White House Appears to Confirm Hunter Biden Still Holds Stake in Chinese Private Equity Firm
The White House press secretary appeared to confirm that President Joe Biden’s son Hunter Biden still holds a stake in a Chinese private equity firm.
“He has been working to unwind his investment,” press secretary Jen Psaki said during a Friday press conference when asked about Hunter Biden’s stake in Bohai Harvest RST Shanghai Equity Investment Fund Management, commonly known as BHR Partners.
Psaki’s remarks confirmed an early report by the Daily Caller saying Hunter Biden still holds a stake in the Chinese company.
She then directed reporters to Hunter Biden for further questions.
“I would certainly point you—he’s a private citizen. I would point you to him or his lawyers on the outside on any update,” she added.
Hunter Biden didn’t respond to a request for comment from The Epoch Times.
George Mesires, the lawyer who represents the president’s son, said in an Oct. 13, 2019 statement that Hunter Biden intended to resign from the BHR board of directors on or by Oct. 31, 2019.
Business records show Hunter Biden left the board of directors on April 20, 2020.
However, he still holds a 10 percent stake via his company, Skaneateles LLC.
Hunter Biden is the sole beneficial owner of Skaneateles LLC, according to Washington, D.C. corporate records obtained by the Daily Caller.
The president told CNN’s Jake Tapper that his family would refrain from foreign business to avoid conflicts of interests.
“My son, my family will not be involved in any business, any enterprise that is in conflict with or appears to be in conflict, where there’s appropriate distance from the presidency and government,” he said during the Dec. 3, 2020 interview.
According to the assessment of Biden’s top intelligence pick, Hunter Biden’s stake in BHR Partners needs to be put in the crosshairs.
Avril Haines, the director of national intelligence, said during her confirmation hearing that the Chinese Communist Party is an adversary of the United States “on some issues.”
“China is adversarial and an adversary on some issues and, in other issues, we try to cooperate with them, whether in the context of climate change or other things,” she said.
Replies