• Following pardon, Hunter Biden is mired in debt and without a permanent

    From Planet of the apes@21:1/5 to All on Sat Mar 8 01:50:24 2025
    XPost: alt.government.shills, alt.fan.rush-limbaugh, sac.politics
    XPost: or.politics

    Hunter Biden may have his freedom, but the son of former President Joe
    Biden now finds himself mired in debt, without a permanent home, and the
    target of ongoing attacks from the current president, Donald Trump, and
    his allies on Capitol Hill, according to a court filing.

    In court papers filed Wednesday, Hunter Biden asked a federal judge to
    dismiss his lawsuit against online provocateur Garrett Ziegler because he
    "does not have the financial resources to continue litigating this case."

    Amid lagging sales of his art and his memoir, the younger Biden remains "several million dollars" in debt after fighting multiple federal criminal cases, claiming in an affidavit that he only sold one painting for $36,000 since late 2023, after selling 27 paintings in the previous couple of
    years at an average price of nearly $55,000.

    "Given the positive feedback and reviews of my artwork and memoir, I was expecting to obtain paid speaking engagements and paid appearances, but
    that has not happened," Hunter Biden wrote Wednesday.

    He said that his "lack of financial resources has been exacerbated by the
    fires in the Pacific Palisades in early January, which has rendered my
    rental house unlivable for an extended period of time and, like many
    others in that situation, I am having difficulty in finding a new
    permanent place to live."

    A person close to Hunter Biden told ABC News that his rental did not burn
    down, but that immense damage to the surrounding properties had limited
    his access to his residence.

    The affidavit chronicles a series of hardships since his father's
    departure from office. Weeks before Trump's inauguration, then-President
    Biden pardoned his son shortly before two federal judges were scheduled to sentence him for a pair of criminal convictions in Delaware and
    California, for which he faced the possibility of substantial prison time.

    Hunter Biden has acknowledged taking out millions of dollars in loans from Kevin Morris, a Hollywood attorney who largely bankrolled Hunter Biden's
    legal defense over the past five years. In congressional testimony last
    year, Morris said he expected Hunter Biden to repay those loans beginning
    in 2025, though it was not clear from the affidavit whether those loan repayments have begun.

    Hunter Biden and his legal team are evaluating whether to continue
    litigating a handful of other lawsuits he filed in recent years against purveyors of his infamous laptop on a "case by case basis," Hunter Biden
    wrote in Wednesday's filing. Ziegler did not immediately respond to a
    request for comment from ABC News.

    One of those suits targets Patrick Byrne, the founder of Overstock.com and
    an avid supporter of President Trump. Hunter Biden sued Byrne in late 2023
    for defamation for falsely accused Hunter Biden of trying to bribe Iran
    while his father was president -- a claim that Hunter Biden said has
    subjected him to "harassment, intimidation, and harm." Byrne has fought
    the defamation claim in court.

    The trial in the case has been repeatedly delayed amid a protracted
    dispute over depositions from Byrne and an FBI agent that has thrown a
    wrench into the proceedings.

    Byrne's attorneys claim in court papers that Byrne fled to Dubai after he
    was told by U.S. officials "that the Venezuelan government has a
    $25,000,000 bounty on his head," and said he preferred a deposition over
    Zoom "out of concern for his personal safety." The parties ultimately
    agreed to a remote deposition in December that was expected to span seven
    hours over the course of three days, though it was unclear from the court docket when exactly the deposition occurred.

    In court filings as part of that case, Hunter Biden has echoed his claims
    of financial hardship. He claimed that because of Byrne's defamatory statements, he has suffered "lost economic opportunities" to the tune of
    nearly half a million dollars, citing lost memoir sales, lost art sales,
    and lost speaking opportunities.

    Hunter Biden's legal team has also subpoenaed the FBI, demanding testimony
    and documents from an agent whom Byrne claimed on social media could corroborate Byrne's allegations against the younger Biden. But the FBI has
    so far rebuffed those efforts, and on Monday the Justice Department filed
    a motion in federal court in Washington, D.C., urging a federal judge
    there to quash the subpoena.

    Meanwhile, Hunter Biden remains squarely on the minds of Trump and his loyalists in Congress. As one of his first acts in office, Trump signed an executive order revoking security clearances for 51 former intelligence officials who signed a letter asserting that the emergence of data from
    Hunter Biden's laptop in the weeks leading up to the 2020 election bore similarities to prior Russian misinformation operations.

    During a heated Oval Office confrontation between Trump, Vice President JD Vance and Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy last week, Trump
    repeatedly invoked Hunter Biden's name as part of a lengthy diatribe about
    the Russia investigation led by Robert Mueller.

    And on Tuesday, two top Republican lawmakers invited IRS whistleblowers
    who revealed details of Hunter Biden's tax filings as guests at Trump's
    Joint Address to Congress.

    The person close to Hunter Biden told ABC News that the former president's
    son will continue pursuing his art career and plans to devote himself to initiatives meant to help people struggling with addiction. And despite
    the sentiments in his affidavit, Hunter Biden remains in "a good place to rebuild his life," the person said.

    https://abcnews.go.com/US/pardon-hunter-biden-mired-debt-permanent-home- court/story?id=119520818

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From pothead@21:1/5 to Planet of the apes on Sat Mar 8 02:17:38 2025
    XPost: alt.government.shills, alt.fan.rush-limbaugh, sac.politics
    XPost: or.politics

    On 2025-03-08, Planet of the apes <enough.of.the@apes.usa> wrote:
    Hunter Biden may have his freedom, but the son of former President Joe
    Biden now finds himself mired in debt, without a permanent home, and the target of ongoing attacks from the current president, Donald Trump, and
    his allies on Capitol Hill, according to a court filing.

    In court papers filed Wednesday, Hunter Biden asked a federal judge to dismiss his lawsuit against online provocateur Garrett Ziegler because he "does not have the financial resources to continue litigating this case."

    Amid lagging sales of his art and his memoir, the younger Biden remains "several million dollars" in debt after fighting multiple federal criminal cases, claiming in an affidavit that he only sold one painting for $36,000 since late 2023, after selling 27 paintings in the previous couple of
    years at an average price of nearly $55,000.

    "Given the positive feedback and reviews of my artwork and memoir, I was expecting to obtain paid speaking engagements and paid appearances, but
    that has not happened," Hunter Biden wrote Wednesday.

