New York Post

HUNTER’S ‘HOOK’

Sandy memorial to pitch ‘meet my dad’

- By OLIVIA LAND and STEVEN NELSON

Hunter Biden used his dad’s appearance at a Sandy Hook shooting memorial event to coordinate a previously unknown planned meeting between the former vice president and a Chinese business partner, newly unveiled texts showed.

On Dec. 12, 2017, Hunter messaged CEFC executive Liu Yadong on WeChat to arrange a meeting with his dad, documents released this week by the House Ways and Means Committee revealed.

“Can you meet this evening early,” Hunter wrote in the messages obtained by IRS investigat­ors.

“My father will be in New York also and he wants me to attend the

Sandyhook [sic] memorial service with him and I would like him to meet you along with my uncle [Jim Biden] and then you and I can talk let me know if that works.”

“No problem,” Liu replied. “Pls let me know where and when to meet.”

Joe Biden was later pictured at The Plaza hotel for the event commemorat­ing five years since the deadly Sandy Hook Elementary School shooting in Connecticu­t.

It was not clear if Joe Biden and Liu actually met that night.

Despite repeatedly insisting his family earned no money from China, the president featured prominentl­y in First Son Hunter and First Brother James Biden’s multimilli­on-dollar relationsh­ip with CEFC, with most of his known alleged interactio­ns happening in 2017 shortly after he left office as vice president.

Chinese entangleme­nt

Joe Biden played a similar supporting role in Hunter’s dealings with Chinese state-backed fund BHR Partners, which was registered just days after the father-son duo landed in Beijing aboard Air Force Two in 2013.

The newly revealed texts between Hunter Biden and Liu came after several months of back-andforth over the Biden clan’s involvemen­t in a deal with CEFC — which has ties to the Chinese government — in exchange for a cool $10 million per year. In July 2017, Hunter

Biden sent a stony message to CEFC official Runlong Zhao demanding an update on the project — and pointing out his dad’s involvemen­t — as the powerful US political family moved to cut out its other non-Chinese partners from the cash flow.

“I am sitting here with my father, and we would like to understand why the commitment made has not been fulfilled,” Hunter shot off. Within 10 days of Hunter’s threatenin­g July text message invoking his dad, CEFC wired $5.1 million to accounts linked to Hunter and his uncle James. The future president’s brother in turn sent $40,000 of the haul to Joe Biden as part of an alleged loan repayment, James Biden admitted last February.

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