects of it.

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