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Good evening. It's Friday, August 11. Welcome to a new episode of System Update, our live nightly show that airs every Monday through Friday at 7 p.m. Eastern, exclusively on Rumble, the free speech alternative to YouTube.
Tonight: House Republicans have long been demanding that Attorney General Merrick Garland appoint a special counsel to conduct the criminal investigation into Hunter Biden. Their argument was obvious: it is impossible for a Justice Department that answers to Joe Biden to conduct a fair and sufficiently aggressive inquiry into the son of the president, to whom the DOJ answers. Those requests were long rejected, with both Garland and the U.S. attorney in Delaware overseeing the case, David Weiss, offering the same justification for why a special counsel wasn't needed. Namely, there has been no interference of any kind from the Biden DOJ, they said, and they insisted Weiss has had full, unfettered authority to take their investigation wherever it may lead.
As it turns out, that investigation led virtually nowhere. Last month, Weiss's office announced it had reached a plea deal with Hunter. It was something a criminal defendant facing serious charges of tax evasion, gun charges and FARA violations could only dream of. Under the deal offered to him, Hunter would plead guilty to only the two misdemeanor charges and would not spend a day in prison. But the Biden DOJ’s attempt to shove that very generous agreement through the court system fell into several parts over the last month. First, two credible IRS whistleblowers who had served as senior investigators in the case and were obviously risking career reprisals by stepping forward, testified before Congress that they were repeatedly prevented from suing, pursuing the kinds of investigative lines that they would typically have pursued and have always pursued in every other similar tax case. Then in late July, the Justice Department's plea deal with Hunter was presented to a federal judge, Maryellen Noreika, at the federal District Court in Wilmington, Delaware, who was clearly shocked by the broad scope of the deal and the highly unusual structure of it, one that would allow it to be enacted without her having to scrutinize or approve it. She began asking just a few basic questions to the prosecutors only to watch the deal immediately fall apart once it was subjected to the slightest traditional scrutiny.
With the deal blown up and with suspicions continuing to linger that the Biden DOJ gave unusually favorable treatment to the president's son, some media outlets, along with House Republicans, continue to investigate what really happened here with Hunter's profiteering in Ukraine, China, and elsewhere. What they found was increasingly compelling evidence, now a mountain’s worth, that Hunter Biden was not only selling the appearance of access to his powerful father when he was vice president but selling the reality of access and the ability of his father to take action to benefit those paying him. As a result of all of this, Biden’s Attorney General Merrick Garland today finally announced the appointment of a special counsel to investigate all of this. Yet, bizarrely, he did not choose someone outside of the authority of the White House or this investigation or even outside the government. Instead, he simply took the same prosecutor responsible for this entire debacle, David Weiss, who oversaw the preposterous plea deal that just fell apart and simply changed his title to “special counsel.” That obviously raises this pressing question: Is this really about finally bringing consequences and fair administration of justice to the president's son, or is it about just further delaying and covering up the corruption that has driven this investigation from the start, as well as attempts both in the media and in the DOJ, to shield Joe Biden from possible implication in all of these charges? We'll examine all angles of these events tonight.
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For now, welcome to a new episode of System Update, starting right now.