    He said that his "lack of financial resources has been exacerbated by the fires in the Pacific Palisades in early January, which has rendered my
    rental house unlivable for an extended period of time and, like many
    others in that situation, I am having difficulty in finding a new
    permanent place to live."

    A person close to Hunter Biden told ABC News that his rental did not burn down, but that immense damage to the surrounding properties had limited
    his access to his residence.

    The affidavit chronicles a series of hardships since his father's
    departure from office. Weeks before Trump's inauguration, then-President Biden pardoned his son shortly before two federal judges were scheduled to sentence him for a pair of criminal convictions in Delaware and
    California, for which he faced the possibility of substantial prison time.

    Hunter Biden has acknowledged taking out millions of dollars in loans from Kevin Morris, a Hollywood attorney who largely bankrolled Hunter Biden's legal defense over the past five years. In congressional testimony last
    year, Morris said he expected Hunter Biden to repay those loans beginning
    in 2025, though it was not clear from the affidavit whether those loan repayments have begun.

    Hunter Biden and his legal team are evaluating whether to continue
    litigating a handful of other lawsuits he filed in recent years against purveyors of his infamous laptop on a "case by case basis," Hunter Biden wrote in Wednesday's filing. Ziegler did not immediately respond to a
    request for comment from ABC News.

    One of those suits targets Patrick Byrne, the founder of Overstock.com and
    an avid supporter of President Trump. Hunter Biden sued Byrne in late 2023 for defamation for falsely accused Hunter Biden of trying to bribe Iran
    while his father was president -- a claim that Hunter Biden said has subjected him to "harassment, intimidation, and harm." Byrne has fought
    the defamation claim in court.

    The trial in the case has been repeatedly delayed amid a protracted
    dispute over depositions from Byrne and an FBI agent that has thrown a
    wrench into the proceedings.

    Byrne's attorneys claim in court papers that Byrne fled to Dubai after he
    was told by U.S. officials "that the Venezuelan government has a
    $25,000,000 bounty on his head," and said he preferred a deposition over
    Zoom "out of concern for his personal safety." The parties ultimately
    agreed to a remote deposition in December that was expected to span seven hours over the course of three days, though it was unclear from the court docket when exactly the deposition occurred.

    In court filings as part of that case, Hunter Biden has echoed his claims
    of financial hardship. He claimed that because of Byrne's defamatory statements, he has suffered "lost economic opportunities" to the tune of nearly half a million dollars, citing lost memoir sales, lost art sales,
    and lost speaking opportunities.

    Hunter Biden's legal team has also subpoenaed the FBI, demanding testimony and documents from an agent whom Byrne claimed on social media could corroborate Byrne's allegations against the younger Biden. But the FBI has
    so far rebuffed those efforts, and on Monday the Justice Department filed
    a motion in federal court in Washington, D.C., urging a federal judge
    there to quash the subpoena.

    Meanwhile, Hunter Biden remains squarely on the minds of Trump and his loyalists in Congress. As one of his first acts in office, Trump signed an executive order revoking security clearances for 51 former intelligence officials who signed a letter asserting that the emergence of data from Hunter Biden's laptop in the weeks leading up to the 2020 election bore similarities to prior Russian misinformation operations.

    During a heated Oval Office confrontation between Trump, Vice President JD Vance and Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy last week, Trump
    repeatedly invoked Hunter Biden's name as part of a lengthy diatribe about the Russia investigation led by Robert Mueller.

    And on Tuesday, two top Republican lawmakers invited IRS whistleblowers
    who revealed details of Hunter Biden's tax filings as guests at Trump's
    Joint Address to Congress.

    The person close to Hunter Biden told ABC News that the former president's son will continue pursuing his art career and plans to devote himself to initiatives meant to help people struggling with addiction. And despite
    the sentiments in his affidavit, Hunter Biden remains in "a good place to rebuild his life," the person said.

    https://abcnews.go.com/US/pardon-hunter-biden-mired-debt-permanent-home- court/story?id=119520818

    The gravy train that the Biden's were running has run dry.
    Just like when Biden was no longer VP and Hunter's Burisma board of directors salary
    got cut big time.
    Hunter no longer had anything to sell.

    So how does the Biden crime family go from 10's of millions of dollars to
    stone cold broke?
    Seems odd to me.

    <https://oversight.house.gov/the-bidens-influence-peddling-timeline/>





    --
    pothead
    Liberalism is a mental disease.
    When you trim the fat, the pig squeals.
    -- Sen. John Kennedy (R-LA)

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Mitchell Holman@21:1/5 to pothead on Sat Mar 8 03:05:00 2025
    XPost: alt.government.shills, alt.fan.rush-limbaugh, sac.politics
    XPost: or.politics

    pothead <pothead@snakebite.com> wrote in
    news:vqg9c2$3qqnc$1@dont-email.me:

    On 2025-03-08, Planet of the apes <enough.of.the@apes.usa> wrote:
    Hunter Biden may have his freedom, but the son of former President
    Joe Biden now finds himself mired in debt, without a permanent home,
    and the target of ongoing attacks from the current president, Donald
    Trump, and his allies on Capitol Hill, according to a court filing.

    In court papers filed Wednesday, Hunter Biden asked a federal judge
    to dismiss his lawsuit against online provocateur Garrett Ziegler
    because he "does not have the financial resources to continue
    litigating this case."

    Amid lagging sales of his art and his memoir, the younger Biden
    remains "several million dollars" in debt after fighting multiple
    federal criminal cases, claiming in an affidavit that he only sold
    one painting for $36,000 since late 2023, after selling 27 paintings
    in the previous couple of years at an average price of nearly
    $55,000.

    "Given the positive feedback and reviews of my artwork and memoir, I
    was expecting to obtain paid speaking engagements and paid
    appearances, but that has not happened," Hunter Biden wrote
    Wednesday.

    He said that his "lack of financial resources has been exacerbated by
    the fires in the Pacific Palisades in early January, which has
    rendered my rental house unlivable for an extended period of time
    and, like many others in that situation, I am having difficulty in
    finding a new permanent place to live."

    A person close to Hunter Biden told ABC News that his rental did not
    burn down, but that immense damage to the surrounding properties had
    limited his access to his residence.

    The affidavit chronicles a series of hardships since his father's
    departure from office. Weeks before Trump's inauguration,
    then-President Biden pardoned his son shortly before two federal
    judges were scheduled to sentence him for a pair of criminal
    convictions in Delaware and California, for which he faced the
    possibility of substantial prison time.

