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Hunter Biden: in the shadow of his father and brother

Shady business deals, drugs and women: Hunter Biden has lived a turbulent life under two shadows -- that of his father, President Joe Biden, and his older brother Beau, who died of cancer in 2015.

The 53-year-old Hunter Biden's efforts to put his lurid past behind him suffered a setback on Friday as Attorney General Merrick Garland named a special counsel to look into his affairs.

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Comer accuses Merrick Garland of running a 'coverup' by appointing special counsel for Hunter Biden

Attorney General Merrick Garland appointed David Weiss as special counsel to oversee the investigation into Hunter Biden -- but Rep. James Comer (R-KY) is still not happy.

Fox News' Chad Pergram reports that Comer lashed out at Garland for appointing a special prosecutor to investigate the president's son, despite the fact that such an appointment makes it more likely that Biden will face prison time for his alleged misdeeds.

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U.S. to invest $1.2 billion in plants to pull carbon from air

The US government said Friday it will spend up to $1.2 billion for two pioneering facilities to vacuum carbon out of the air, a technology to combat global warming that is not universally praised by experts.

The two projects -- in Texas and Louisiana -- each aim to eliminate one million tons of carbon dioxide per year, equivalent in total to the annual emissions of 445,000 gas-powered cars.

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Merrick Garland appoints special counsel to oversee Hunter Biden probe

Attorney General Merrick Garland announced that he was appointing prosecutor David Weiss as special counsel to investigate Hunter Biden, the son of President Joe Biden.

Garland said that Weiss had approached him this week and said that his investigation would require making him a special prosecutor, and Garland granted his request.

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Trump insiders worried about cash crunch before primaries due to legal bills sucking up donations

Nearly 30 percent of money spent this year by campaign entities on behalf of former President Donald Trump have gone to legal expenses, reported The New York Times on Friday.

According to new financial reports analyzed by Shane Goldmacher and Maggie Haberman, out of $90 million spent by these entities, including an independent super PAC Trump does not directly control, $27 million of it went to legal fees — including paying $1 million each to 8 law firms. This comes as the former president defends against three different indictments: a business fraud case in New York, the federal Mar-a-Lago Espionage Act and obstruction case in Florida, and the federal election 2020 coup case in Washington, D.C. Another indictment could be happening soon as Fulton County, Georgia prosecutor Fani Willis plans to seek over a dozen charges for multiple people in an election interference case in that state.

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Michigan woman lied about buying guns for son who made threats against Democrats: prosecutors

The mother of a man who allegedly made threats against Democratic lawmakers has been charged with lying about purchasing the weapons that her son was found with, ABC News reported.

Michelle Berka, 56, of Michigan, knowingly lied when she denied buying the five guns, according to prosecutors. Her son. Randall Berka II, was arrested in March and charged with illegally possessing guns. He was accused of making death threats against President Joe Biden and Michigan Gov. Gretchen Whitmer, as well as people in the LGBTQ community.

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Fani Willis 'has evidence to charge multiple' Trump allies with breaching voting machines: report

A new report from The Guardian's Hugo Lowell claims that Fulton County District Attorney Fani Willis has enough "evidence to charge multiple" Trump allies with breaching voting machines in the state.

Two sources tell The Guardian that several of Trump's allies could get hit with felony computer trespass charges as soon as next week, although the list of charges and defendants has yet to be finalized.

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James Comer's 'crazy trail' allegations should make swing-district Republicans nervous: Morning Joe

Reacting to a clip of Rep. Nick Langworthy (R-NY) being cornered by Fox News host Gillian Turner about the fact that Republican lawmakers have been claiming they have proof President Joe Biden took bribes without any evidence, "Morning Joe" host Joe Scarborough used it as an opportunity to trash GOP House Oversight Chair James Comer (R-KY) and his obsession with Hunter Biden.

After the clip was shown, Washington Post reporter Jacqueline Alemany offered, "Everyone on that committee has said several times, they have made these unsubstantiated claims and been unable to find the evidence to prove it. That there is a direct link between Hunter Biden and his business affairs and Joe Biden."

"There is no such thing, they haven't found anything," she asserted. "Now, Comer is moving the goalposts. If they do need to impeach Joe Biden, they know there is no smoking gun -- at least not yet. He now says he is going to subpoena Joe Biden and Hunter Biden; we'll see how far that goes."

"I've never understood people that say things one day and act like tomorrow is never going to come, right?" host Scarborough interjected.

IN OTHER NEWS: 'Not a single peso from Mexico': Chris Christie taunts Trump fans for broken wall-building promise

"The star GOP witness [Devon Archer], they got their smoking gun, they got their smoking gun, it's all horrible," the Morning Joe host continued. "Then the next, you know, the next day, you read the transcript and you're like, 'Oh, wait, this breaks in Biden's way.' They've done that time and time again."

"I mean, Congressman Comer, who on one hand acknowledged that he is doing this because it's taken a toll on President Biden's poll numbers, he's talking subpoenas now. -- he wants to go that step," he added. "He's giving new life to the idea of an impeachment inquiry, even after House Speaker [Kevin] McCarthy a few weeks ago tried to tap the brakes on that. It seems it couldn't be clearer, that this is an effort to muddy the water, to come up with a false equivalency to all the legal trouble that Donald Trump is in, and they're trying to paint a bad-faith image. Same as the case with President Biden and his family."

