Hunter Biden texted of ‘sleeping on car smoking crack’

Hunter-Biden-texted

WILMINGTON –  Hunter Biden was using crack cocaine shortly after he illegally bought a gun in 2018, his criminal trial has heard. Biden, 54, texted that he was “sleeping on a car smoking crack” in one message sent to his brother’s widow days after the firearm purchase, an FBI agent testifying at his trial has said.

 

The US president’s son is accused of knowingly lying on a form about his drug use to buy a revolver and ammunition from a gun shop in Wilmington, Delaware. His defense says he was in recovery, so he was truthful when he wrote on the form that he was not a user of illicit drugs when buying the weapon. The case marks the first time a sitting US president’s son has gone on trial.

Biden could face up to 25 years in prison if found guilty of all three federal counts in the case. The trial continued, with more testimony from FBI agent Erika Jensen, who read text messages found on a laptop of Biden that was left behind at a Delaware repair shop and never retrieved. In her testimony last Tuesday, Jensen said the laptop contained “evidence of addiction”.

The text messages, she said, used coded language for crack cocaine like “baby powder”, and that Biden appeared to be arranging to get illicit substances in the months leading up to him buying the gun. In one text sent the day after the gun purchase, he told Hallie Biden – the widow of the president’s late son, Beau Biden – that he was “waiting for a dealer named Mookie”.

The same day, Hallie Biden texted him: “I called you 500 times in past 24 hours.”

Hunter Biden replied less than a minute later that he was “sleeping on a car smoking crack on 4th street and Rodney”. “There’s my truth,” he added in another text. The jury is expected to hear during the trial how Hallie Biden also became addicted to crack cocaine during her brief relationship with Biden after her husband Beau’s death in 2015. The president’s son also faces a trial in California in September on charges of failing to pay $1.4million in taxes. (BBC) …[+]