    Hunter Biden has acknowledged taking out millions of dollars in loans
    from Kevin Morris, a Hollywood attorney who largely bankrolled Hunter
    Biden's legal defense over the past five years. In congressional
    testimony last year, Morris said he expected Hunter Biden to repay
    those loans beginning in 2025, though it was not clear from the
    affidavit whether those loan repayments have begun.

    Hunter Biden and his legal team are evaluating whether to continue
    litigating a handful of other lawsuits he filed in recent years
    against purveyors of his infamous laptop on a "case by case basis,"
    Hunter Biden wrote in Wednesday's filing. Ziegler did not immediately
    respond to a request for comment from ABC News.

    One of those suits targets Patrick Byrne, the founder of
    Overstock.com and an avid supporter of President Trump. Hunter Biden
    sued Byrne in late 2023 for defamation for falsely accused Hunter
    Biden of trying to bribe Iran while his father was president -- a
    claim that Hunter Biden said has subjected him to "harassment,
    intimidation, and harm." Byrne has fought the defamation claim in
    court.

    The trial in the case has been repeatedly delayed amid a protracted
    dispute over depositions from Byrne and an FBI agent that has thrown
    a wrench into the proceedings.

    Byrne's attorneys claim in court papers that Byrne fled to Dubai
    after he was told by U.S. officials "that the Venezuelan government
    has a $25,000,000 bounty on his head," and said he preferred a
    deposition over Zoom "out of concern for his personal safety." The
    parties ultimately agreed to a remote deposition in December that was
    expected to span seven hours over the course of three days, though it
    was unclear from the court docket when exactly the deposition
    occurred.

    In court filings as part of that case, Hunter Biden has echoed his
    claims of financial hardship. He claimed that because of Byrne's
    defamatory statements, he has suffered "lost economic opportunities"
    to the tune of nearly half a million dollars, citing lost memoir
    sales, lost art sales, and lost speaking opportunities.

    Hunter Biden's legal team has also subpoenaed the FBI, demanding
    testimony and documents from an agent whom Byrne claimed on social
    media could corroborate Byrne's allegations against the younger
    Biden. But the FBI has so far rebuffed those efforts, and on Monday
    the Justice Department filed a motion in federal court in Washington,
    D.C., urging a federal judge there to quash the subpoena.

    Meanwhile, Hunter Biden remains squarely on the minds of Trump and
    his loyalists in Congress. As one of his first acts in office, Trump
    signed an executive order revoking security clearances for 51 former
    intelligence officials who signed a letter asserting that the
    emergence of data from Hunter Biden's laptop in the weeks leading up
    to the 2020 election bore similarities to prior Russian
    misinformation operations.

    During a heated Oval Office confrontation between Trump, Vice
    President JD Vance and Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy last
    week, Trump repeatedly invoked Hunter Biden's name as part of a
    lengthy diatribe about the Russia investigation led by Robert
    Mueller.

    And on Tuesday, two top Republican lawmakers invited IRS
    whistleblowers who revealed details of Hunter Biden's tax filings as
    guests at Trump's Joint Address to Congress.

    The person close to Hunter Biden told ABC News that the former
    president's son will continue pursuing his art career and plans to
    devote himself to initiatives meant to help people struggling with
    addiction. And despite the sentiments in his affidavit, Hunter Biden
    remains in "a good place to rebuild his life," the person said.

    https://abcnews.go.com/US/pardon-hunter-biden-mired-debt-permanent-hom
    e- court/story?id=119520818

    The gravy train that the Biden's were running has run dry.


    Where are the indictments of the
    "Biden crime family" you promised Trump
    would produce?

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Bill Pfister@21:1/5 to pothead on Fri Mar 7 19:19:41 2025
    XPost: alt.government.shills, alt.fan.rush-limbaugh, sac.politics
    XPost: or.politics

    On 3/7/2025 6:17 PM, pothead wrote:
    On 2025-03-08, Planet of the apes <enough.of.the@apes.usa> wrote:
    Hunter Biden may have his freedom, but the son of former President Joe
    Biden now finds himself mired in debt, without a permanent home, and the
    target of ongoing attacks from the current president, Donald Trump, and
    his allies on Capitol Hill, according to a court filing.

    In court papers filed Wednesday, Hunter Biden asked a federal judge to
    dismiss his lawsuit against online provocateur Garrett Ziegler because he
    "does not have the financial resources to continue litigating this case."

    Amid lagging sales of his art and his memoir, the younger Biden remains
    "several million dollars" in debt after fighting multiple federal criminal >> cases, claiming in an affidavit that he only sold one painting for $36,000 >> since late 2023, after selling 27 paintings in the previous couple of
    years at an average price of nearly $55,000.

    "Given the positive feedback and reviews of my artwork and memoir, I was
    expecting to obtain paid speaking engagements and paid appearances, but
    that has not happened," Hunter Biden wrote Wednesday.

    He said that his "lack of financial resources has been exacerbated by the
    fires in the Pacific Palisades in early January, which has rendered my
    rental house unlivable for an extended period of time and, like many
    others in that situation, I am having difficulty in finding a new
    permanent place to live."

    A person close to Hunter Biden told ABC News that his rental did not burn
    down, but that immense damage to the surrounding properties had limited
    his access to his residence.

    The affidavit chronicles a series of hardships since his father's
    departure from office. Weeks before Trump's inauguration, then-President
    Biden pardoned his son shortly before two federal judges were scheduled to >> sentence him for a pair of criminal convictions in Delaware and
    California, for which he faced the possibility of substantial prison time. >>
    Hunter Biden has acknowledged taking out millions of dollars in loans from >> Kevin Morris, a Hollywood attorney who largely bankrolled Hunter Biden's
    legal defense over the past five years. In congressional testimony last
    year, Morris said he expected Hunter Biden to repay those loans beginning
    in 2025, though it was not clear from the affidavit whether those loan
    repayments have begun.

    Hunter Biden and his legal team are evaluating whether to continue
    litigating a handful of other lawsuits he filed in recent years against
    purveyors of his infamous laptop on a "case by case basis," Hunter Biden
    wrote in Wednesday's filing. Ziegler did not immediately respond to a
    request for comment from ABC News.

    One of those suits targets Patrick Byrne, the founder of Overstock.com and >> an avid supporter of President Trump. Hunter Biden sued Byrne in late 2023 >> for defamation for falsely accused Hunter Biden of trying to bribe Iran
    while his father was president -- a claim that Hunter Biden said has
    subjected him to "harassment, intimidation, and harm." Byrne has fought
    the defamation claim in court.