"There is a cost to that, though, for Republicans," he elaborated. 'Think about the number of Republicans that won in Biden districts. Those people -- every time these Republicans go down a crazy trail, they're the ones that end up paying the price for it."

Watch the video below or at this link.

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'All her mistakes break Trump's way': Morning Joe panel buries Judge Cannon over constant errors

An MSNBC "Morning Joe" panel discussion on the swift rulings from United States District Court Judge Tonya Chutkan, who is overseeing Donald Trump's trial related to the Jan. 6 insurrection, turned to contrasting her conduct with Trump-appointed Judge Aileen Cannon, who is under fire for multiple questionable rulings.

Host Joe Scarborough brought up Cannon after the panel noted Chutkan was efficiently moving her trial along, and that led State Attorney for Palm Beach County Dave Aronberg to point out Cannon's barely disguised bias towards the man who appointed her to the bench.

In particular, they focused on her challenge to the DOJ over the use of another grand jury to continue investigating Trump's mishandling of classified documents after leaving office.

" Trump lawyer Jim Trusty was on a right-wing show and said that there is a problem with having the separate grand jury -- this was the day before the ruling came out," Aronberg explained. "It made some people think that, was that a message sent from Trump's team to the judge?"

IN OTHER NEWS: Republicans 'intend to accuse Joe Biden of corruption without any direct evidence': CNN reporter

"Now, I'm not going to accuse anyone of impropriety, but it is peculiar she decided to do that when no one asked for that to be briefed," he added. "She said, 'Now, I want you to tell me whether you can have a second grand jury?' But a second grand jury can be used to investigate other crimes and to indict other people. So I think this issue is really bizarre, and it makes me think that we're back to the Judge Cannon of 2022 instead of Judge Cannon 2.0."

"Not to get off on this issue too long, but, I mean, if you go to 'The Drudge Report' any day, you see the mistakes she's made," host Scarborough interjected. "You know, she's just not had much trial experience. but in this case, it seems all the mistakes are breaking Trump's way, at least in the documents case, which, again, why we are saying this."

"This explains, in part, I think, why [special counsel] Jack Smith kept his indictment so tight on Donald Trump because he's in a rocket docket, and that thing is actually going to move," he continued.

"Yeah, any 50/50 ball in this case is going to Trump from Judge Cannon," contributor Jonathan Lemire added. "She's been deferential to his team's arguments, and that does seem like Jack Smith is trying to move forward on a tight case here in the election interference."

Watch below or at the link.

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Republicans 'intend to accuse Joe Biden of corruption without any direct evidence': CNN reporter

CNN reporter Zachary Cohen said on Friday that Republicans in the House of Representatives are planning to implicate President Joe Biden in a bribery scheme despite lacking any proof that any bribery took place.

While House Republicans have uncovered shady business dealings made by Hunter Biden during his time working for Ukrainian energy firm Burisma, they have so far found nothing indicating that President Biden benefited from the arrangements or altered American government policy because of them.

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A new growing threat to democracy is coming to a state near you: report

States removed more than 19 million people—or about 8.5% of the registered U.S. electorate—from voter rolls between the 2020 and 2022 electoral cycles, often via flawed practices that prevent many eligible persons from exercising their right to vote, a report released Thursday revealed.

The report—Protecting Voter Registration: An Assessment of Voter Purge Policies in 10 States—from the liberal think tank Dēmos, examines how voters are removed from electoral rolls in Arizona, California, Georgia, Indiana, Louisiana, Michigan, North Carolina, Ohio, Texas, and Wisconsin.

"An inclusive democracy requires free and fair ballot access. But too many states are limiting this fundamental right."

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Iowa Dem chair calls out RFK Jr.'s 'antisemitic' comments in state fair kickoff

Iowa Democratic Party Chair Rita Hart said 2024 Democratic challengers to President Joe Biden are welcome to campaign in Iowa, but said she was concerned about Robert F. Kennedy Jr.’s “antisemitic” comments.

Hart, joined by Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz, a fellow Democrat, spoke about the state fair and Iowa caucuses Thursday during the recording of “Iowa Press” on Iowa PBS. While much of the attention is focused on the Republican presidential candidates vying for the 2024 nomination, there are multiple candidates running against Biden in the upcoming presidential nominating cycle. Two of those candidates, Kennedy and Marianne Williamson, plan to speak at the Des Moines Register Political Soapbox Saturday afternoon.

Hart said Iowa has “a longstanding tradition of candidates coming to the Iowa State Fair,” but she was “concerned about the antisemitic comments that Robert F. Kennedy has recently said.”

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US investors flag retaliation risks after Biden's China tech curbs

(Reuters) - While the market mostly shrugged off President Joe Biden's move to prohibit some U.S. technology investments in China, U.S. investors said they were worried Beijing would retaliate or pull back from buying American technology. Aiming to protect national security and prevent U.S. capital and expertise from aiding China's military modernization, Biden this week issued an executive order barring some new U.S. investments in China in sensitive technologies including computer chips, while regulating others. U.S. investors were unfazed by the initial news, saying that the restrictions, a...