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Hunter Biden’s Legal Team Makes Swift Use of Supreme Court Decision

AP Photo/Jose Luis Magana

The ink is barely dry on the decisions handed down by the Supreme Court the last week of June, but Hunter Biden’s legal team is already availing itself of one of the rulings in an effort to have the First Son’s convictions in his Delaware gun trial overturned. 

On Wednesday, the high court issued its opinion in Snyder v. United States, a case involving the former mayor of Portage, Indiana, who accepted a $13,000 check from a trucking company after the city awarded two contracts to the company for the purchase of its trucks. At issue was whether the statutory section under which Snyder was charged and convicted applied to gratuities (gifts after the fact) or solely to bribes. In holding that the particular statute at issue only applied to bribes, the court wasn’t absolving Snyder of shady behavior. Rather, it was saying if Congress wants that section to cover gratuities as well as bribes, it’s perfectly capable of amending the law to make that clear, and the government is also free to prosecute under other statutes that prohibit accepting gratuities. 


The Skinny on SCOTUS – 6-26-24 Edition: Gratuities Aren’t Bribes and Standing Is Tricky

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The Supreme Court Firebombs the Administrative State and Tells Congress
to Get Off Its Butt and Work


On Thursday, Hunter Biden’s lawyers filed a “Notice of Supplemental Authority” (see below) in the Delaware District Court where he was convicted and where Judge Maryellen Noreika is considering his motion for new trial. Their argument is essentially that a similar analysis of the statutory language under which Biden was charged raises the same issues as the Supreme Court found in Snyder

Translating the logic behind Snyder into the issues his lawyers claim are at hand in Hunter’s case is where it gets somewhat fun: 

This has that sort of “It depends on what the definition of the word ‘is’ is” feel to it, but cases involving statutory construction often do. Sometimes, it comes down to the placement of a comma or the verb tense used. (And yes, this is one of several reasons people hate lawyers.) But points to Abbe Lowell and Biden’s defense team for seizing upon the SCOTUS ruling and attempting to use it to their advantage. (Don’t be surprised if, on Monday or Tuesday, they file an additional Notice of Supplemental Authority invoking Fischer.) 


Supreme Court Hands Down Blockbuster Ruling in Case
That Will Impact Multiple J6 Defendants

Fischer v. United States – A Tale of Two Readings: All May Not Be What It Seems


Will it ultimately be successful? My instinct is that it will not. But as lackluster as their trial performance seemed to me, I will hand it to them for this semi-clever effort post-trial. 

RHB – De – Supplemental Authority – 6-27-24 by Susie Moore on Scribd

 

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