    The trial in the case has been repeatedly delayed amid a protracted
    dispute over depositions from Byrne and an FBI agent that has thrown a
    wrench into the proceedings.

    Byrne's attorneys claim in court papers that Byrne fled to Dubai after he
    was told by U.S. officials "that the Venezuelan government has a
    $25,000,000 bounty on his head," and said he preferred a deposition over
    Zoom "out of concern for his personal safety." The parties ultimately
    agreed to a remote deposition in December that was expected to span seven
    hours over the course of three days, though it was unclear from the court
    docket when exactly the deposition occurred.

    In court filings as part of that case, Hunter Biden has echoed his claims
    of financial hardship. He claimed that because of Byrne's defamatory
    statements, he has suffered "lost economic opportunities" to the tune of
    nearly half a million dollars, citing lost memoir sales, lost art sales,
    and lost speaking opportunities.

    Hunter Biden's legal team has also subpoenaed the FBI, demanding testimony >> and documents from an agent whom Byrne claimed on social media could
    corroborate Byrne's allegations against the younger Biden. But the FBI has >> so far rebuffed those efforts, and on Monday the Justice Department filed
    a motion in federal court in Washington, D.C., urging a federal judge
    there to quash the subpoena.

    Meanwhile, Hunter Biden remains squarely on the minds of Trump and his
    loyalists in Congress. As one of his first acts in office, Trump signed an >> executive order revoking security clearances for 51 former intelligence
    officials who signed a letter asserting that the emergence of data from
    Hunter Biden's laptop in the weeks leading up to the 2020 election bore
    similarities to prior Russian misinformation operations.

    During a heated Oval Office confrontation between Trump, Vice President JD >> Vance and Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy last week, Trump
    repeatedly invoked Hunter Biden's name as part of a lengthy diatribe about >> the Russia investigation led by Robert Mueller.

    And on Tuesday, two top Republican lawmakers invited IRS whistleblowers
    who revealed details of Hunter Biden's tax filings as guests at Trump's
    Joint Address to Congress.

    The person close to Hunter Biden told ABC News that the former president's >> son will continue pursuing his art career and plans to devote himself to
    initiatives meant to help people struggling with addiction. And despite
    the sentiments in his affidavit, Hunter Biden remains in "a good place to
    rebuild his life," the person said.

    https://abcnews.go.com/US/pardon-hunter-biden-mired-debt-permanent-home-
    court/story?id=119520818

    The gravy train that the Biden's were running has run dry.
    Just like when Biden was no longer VP and Hunter's Burisma board of directors salary
    got cut big time.
    Hunter no longer had anything to sell.

    So how does the Biden crime family go from 10's of millions of dollars to stone cold broke?
    Seems odd to me.

    <https://oversight.house.gov/the-bidens-influence-peddling-timeline/>

    The Zelenskyy cache pipeline has been turned off. No more freebies.
    Hunter should have managed his money better.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From ron@21:1/5 to pothead on Fri Mar 7 19:43:32 2025
    XPost: alt.government.shills, alt.fan.rush-limbaugh, sac.politics
    XPost: or.politics

    On 3/7/2025 6:17 PM, pothead wrote:
    On 2025-03-08, Planet of the apes <enough.of.the@apes.usa> wrote:
    Hunter Biden may have his freedom, but the son of former President Joe
    Biden now finds himself mired in debt, without a permanent home, and the
    target of ongoing attacks from the current president, Donald Trump, and
    his allies on Capitol Hill, according to a court filing.

    In court papers filed Wednesday, Hunter Biden asked a federal judge to
    dismiss his lawsuit against online provocateur Garrett Ziegler because he
    "does not have the financial resources to continue litigating this case."

    Amid lagging sales of his art and his memoir, the younger Biden remains
    "several million dollars" in debt after fighting multiple federal criminal >> cases, claiming in an affidavit that he only sold one painting for $36,000 >> since late 2023, after selling 27 paintings in the previous couple of
    years at an average price of nearly $55,000.

    Art the quality of an 8-year-old.

    Hunter Biden and his legal team are evaluating whether to continue
    litigating a handful of other lawsuits he filed in recent years against
    purveyors of his infamous laptop on a "case by case basis," Hunter Biden
    wrote in Wednesday's filing. Ziegler did not immediately respond to a
    request for comment from ABC News.

    One of those suits targets Patrick Byrne, the founder of Overstock.com and >> an avid supporter of President Trump. Hunter Biden sued Byrne in late 2023 >> for defamation for falsely accused Hunter Biden of trying to bribe Iran
    while his father was president -- a claim that Hunter Biden said has
    subjected him to "harassment, intimidation, and harm." Byrne has fought
    the defamation claim in court.

    The trial in the case has been repeatedly delayed amid a protracted
    dispute over depositions from Byrne and an FBI agent that has thrown a
    wrench into the proceedings.

    Byrne's attorneys claim in court papers that Byrne fled to Dubai after he
    was told by U.S. officials "that the Venezuelan government has a
    $25,000,000 bounty on his head," and said he preferred a deposition over
    Zoom "out of concern for his personal safety." The parties ultimately
    agreed to a remote deposition in December that was expected to span seven
    hours over the course of three days, though it was unclear from the court
    docket when exactly the deposition occurred.

    In court filings as part of that case, Hunter Biden has echoed his claims
    of financial hardship. He claimed that because of Byrne's defamatory
    statements, he has suffered "lost economic opportunities" to the tune of
    nearly half a million dollars, citing lost memoir sales, lost art sales,
    and lost speaking opportunities.

    Hunter Biden's legal team has also subpoenaed the FBI, demanding testimony >> and documents from an agent whom Byrne claimed on social media could
    corroborate Byrne's allegations against the younger Biden. But the FBI has >> so far rebuffed those efforts, and on Monday the Justice Department filed
    a motion in federal court in Washington, D.C., urging a federal judge
    there to quash the subpoena.

    Meanwhile, Hunter Biden remains squarely on the minds of Trump and his
    loyalists in Congress. As one of his first acts in office, Trump signed an >> executive order revoking security clearances for 51 former intelligence
    officials who signed a letter asserting that the emergence of data from
    Hunter Biden's laptop in the weeks leading up to the 2020 election bore
    similarities to prior Russian misinformation operations.

    During a heated Oval Office confrontation between Trump, Vice President JD >> Vance and Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy last week, Trump
    repeatedly invoked Hunter Biden's name as part of a lengthy diatribe about >> the Russia investigation led by Robert Mueller.

