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US President’s notorious son opens up about drugs, scandals, shady dealings

In this file photo, then-US Vice President Joe Biden and sons Hunter Biden (L) and Beau Biden walk in the Inaugural Parade in Washington, DC. (AFP Photo)

US President Joe Biden’s notorious son Hunter Biden has opened up about his drug addiction and other scandals, which dominated the US presidential election last year, in a new memoir.

The book, releasing this week, chronicles the 50-year-old's struggle with substance abuse, personal scandals, unceremonious exit from the US military and shady dealings in Ukraine.

“I’ve bought crack cocaine on the streets of Washington, D.C., and cooked up my own inside a hotel bungalow in Los Angeles. I’ve been so desperate for a drink that I couldn’t make the one-block walk between a liquor store and my apartment without uncapping the bottle to take a swig,” writes the son of President Biden in the prologue of ‘Beautiful Things’.

“In the last five years alone, my two-decades-long marriage has dissolved, guns have been put in my face, and at one point I dropped clean off the grid, living in $59-a-night Super 8 motels off I-95 while scaring my family even more than myself,” he adds.

In a television interview on Sunday, Hunter said he was barely sleeping and consuming cocaine and alcohol after the death of his brother Beau in 2015.

“I spent more time on my hands and knees picking through rugs, smoking anything that even remotely resembled crack cocaine,” he told CBS, reminiscing about time when his father was the vice president.

“I went one time for 13 days without sleeping, and smoking crack and drinking vodka exclusively throughout that entire time,” said the Yale-trained lawyer and lobbyist.

The junior Biden, who was thrown out of the UN Navy Reserve after failing a drug test, struggled to overcome the addiction for years.

The problem only got worse after his elder brother succumbed to brain cancer in 2015, when his binge-drinking vodka grabbed headlines and became a subject of political conversations in the US.

Hunter’s drug addiction was raised by the former US President Donald Trump during the high-voltage presidential debate in September last year.

Trump: "Hunter got thrown out of the military. He was thrown out, dishonorably discharged…"
Biden: "That's not true, he wasn't dishonorably discharged."
Trump: "… for cocaine use. And he didn't have a job until you became vice president. Once you became vice president …"
Biden: "None of that is true."
Trump: "… he made a fortune in Ukraine, in China, in Moscow, and various other places."
Biden: "That is simply not true."

In October last year, a New York Post article exposed Hunter’s shady dealings in Ukraine, which were found on a laptop that he apparently left in a Delaware repair shop in 2019.

Hunter was a director on the board of Burisma - a Ukrainian-owned private energy company while his father was the Obama administration's pointman on US-Ukrainian relations.

“There's a current Department of Justice investigation into your finances,” the CSB interviewer asked Hunter. “What is it about? Can you say anything?”

“I can't. But I can say this, is I'm cooperating completely. And I am absolutely certain, 100% certain that at the end of the investigation, that I will be cleared of any wrongdoing,” he replied.

Hunter had in December last year put out a statement saying his "tax affairs" are under federal investigation, which brought his years of shady financial dealings back into limelight.

His finances are currently being investigated by the US Department of Justice, but speculation is rife that the Biden team is making all-out efforts to save him from legal action.


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