Ted Cruz calls it ‘critical for the FBI to search Hunter Biden’s homes’

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Sen. Ted Cruz of Texas wants the FBI to search Hunter Biden‘s homes – after classified documents were discovered inside President Biden’s Wilmington residence where documents indicate Hunter kept a home office.

Cruz, who has already called for a search of the thousands of boxes of Biden papers donated to the University of Delaware, pointed to a Hunter Biden email that purports to show a level of expertise in Ukraine and claimed it raised the ‘inference’ that the president’s son may have had ‘direct access’ to classified info.  

The former presidential candidate referenced the same Hunter Biden 2014 email to his former business partner that showed fluency with internal politics of Ukraine that Wisconsin GOP Sen. Ron Johnson flagged as ‘suspicious.’ 

‘I also believe it is critical for the FBI to search Hunter Biden’s homes, home and office residences to make sure there are no classified documents there, given all the evidence that’s piling up. We need to ascertain who’s had access to what and when,’ Cruz said.

Ted Cruz calls it ‘critical for the FBI to search Hunter Biden’s homes’

Texas Republican Sen. Ted Cruz pointed to an email he said raises the ‘inference’ that Hunter Biden had ‘direct access’ to classified documents uncovered at his father’s Wilmington home. Other documents indicate Hunter has maintained a home office there, prompting Cruz to say Hunter’s own properties should get searched

Cruz said there was no chance of classified material inside his own home, following the discovery of such material at Trump’s home of Mar-a-Lago, Biden’s home and office, and former Vice President Mike Pence’s Indiana home.  

‘I have been in the Senate 10 years. I can state to a metaphysical certainty there are no classified documents at my home. How do I know that? Because I have read classified documents in only one place. It is in the SCIF, which is a secure location in the basement of the Capitol,’ he said. 

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That comes after reports that notebooks from Biden’s time as vice president were among items seized by the FBI during its search – which the White House has stressed came at Biden’s invitation.  

‘It seems he [Biden] leaves classified documents wherever he goes,’ said Cruz said in an interview with Fox News ‘Sunday Morning Futures’ host Maria Bartiromo.

‘And we also know that Hunter Biden at times was — declared his residence to be those very same places… We need to ascertain who’s had access to what and when,’ he added.

Hunter Biden, pictured in July, appeared to have used his father's Delaware home as an office from 2017-19, while classified documents were stored inside

Hunter Biden, pictured in July, appeared to have used his father’s Delaware home as an office from 2017-19, while classified documents were stored inside

At least a few documents were found in Biden's garage at his Wilmington, Delaware, home, where he stores his vintage Corvette. Biden's sons, Beau and Hunter, rebuilt the car for him

At least a few documents were found in Biden’s garage at his Wilmington, Delaware home. Biden’s sons, Beau and Hunter, rebuilt the car for him

Cruz made reference to a briefing by Director of National Intelligence Avril Haines with Senate Intelligence Committee members, who are demanding information on the contents of classified materials uncovered at Biden’s house.  Cruz sits on the Senate Foreign Affairs committee.

‘Essentially, the administration said, go jump in a lake. We’re not going to tell you anything,’ he said. ‘And that is thoroughly unacceptable. Look, there’s a range of classified documents. I have read a lot of classified documents. Some are just general geopolitical observations. The consequences of that are not terribly significant.’

Cruz’s call to expand the search comes after it was revealed Hunter Biden appeared to have been using his father’s Delaware home as an office, with classified documents stored within the walls.

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The president’s son, now 52, listed his father’s Wilmington mansion as his home following his 2017 divorce from Kathleen Buhle.

In 2018 and 2019 he had bills registered at the house, The New York Post reported on Saturday, and he asked his assistant to ship crates of his office equipment to the residence.

‘Have what’s in storage sent to my parents’ guest house,’ he told his assistant, Katie Dodge, in a December 2018 text message.

A box labeled 'Important Doc's + Photos' appears to have been left unsealed on a table in the Delaware home of President Joe Biden, in a photo released Friday from Hunter Biden's laptop

A box labeled ‘Important Doc’s + Photos’ appears to have been left unsealed on a table in the Delaware home of President Joe Biden

Hunter Biden, now 52, was at the time exploring business and investment opportunities with partners in China, Ukraine and beyond.

It is now known that there was classified documents being stored in the house.

Jim Hanson, a national security consultant and president of WorldStrat, said Hunter’s running a private business out of an office where government documents were illicitly stored was a recipe for disaster.

‘Having access to U.S. classified material makes it much easier to leverage your business operations,’ he told the paper.

‘You know things others don’t know or can’t know. That’s one very distinct possibility.’

He added that Hunter, whose had well-publicized problems with drugs and addiction, was also vulnerable to allowing outsiders access to the information. 

‘He’s a degenerate junkie cavorting with foreign prostitutes,’ Hanson said. 

‘How could that go wrong in a place where a bunch of documents are stashed everywhere?’

A special counsel has been appointed to investigate how classified documents ended up at Joe Biden’s home and in the DC office of his think tank.

On Friday, NBC News reported that Joe Biden’s personal notebooks were among the classified documents taken away.

The notebooks contained jottings relating to his official business as vice president, the network said, including details of his diplomatic engagements during the Obama administration.

The notebooks, of which there were many, a source said, did not have classified markings on them.

Jason R. Baron, a former director of litigation at the National Archives, told NBC News that personal notebooks would be considered classified if they contained secret information, and were government property if they were shared with staff. 

‘Handwritten personal notes of a former president or vice president are only considered presidential records if they were shared or communicated with other White House or federal agency personnel for use in transacting government business,’ Baron said. 

‘A former president or vice president has the right to take out of the White House personal notes — they are not official records that come into the legal custody of the National Archives at the end of an administration.’ 

When asked about the notebooks, a spokesperson for Biden’s personal lawyer, Bob Bauer, said they were not commenting.

‘As noted in the statement released on January 14, consistent with our view of the requirements of our cooperation with DOJ in this matter, we will not comment on the accuracy of reports of this nature,’ the spokesperson said.

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