Hunter Biden offers to testify before Congress in December
House Oversight Chairman James Comer subpoenaed the son and brother of President Joe Biden as part of an impeachment inquiry into the Democratic incumbent.
Hunter Biden, son of U.S. President Joe Biden, walks with family members in Nantucket, Massachusetts, U.S, November 24, 2023.
Tom Brenner | Reuters
Hunter Biden said Tuesday he would testify before Congress next month, as part of a Republican-led impeachment investigation into President Joe Biden and his family.
"Your empty investigation has gone on too long wasting too many better-used resources. It should come to an end," Hunter Biden's attorney Abbe Lowell wrote in a letter to the chairman of the House Oversight Committee.
"Consequently, Mr. Biden will appear at such a public hearing on the date you noticed, December 13, or any date in December that we can arrange," wrote Lowell.
The defiant letter came weeks after House Oversight Chairman James Comer, R-Ky., subpoenaed the Biden's son and brother, and called for them to sit for closed-door depositions, as he conducts an impeachment inquiry into the Democratic president.
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While Lowell's letter quotes Comer saying in September Hunter Biden would be "welcome" to appear before Congress, it is unclear if Comer will sign onto the proposal for a public hearing.
A spokesman for Comer did not immediately respond to CNBC's request for comment on the letter.
Comer and other Republicans accuse the president of being involved in, and profiting from, influence-peddling schemes devised by his family members, intended to enrich one another by virtue of their ties to a powerful politician.
The White House has roundly denied any wrongdoing by the president. Democrats have blasted the impeachment efforts as a political fishing expedition.
"Your Committee has been working for almost a year—without success—to tie our client's business activities to his father," Lowell wrote in Tuesday's letter.
He accused Comer of hypocrisy, for claiming that he wants to probe potential conflicts of interest surrounding the business activities of a president's family, while "turning a blind eye toward former President Trump and his family's businesses."
"Unlike members of the Trump family, Hunter is a private person who has never worked in any family business nor ever served in the White House or in any public office," wrote Lowell.
"Notwithstanding this stark difference, you have manipulated Hunter's legitimate business dealings and his times of terrible addiction into a politically motivated basis for hearings to accuse his father of some wrongdoing," Lowell wrote.
Lowell said they were offering Comer a public hearing with Hunter Biden, instead of a deposition behind closed doors, because, "We have seen you use closed-door sessions to manipulate, even distort the facts and misinform the public."
"We therefore propose opening the door," he wrote.
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