    Pissed Zelensky off too. He was part of the scam.

    And on Tuesday, two top Republican lawmakers invited IRS whistleblowers
    who revealed details of Hunter Biden's tax filings as guests at Trump's
    Joint Address to Congress.

    The person close to Hunter Biden told ABC News that the former president's >> son will continue pursuing his art career and plans to devote himself to
    initiatives meant to help people struggling with addiction. And despite
    the sentiments in his affidavit, Hunter Biden remains in "a good place to
    rebuild his life," the person said.

    https://abcnews.go.com/US/pardon-hunter-biden-mired-debt-permanent-home-
    court/story?id=119520818

    The gravy train that the Biden's were running has run dry.
    Just like when Biden was no longer VP and Hunter's Burisma board of directors salary
    got cut big time.
    Hunter no longer had anything to sell.

    So how does the Biden crime family go from 10's of millions of dollars to stone cold broke?
    Seems odd to me.

    Bidens' like to keep the money in the family. Which accounts got fatter?

    <https://oversight.house.gov/the-bidens-influence-peddling-timeline/>

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Prick@21:1/5 to All on Sat Mar 8 03:57:45 2025
    XPost: alt.government.shills, alt.fan.rush-limbaugh, sac.politics
    XPost: or.politics

    Bill Pfister wrote:


    Hillary Clinton and Soros control the purse strings and Trump's afraid
    to do anything about it.

    It's God's will, just like the hurricanes killing Floridians and the
    forest fires sweeping south carolina.

    It's also why Putin has AIDS.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Lester Gruber@21:1/5 to All on Sat Mar 8 08:11:04 2025
    XPost: alt.government.shills, alt.fan.rush-limbaugh, sac.politics
    XPost: or.politics

    On 07 Mar 2025, ron <ronbarnes@linuxmail.org> posted some news:vqged3$gm8$3@toxic.dizum.net:

    On 3/7/2025 6:17 PM, pothead wrote:
    On 2025-03-08, Planet of the apes <enough.of.the@apes.usa> wrote:
    Hunter Biden may have his freedom, but the son of former President
    Joe Biden now finds himself mired in debt, without a permanent home,
    and the target of ongoing attacks from the current president, Donald
    Trump, and his allies on Capitol Hill, according to a court filing.

    In court papers filed Wednesday, Hunter Biden asked a federal judge
    to dismiss his lawsuit against online provocateur Garrett Ziegler
    because he "does not have the financial resources to continue
    litigating this case."

    Amid lagging sales of his art and his memoir, the younger Biden
    remains "several million dollars" in debt after fighting multiple
    federal criminal cases, claiming in an affidavit that he only sold
    one painting for $36,000 since late 2023, after selling 27 paintings
    in the previous couple of years at an average price of nearly
    $55,000.

    Art the quality of an 8-year-old.

    Hunter Biden and his legal team are evaluating whether to continue
    litigating a handful of other lawsuits he filed in recent years
    against purveyors of his infamous laptop on a "case by case basis,"
    Hunter Biden wrote in Wednesday's filing. Ziegler did not
    immediately respond to a request for comment from ABC News.

    One of those suits targets Patrick Byrne, the founder of
    Overstock.com and an avid supporter of President Trump. Hunter Biden
    sued Byrne in late 2023 for defamation for falsely accused Hunter
    Biden of trying to bribe Iran while his father was president -- a
    claim that Hunter Biden said has subjected him to "harassment,
    intimidation, and harm." Byrne has fought the defamation claim in
    court.

    The trial in the case has been repeatedly delayed amid a protracted
    dispute over depositions from Byrne and an FBI agent that has thrown
    a wrench into the proceedings.

    Byrne's attorneys claim in court papers that Byrne fled to Dubai
    after he was told by U.S. officials "that the Venezuelan government
    has a $25,000,000 bounty on his head," and said he preferred a
    deposition over Zoom "out of concern for his personal safety." The
    parties ultimately agreed to a remote deposition in December that
    was expected to span seven hours over the course of three days,
    though it was unclear from the court docket when exactly the
    deposition occurred.

    During a heated Oval Office confrontation between Trump, Vice
    President JD Vance and Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy last
    week, Trump repeatedly invoked Hunter Biden's name as part of a
    lengthy diatribe about the Russia investigation led by Robert
    Mueller.

    Pissed Zelensky off too. He was part of the scam.

    And on Tuesday, two top Republican lawmakers invited IRS
    whistleblowers who revealed details of Hunter Biden's tax filings as
    guests at Trump's Joint Address to Congress.

    The person close to Hunter Biden told ABC News that the former
    president's son will continue pursuing his art career and plans to
    devote himself to initiatives meant to help people struggling with
    addiction. And despite the sentiments in his affidavit, Hunter Biden
    remains in "a good place to rebuild his life," the person said.

    https://abcnews.go.com/US/pardon-hunter-biden-mired-debt-permanent-ho
    me- court/story?id=119520818

    The gravy train that the Biden's were running has run dry.
    Just like when Biden was no longer VP and Hunter's Burisma board of
    directors salary got cut big time.
    Hunter no longer had anything to sell.

    So how does the Biden crime family go from 10's of millions of
    dollars to stone cold broke?
    Seems odd to me.

    Bidens' like to keep the money in the family. Which accounts got
    fatter?

    That's funny. Hunter laundered all the Ukraine money for Joe and got
    nothing out of it except a pardon apparently.

    <https://oversight.house.gov/the-bidens-influence-peddling-timeline/>

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Syn City@21:1/5 to All on Sun May 25 04:28:53 2025
    XPost: alt.music.bruce-springsteen, alt.fan.rush-limbaugh, sac.politics
    XPost: alt.atheism, alt.fun

    Hunter Biden may have his freedom, but the son of former President Joe
    Biden now finds himself mired in debt, without a permanent home, and the
    target of ongoing attacks from the current president, Donald Trump, and
    his allies on Capitol Hill, according to a court filing.

    In court papers filed Wednesday, Hunter Biden asked a federal judge to
    dismiss his lawsuit against online provocateur Garrett Ziegler because he
    "does not have the financial resources to continue litigating this case."

    Amid lagging sales of his art and his memoir, the younger Biden remains "several million dollars" in debt after fighting multiple federal criminal cases, claiming in an affidavit that he only sold one painting for $36,000 since late 2023, after selling 27 paintings in the previous couple of
    years at an average price of nearly $55,000.

