President Joe Biden has claimed there was “an absolute wall” between his family’s foreign business affairs and his job as Vice President of the United States. Biden “never discussed” business and was “never in business” with his son, Biden and White House officials have vehemently claimed. However, the National Archives and Records Administration (NARA) has acknowledged possessing up to 5,400 emails that prove otherwise.
Those 5,400 emails are “connected to then-Vice President Joe Biden’s pseudonym accounts that he used to forward government information and discuss business with his son, Hunter Biden, and others” reports Just The News.
The emails show, “at a bare minimum, that Vice President Biden’s team looped Hunter Biden into his official schedule, and they point to two emails sent on May 26, 2016, and June 14, 2016” , reports Foreign Desk News.
Last week, Representative James Comer, chairman of the House Oversight Committee, requested the National Archives and Records Administration turn over a tranche of emails from President Biden’s time as vice president. More specifically, Comer wants “all unredacted documents and communications” to and from the then-vice president and his son, Hunter Biden, and his son’s business associates.
On Monday, the Southeastern Legal Foundation filed a lawsuit to have the records turned over, saying the emails show Biden used the pseudonyms of Robin Ware, Robert L. Peters, and JRB Ware while he served in the Obama administration.
The archives’ admissions confirm years of reporting from Just the News about Biden’s use of a personal emailas vice president and the pseudonym accounts he used.
Monday’s lawsuit turns up the pressure on the archives to release the documents.
“All too often, public officials abuse their power by using it for their personal or political benefit. When they do, many seek to hide it,” Southeastern Legal Foundation general counsel Kimberly Hermann said. “The only way to preserve governmental integrity is for NARA to release Biden’s nearly 5,400 emails to SLF and thus the public. The American public deserves to know what is in them.”