Joe Biden and the Imperial Palace are not-so-strangely silent about a revelation the National Archives wants to make. They have a whole box full of emails marked “Burisma” and aren’t sure if they should follow the law and hand them over, or violate it and protect Joe.
National Archives on the spot
The National Archives have stored some information which could implicate the Big Guy himself in a huge criminal conspiracy.
Nobody in the Imperial Palace will utter a single word of speculation about the pending decision to release “a trove of documents from the Obama administration that may contain information about Hunter Biden’s relationship with the Ukrainian energy company Burisma.”
On November 30, the National Archives and Records Administration “informed” palace administrators “that it will soon release nearly 300 email messages in response to Freedom of Information Act requests.” Someone actually dared to request “emails that contain the word Burisma.” The problem is that they have some. Well, a lot, actually.
The National Archives plans to release hundreds of pages of internal records from the Obama administration covering Hunter Biden's business and personal relationships with Ukraine. https://t.co/9Wt3ixpFuC
— NEWSMAX (@NEWSMAX) December 16, 2022
Joe can “stop the release of these records by invoking” palace decree. Nobody will say if he will or not. If he does, he goes to jail, if he doesn’t it makes him look like he’s covering up something which would put him in jail.
The records requested from the Archives are already confirmed to include “69 images and 282 email messages that were reviewed by NARA and cleared for release.” They were the harmless ones.
“There were 22 related emails that contain information exempted from FOIA requests and are restricted, as well as 75 messages that will be partially redacted” if and when Joe Biden allows them to be released. Those are the ones congressional watchdogs are going to want clean copies of, in a month or so.
Policy-making process
Any “draft” documents are considered by archives administrators as “part of the deliberative or policy-making process,” therefore “exempt from FOIA requests.” Also exempt is any “information that could violate an individual’s privacy or expose trade secrets.”
After outlining the standard guidelines, “NARA did not say which exemptions the 22 restricted emails fall under.” They’ve been sitting on the whole set for a long time now.
The FOIA requests for the material “were filed by members of the press after Hunter Biden joined Burisma’s board in 2014.” The crack-addicted playboy didn’t know a thing about either Ukraine or natural gas but suddenly found himself cashing checks for $83,333 a month.
The wait is over. My Son Hunter is streaming NOW at https://t.co/R2OKYZD4VG pic.twitter.com/wBv5FRtAP7
— My Son Hunter | The Hunter Biden Movie (@MySonHunter) September 7, 2022
Nobody even knows what, if any, his duties were. The archives managed to shuffle the paper and hide the responses for a full eight years now. They’re running out of time.
After the National Archives did everything they could to cover for Biden, and raided Mar-a-Lago to make Donald Trump look bad, they’re squarely in the spotlight. It’s not their problem now, they shrug. Let Joe cover up his own crimes for a change.
As Fox News writes, “Hunter Biden’s relationship with Burisma has been the focus of Biden family corruption allegations from Republicans, who have accused the family of leveraging Joe Biden’s position as vice president in foreign business dealings.” That puts it mildly. Hunter was selling access to his dad at every opportunity. Joe was fully onboard with the crimes because he benefited heavily from the influence peddling.