    "Given the positive feedback and reviews of my artwork and memoir, I was expecting to obtain paid speaking engagements and paid appearances, but
    that has not happened," Hunter Biden wrote Wednesday.

    He said that his "lack of financial resources has been exacerbated by the
    fires in the Pacific Palisades in early January, which has rendered my
    rental house unlivable for an extended period of time and, like many
    others in that situation, I am having difficulty in finding a new
    permanent place to live."

    A person close to Hunter Biden told ABC News that his rental did not burn
    down, but that immense damage to the surrounding properties had limited
    his access to his residence.

    The affidavit chronicles a series of hardships since his father's
    departure from office. Weeks before Trump's inauguration, then-President
    Biden pardoned his son shortly before two federal judges were scheduled to sentence him for a pair of criminal convictions in Delaware and
    California, for which he faced the possibility of substantial prison time.

    https://abcnews.go.com/US/pardon-hunter-biden-mired-debt-permanent-home- court/story?id=119520818

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From pothead@21:1/5 to Syn City on Mon May 26 14:35:48 2025
    XPost: alt.music.bruce-springsteen, alt.fan.rush-limbaugh, sac.politics
    XPost: alt.atheism, alt.fun

    On 2025-05-25, Syn City <syncity@my-deja.com> wrote:
    Hunter Biden may have his freedom, but the son of former President Joe
    Biden now finds himself mired in debt, without a permanent home, and the target of ongoing attacks from the current president, Donald Trump, and
    his allies on Capitol Hill, according to a court filing.

    In court papers filed Wednesday, Hunter Biden asked a federal judge to dismiss his lawsuit against online provocateur Garrett Ziegler because he "does not have the financial resources to continue litigating this case."

    Amid lagging sales of his art and his memoir, the younger Biden remains "several million dollars" in debt after fighting multiple federal criminal cases, claiming in an affidavit that he only sold one painting for $36,000 since late 2023, after selling 27 paintings in the previous couple of
    years at an average price of nearly $55,000.

    "Given the positive feedback and reviews of my artwork and memoir, I was expecting to obtain paid speaking engagements and paid appearances, but
    that has not happened," Hunter Biden wrote Wednesday.

    He said that his "lack of financial resources has been exacerbated by the fires in the Pacific Palisades in early January, which has rendered my
    rental house unlivable for an extended period of time and, like many
    others in that situation, I am having difficulty in finding a new
    permanent place to live."

    A person close to Hunter Biden told ABC News that his rental did not burn down, but that immense damage to the surrounding properties had limited
    his access to his residence.

    The affidavit chronicles a series of hardships since his father's
    departure from office. Weeks before Trump's inauguration, then-President Biden pardoned his son shortly before two federal judges were scheduled to sentence him for a pair of criminal convictions in Delaware and
    California, for which he faced the possibility of substantial prison time.

    https://abcnews.go.com/US/pardon-hunter-biden-mired-debt-permanent-home- court/story?id=119520818

    Karma's a bitch.


    --
    pothead
    Liberalism Is A Mental Disease
    Treat it accordingly <https://www.dailymail.co.uk/health/article-14512427/Doctors-reveal-symptoms-Trump-Derangement-Syndrome-tell-youve-got-it.html>

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Mitchell Holman@21:1/5 to pothead on Mon May 26 17:16:46 2025
    XPost: alt.fan.rush-limbaugh, sac.politics, alt.atheism
    XPost: alt.fun

    pothead <pothead@snakebite.com> wrote in
    news:1011u84$21q5b$1@dont-email.me:

    On 2025-05-25, Syn City <syncity@my-deja.com> wrote:
    Hunter Biden may have his freedom, but the son of former President
    Joe Biden now finds himself mired in debt, without a permanent home,
    and the target of ongoing attacks from the current president, Donald
    Trump, and his allies on Capitol Hill, according to a court filing.

    In court papers filed Wednesday, Hunter Biden asked a federal judge
    to dismiss his lawsuit against online provocateur Garrett Ziegler
    because he "does not have the financial resources to continue
    litigating this case."

    Amid lagging sales of his art and his memoir, the younger Biden
    remains "several million dollars" in debt after fighting multiple
    federal criminal cases, claiming in an affidavit that he only sold
    one painting for $36,000 since late 2023, after selling 27 paintings
    in the previous couple of years at an average price of nearly
    $55,000.

    "Given the positive feedback and reviews of my artwork and memoir, I
    was expecting to obtain paid speaking engagements and paid
    appearances, but that has not happened," Hunter Biden wrote
    Wednesday.

    He said that his "lack of financial resources has been exacerbated by
    the fires in the Pacific Palisades in early January, which has
    rendered my rental house unlivable for an extended period of time
    and, like many others in that situation, I am having difficulty in
    finding a new permanent place to live."

    A person close to Hunter Biden told ABC News that his rental did not
    burn down, but that immense damage to the surrounding properties had
    limited his access to his residence.

    The affidavit chronicles a series of hardships since his father's
    departure from office. Weeks before Trump's inauguration,
    then-President Biden pardoned his son shortly before two federal
    judges were scheduled to sentence him for a pair of criminal
    convictions in Delaware and California, for which he faced the
    possibility of substantial prison time.

    https://abcnews.go.com/US/pardon-hunter-biden-mired-debt-permanent-hom
    e- court/story?id=119520818

    Karma's a bitch.



    Biden Derangement Syndrome.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Gregor@21:1/5 to All on Mon May 26 18:56:26 2025
    XPost: alt.fan.rush-limbaugh, sac.politics, alt.atheism
    XPost: alt.fun

    On 26 May 2025, Mitchell Holman <noemail@aol.com> posted some news:XnsB2EB7CBDAB350629555@69.80.102.16:

    pothead <pothead@snakebite.com> wrote in
    news:1011u84$21q5b$1@dont-email.me:

    On 2025-05-25, Syn City <syncity@my-deja.com> wrote:
    Hunter Biden may have his freedom, but the son of former President
    Joe Biden now finds himself mired in debt, without a permanent home,
    and the target of ongoing attacks from the current president, Donald
    Trump, and his allies on Capitol Hill, according to a court filing.

    In court papers filed Wednesday, Hunter Biden asked a federal judge
    to dismiss his lawsuit against online provocateur Garrett Ziegler
    because he "does not have the financial resources to continue
    litigating this case."

