Hunter Biden to appear in court on Oct 3 on gun charges
US PRESIDENT Joe Biden’s son Hunter Biden was ordered on Wednesday to appear in a Delaware court on Oct 3 to face gun charges, after he sought to avoid showing up personally in the case.
Federal judge Christopher Burke rejected Biden’s request to appear by video, in which he said he did not want to cause a disruption arriving at the courthouse with his Secret Service escort.
“The defendant should not receive any special treatment in this matter,” Burke wrote in his ruling.
Burke though gave Biden an extra week to comply, from the date originally set for the hearing, Sept 26.
On Tuesday, Biden’s attorney informed the court that he would enter a “not guilty” plea to charges of illegally buying a gun when he was using drugs.
Biden, 53, was charged last week with three counts related to making false statements when claiming on forms required for a 2018 gun purchase that he was not using drugs illegally at the time.
GET BT IN YOUR INBOX DAILY
Start and end each day with the latest news stories and analyses delivered straight to your inbox.
He possessed the Colt revolver for 11 days before getting rid of it.
In June, a deal with federal prosecutor David Weiss - which would have erased the gun charges while Biden pleaded guilty to two tax charges and avoided prison - fell apart.
That led Weiss to filing three felony gun possession charges against him.
If convicted, Biden could in theory face 25 years in prison, though in practice such charges, if not accompanied by other charges, are seldom punished by any jail time.
Weiss, who was elevated to special counsel for the Biden probe after the plea deal fell through, in the meantime has signaled that he is still investigating Biden on possible tax charges. AFP
KEYWORDS IN THIS ARTICLE
BT is now on Telegram!
For daily updates on weekdays and specially selected content for the weekend. Subscribe to t.me/BizTimes
International
Indonesia sees more capital inflows after April rate hike: central bank governor
Malaysia eyes ‘orangutan diplomacy’ with nations that import palm oil
Malaysia to assess response to unilateral sanctions amid concern over Iran oil shipments
Trade between Singapore and Asean was at S$295.6 billion in 2023
UK passport control hit by outage, causing long waits at airports
Fed’s Kashkari says rates likely on hold for ‘extended period’