US House Republicans question whether Joe Biden's son accessed classified documents

The address where the documents were found was listed as Hunter Biden's address on his driver's license through 2018.

Joe Biden and his son Hunter

In addition to examining President Joe Biden's handling of classified documents, Republicans are preparing to probe Hunter Biden's (left) past business dealings in Ukraine. Source: Getty / Teresa Kroeger

Republicans in the US House of Representatives have launched an investigation into the Justice Department's handling of improperly stored classified documents possessed by President Joe Biden and questioned whether his son, Hunter, had access to any.

In a 13 January letter to Attorney-General Merrick Garland, top Republicans on the House judiciary committee said the Justice Department's appointment of Robert Hur as special counsel for the case this week raised "fundamental oversight questions".

They demanded all relevant documents and communications between the department, the FBI, the White House and Mr Biden's lawyers.
The letter came a day after Mr Biden's legal team acknowledged it had found classified documents relating to his time as vice president in the Obama administration at his Delaware home, including some in his garage.

Aides previously found another batch of classified documents at his residence and at a Washington think tank he was associated with.

Earlier on Friday, House oversight committee chairman James Comer wrote to the White House asking whether Hunter Biden had access to classified documents found at the president's private residence.

"It is unclear when the department first came to learn about the existence of these documents, and whether it actively concealed this information from the public on the eve of the 2022 elections," House judiciary chairman Jim Jordan and fellow panel Republican Mike Johnson told Mr Garland in their letter.

They set a 27 January deadline for compliance.
White House and Justice Department officials were not immediately available for comment.

The two Republican probes present a distraction for the Democratic president, who has criticised his Republican predecessor Donald Trump's handling of classified material and could cast a shadow over Mr Biden as both he and Mr Trump gear up for a possible 2024 election rematch.

It also provides fodder for House Republicans, who have pledged to focus their new majority on a number of investigations into the Biden administration.

As well as examining Mr Biden's handling of classified documents, Republicans are preparing to probe Hunter Biden's past business dealings in Ukraine.

In Mr Comer's letter to the White House, the House oversight committee chairman said the home where the documents were found was listed as Hunter Biden's address on his driver's license as recently as 2018.
"The committee is concerned President Biden stored classified documents at the same location his son resided while engaging in international business deals with adversaries of the United States," the letter read.

Republicans have sought to compare the investigation of Mr Biden's handling of classified documents to the ongoing probe into how Trump handled classified documents after his presidency.

But their cases are not the same, legal experts say.

The White House said Mr Biden's lawyers found a small number of classified documents and turned them over after discovery. Mr Trump resisted doing so until an August FBI search turned up about 100 classified documents, raising questions about whether Mr Trump or his staff obstructed the investigation.

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Published 14 January 2023 6:59am
Updated 14 January 2023 10:41am
Source: AAP, SBS

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