    Amid lagging sales of his art and his memoir, the younger Biden
    remains "several million dollars" in debt after fighting multiple
    federal criminal cases, claiming in an affidavit that he only sold
    one painting for $36,000 since late 2023, after selling 27 paintings
    in the previous couple of years at an average price of nearly
    $55,000.

    "Given the positive feedback and reviews of my artwork and memoir, I
    was expecting to obtain paid speaking engagements and paid
    appearances, but that has not happened," Hunter Biden wrote
    Wednesday.

    He said that his "lack of financial resources has been exacerbated by
    the fires in the Pacific Palisades in early January, which has
    rendered my rental house unlivable for an extended period of time
    and, like many others in that situation, I am having difficulty in
    finding a new permanent place to live."

    A person close to Hunter Biden told ABC News that his rental did not
    burn down, but that immense damage to the surrounding properties had
    limited his access to his residence.

    The affidavit chronicles a series of hardships since his father's
    departure from office. Weeks before Trump's inauguration,
    then-President Biden pardoned his son shortly before two federal
    judges were scheduled to sentence him for a pair of criminal
    convictions in Delaware and California, for which he faced the
    possibility of substantial prison time.

    https://abcnews.go.com/US/pardon-hunter-biden-mired-debt-permanent-hom
    e- court/story?id=119520818

    Karma's a bitch.

    Biden Derangement Syndrome.

    That only affected Democrats who voted for Joe or Kamala.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From NoBody@21:1/5 to pothead@snakebite.com on Tue May 27 08:51:49 2025
    XPost: alt.music.bruce-springsteen, alt.fan.rush-limbaugh, sac.politics
    XPost: alt.atheism, alt.fun

    On Mon, 26 May 2025 14:35:48 -0000 (UTC), pothead
    <pothead@snakebite.com> wrote:

    On 2025-05-25, Syn City <syncity@my-deja.com> wrote:
    Hunter Biden may have his freedom, but the son of former President Joe
    Biden now finds himself mired in debt, without a permanent home, and the
    target of ongoing attacks from the current president, Donald Trump, and
    his allies on Capitol Hill, according to a court filing.

    In court papers filed Wednesday, Hunter Biden asked a federal judge to
    dismiss his lawsuit against online provocateur Garrett Ziegler because he
    "does not have the financial resources to continue litigating this case."

    Amid lagging sales of his art and his memoir, the younger Biden remains
    "several million dollars" in debt after fighting multiple federal criminal >> cases, claiming in an affidavit that he only sold one painting for $36,000 >> since late 2023, after selling 27 paintings in the previous couple of
    years at an average price of nearly $55,000.

    "Given the positive feedback and reviews of my artwork and memoir, I was
    expecting to obtain paid speaking engagements and paid appearances, but
    that has not happened," Hunter Biden wrote Wednesday.

    He said that his "lack of financial resources has been exacerbated by the
    fires in the Pacific Palisades in early January, which has rendered my
    rental house unlivable for an extended period of time and, like many
    others in that situation, I am having difficulty in finding a new
    permanent place to live."

    A person close to Hunter Biden told ABC News that his rental did not burn
    down, but that immense damage to the surrounding properties had limited
    his access to his residence.

    The affidavit chronicles a series of hardships since his father's
    departure from office. Weeks before Trump's inauguration, then-President
    Biden pardoned his son shortly before two federal judges were scheduled to >> sentence him for a pair of criminal convictions in Delaware and
    California, for which he faced the possibility of substantial prison time. >>
    https://abcnews.go.com/US/pardon-hunter-biden-mired-debt-permanent-home-
    court/story?id=119520818

    Karma's a bitch.

    I don't believe for a second he's broke. He's just trying to get out
    of paying his bills.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Dong@21:1/5 to All on Tue May 27 17:48:08 2025
    XPost: alt.music.bruce-springsteen, alt.fan.rush-limbaugh, sac.politics
    XPost: alt.atheism, alt.fun

    On 27 May 2025, NoBody <NoBody@nowhere.com> posted some news:q9db3k9v3tnn3dfvm72abka4t03c8orn9t@4ax.com:

    On Mon, 26 May 2025 14:35:48 -0000 (UTC), pothead
    <pothead@snakebite.com> wrote:

    On 2025-05-25, Syn City <syncity@my-deja.com> wrote:
    Hunter Biden may have his freedom, but the son of former President
    Joe Biden now finds himself mired in debt, without a permanent home,
    and the target of ongoing attacks from the current president, Donald
    Trump, and his allies on Capitol Hill, according to a court filing.

    In court papers filed Wednesday, Hunter Biden asked a federal judge
    to dismiss his lawsuit against online provocateur Garrett Ziegler
    because he "does not have the financial resources to continue
    litigating this case."

    Amid lagging sales of his art and his memoir, the younger Biden
    remains "several million dollars" in debt after fighting multiple
    federal criminal cases, claiming in an affidavit that he only sold
    one painting for $36,000 since late 2023, after selling 27 paintings
    in the previous couple of years at an average price of nearly
    $55,000.

    "Given the positive feedback and reviews of my artwork and memoir, I
    was expecting to obtain paid speaking engagements and paid
    appearances, but that has not happened," Hunter Biden wrote
    Wednesday.

    He said that his "lack of financial resources has been exacerbated
    by the fires in the Pacific Palisades in early January, which has
    rendered my rental house unlivable for an extended period of time
    and, like many others in that situation, I am having difficulty in
    finding a new permanent place to live."

    A person close to Hunter Biden told ABC News that his rental did not
    burn down, but that immense damage to the surrounding properties had
    limited his access to his residence.

    The affidavit chronicles a series of hardships since his father's
    departure from office. Weeks before Trump's inauguration,
    then-President Biden pardoned his son shortly before two federal
    judges were scheduled to sentence him for a pair of criminal
    convictions in Delaware and California, for which he faced the
    possibility of substantial prison time.

    https://abcnews.go.com/US/pardon-hunter-biden-mired-debt-permanent-ho
    me- court/story?id=119520818

    Karma's a bitch.

    I don't believe for a second he's broke. He's just trying to get out
    of paying his bills.

