The IRS, FBI and Department of Justice all knew the Hunter Biden laptop was real ahead of the 2020 election, according to an exclusive report by investigative journalist Catherine Herridge. The report included an interview with IRS whistleblowers who said prosecutors demanded that they not ask questions about Joe Biden in an effort to affect that election.
“When we were doing the interviews the prosecutors specifically told us that they didn’t want to ask about the big guy because they knew it was Joe Biden,” IRS Whistleblower Gary Shapley said.
BREAKING: IRS Whistleblowers Involved in Hunter Biden Tax Case Reveal IRS, DOJ, and FBI Knew Laptop “Was Real” Immediately; Claim Prosecutors Demanded They Not Ask Questions About Joe Biden Ahead of 2020 Election
— Catherine Herridge (@C__Herridge) October 29, 2024
“There were a lot of overt investigative steps that we were not… pic.twitter.com/WKyS8Pi5pj
Leaked emails from Hunter Biden’s laptop reveal his business partner wanted to set aside 10% of a 2017 business deal with a Chinese company for ‘the big guy’. Hunter Biden admitted ‘the big guy’ was Joe Biden during a February deposition but said his father was never penciled in to get a cut. According to the whistleblowers, the feds also knew Joe Biden was the big guy.
“There was no question in your mind the big guy was Joe Biden,” Herridge asked in the report.
“We corroborated that ‘The Big Guy’ was Joe Biden, yes,” Shapley said.
The House Judiciary Committee also released a report stating the FBI attempted to preemptively debunk information about the Biden family ahead of the 2020 election that they thought could be harmful.
The Committee said federal agencies repeatedly warned social media platforms about a pre-election Russian influence operation related to Hunter Biden and the Ukrainian company Burisma.
In response, big tech companies adopted policies to address hacked materials, which led to the suppression of the Hunter Biden laptop story. The Committee’s 82 page report is based on testimony from FBI and Big Tech personnel and subpoenaed nonpublic internal documents and communications obtained by the Committee .