House Oversight Chair James Comer is requesting President-elect Trump’s DOJ investigate and prosecute President Biden’s brother, James Biden, for alleged false statements to Congress.
Earlier today, Biden issued preemptive pardons for Gen. Mark Milley, Dr. Anthony Fauci, the members of the Jan. 6 committee, and the officers who testified before the committee.
Outgoing President Biden on Monday issued a slew of pardons for more kin, including a broad, 11-year granting of clemency for his brother James — effectively killing any chance of
House Oversight Democrats hoping to highlight potential conflicts of interest under President Trump see leverage in a past ethics bill from Chair James Comer (R-Ky.). That proposal, which Comer introduced amid his wide-ranging investigation into former President Biden,
“The next day a GOP consultant close to both Kushner and Representative Kevin McCarthy called telling me that I needed to change my statement,” Comer writes in his new book, “All the President’s Money: Investigating the Secret Foreign Schemes That Made the Biden Family Rich.”
They would no longer have the right to invoke the Fifth Amendment if called to testify in civil, criminal, or congressional proceedings
In his final hours as president, Biden issued several pardons to family members, including his brother James Biden. Joe Biden said his family has “been subjected to unrelenting attacks and threats, motivated solely by a desire to hurt me — the worst kind of partisan politics,” and he has “no reason to believe these attacks will end.”
The end of the Biden administration might not mean the end of the investigation into the financial actions of President Joe Biden’s family members. House Oversight Committee Chair James Comer of Kentucky is asking the incoming Justice Department to file criminal charges against James Biden,
House Oversight Chairman James Comer and a pair of IRS whistleblowers slammed Special Counsel David Weiss' final report on first son Hunter Biden as incomplete.
Former President Joe Biden s decision to extend pardons to multiple family members just before the close of his presidency drew swift backlash from political opponents, including his successor
President Joe Biden issued pardons to several close family members Monday in the final minutes of his presidency.
In his last hour as president, Joe Biden pardoned his brothers, his sister and their spouses. "My family has been subjected to unrelenting attacks and threats, motivated solely by a desire to hurt me -- the worst kind of partisan politics," Biden wrote in a statement. "Unfortunately, I have no reason to believe these attacks will end."