    Wasn't Hunter the Biden family "bank"? Supposedly he was paying Joe's
    bills.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Mitchell Holman@21:1/5 to Dong on Tue May 27 18:07:59 2025
    XPost: alt.fan.rush-limbaugh, sac.politics, alt.atheism
    XPost: alt.fun

    Dong <nguyen@bank.vn> wrote in news:8372a35964.1748368078@vgfto.xb:

    On 27 May 2025, NoBody <NoBody@nowhere.com> posted some news:q9db3k9v3tnn3dfvm72abka4t03c8orn9t@4ax.com:

    On Mon, 26 May 2025 14:35:48 -0000 (UTC), pothead
    <pothead@snakebite.com> wrote:

    On 2025-05-25, Syn City <syncity@my-deja.com> wrote:
    Hunter Biden may have his freedom, but the son of former President
    Joe Biden now finds himself mired in debt, without a permanent home,
    and the target of ongoing attacks from the current president, Donald
    Trump, and his allies on Capitol Hill, according to a court filing.

    In court papers filed Wednesday, Hunter Biden asked a federal judge
    to dismiss his lawsuit against online provocateur Garrett Ziegler
    because he "does not have the financial resources to continue
    litigating this case."

    Amid lagging sales of his art and his memoir, the younger Biden
    remains "several million dollars" in debt after fighting multiple
    federal criminal cases, claiming in an affidavit that he only sold
    one painting for $36,000 since late 2023, after selling 27 paintings
    in the previous couple of years at an average price of nearly
    $55,000.

    "Given the positive feedback and reviews of my artwork and memoir, I
    was expecting to obtain paid speaking engagements and paid
    appearances, but that has not happened," Hunter Biden wrote
    Wednesday.

    He said that his "lack of financial resources has been exacerbated
    by the fires in the Pacific Palisades in early January, which has
    rendered my rental house unlivable for an extended period of time
    and, like many others in that situation, I am having difficulty in
    finding a new permanent place to live."

    A person close to Hunter Biden told ABC News that his rental did not
    burn down, but that immense damage to the surrounding properties had
    limited his access to his residence.

    The affidavit chronicles a series of hardships since his father's
    departure from office. Weeks before Trump's inauguration,
    then-President Biden pardoned his son shortly before two federal
    judges were scheduled to sentence him for a pair of criminal
    convictions in Delaware and California, for which he faced the
    possibility of substantial prison time.

    https://abcnews.go.com/US/pardon-hunter-biden-mired-debt-permanent-
    ho
    me- court/story?id=119520818

    Karma's a bitch.

    I don't believe for a second he's broke. He's just trying to get out
    of paying his bills.

    Wasn't Hunter the Biden family "bank"? Supposedly he was paying Joe's
    bills.




    MAGA's complaining about others
    not paying their bills.

    Oh, the irony............




    Cities seek more than $750K in unpaid
    bills for Trump campaign events
    Oct. 11, 2024
    https://tinyurl.com/bdffetut



    Trump campaign leaving some cities with
    hundreds of thousands in unpaid bills
    November 3, 2024
    https://tinyurl.com/4e5pt6kh



    The Trump campaign has over $1 million in
    outstanding bills from American cities
    October 24, 2019
    https://tinyurl.com/u8bazxt8

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Siri Cruz@21:1/5 to NoBody on Tue May 27 16:47:44 2025
    XPost: alt.music.bruce-springsteen, alt.fan.rush-limbaugh, sac.politics
    XPost: alt.atheism, alt.fun

    On 27/5/25 5:51, NoBody wrote:
    I don't believe for a second he's broke. He's just trying to get out
    of paying his bills.

    I do not care. Never did.

    I care about people who get into government. Like Eric, Ivanka,
    and Junior.

    --
    Siri Seal of Disavowal #000-999. Disavowed. Denied. @
    'I desire mercy, not sacrifice.' /|\
    The Church of the Holey Apple .signature 4.0 / \
    of Discordian Mysteries. This post insults Islam. Mohamed

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Attila@21:1/5 to 1011u84$21q5b$1@dont-email.me on Thu May 29 09:32:38 2025
    XPost: alt.music.bruce-springsteen, alt.fan.rush-limbaugh, sac.politics
    XPost: alt.atheism, alt.fun

    On Mon, 26 May 2025 14:35:48 -0000 (UTC), pothead
    <pothead@snakebite.com> in alt.atheism with message-id <1011u84$21q5b$1@dont-email.me> wrote:

    On 2025-05-25, Syn City <syncity@my-deja.com> wrote:
    Hunter Biden may have his freedom, but the son of former President Joe
    Biden now finds himself mired in debt, without a permanent home, and the
    target of ongoing attacks from the current president, Donald Trump, and
    his allies on Capitol Hill, according to a court filing.

    In court papers filed Wednesday, Hunter Biden asked a federal judge to
    dismiss his lawsuit against online provocateur Garrett Ziegler because he
    "does not have the financial resources to continue litigating this case."

    Amid lagging sales of his art and his memoir, the younger Biden remains
    "several million dollars" in debt after fighting multiple federal criminal >> cases, claiming in an affidavit that he only sold one painting for $36,000 >> since late 2023, after selling 27 paintings in the previous couple of
    years at an average price of nearly $55,000.

    "Given the positive feedback and reviews of my artwork and memoir, I was
    expecting to obtain paid speaking engagements and paid appearances, but
    that has not happened," Hunter Biden wrote Wednesday.

    He said that his "lack of financial resources has been exacerbated by the
    fires in the Pacific Palisades in early January, which has rendered my
    rental house unlivable for an extended period of time and, like many
    others in that situation, I am having difficulty in finding a new
    permanent place to live."

    A person close to Hunter Biden told ABC News that his rental did not burn
    down, but that immense damage to the surrounding properties had limited
    his access to his residence.

    The affidavit chronicles a series of hardships since his father's
    departure from office. Weeks before Trump's inauguration, then-President
    Biden pardoned his son shortly before two federal judges were scheduled to >> sentence him for a pair of criminal convictions in Delaware and
    California, for which he faced the possibility of substantial prison time. >>
    https://abcnews.go.com/US/pardon-hunter-biden-mired-debt-permanent-home-
    court/story?id=119520818

    Karma's a bitch.

    I would not be surprised to learn he drafted and signed his
    own pardon using an autopen.

    I can believe he has little income since he no longer has
    political access to sell.

    --


    Build a wall.
    Deport them all.

    Every illegal is a criminal.

    All politicians are trained to lie
    and make those lies sound like
    the truth. They start with the biggest
    lie of all: Politicians are public
    servants.

    DEI DEATH CERTIFICATE

    Date - Jan 20, 2025
    Time - 12:00 Noon

    "Joe who?"

    I support:

    A Constitional Amendment establishing
    the Freedom of Choice.

    The elimination of public expression,
    display or support of religion or
    religious positions.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)