The US Attorney for Delaware Treats Contract Law as a Hypertechnicality

Before I lay out how David Weiss responded to Judge Mark Scarsi’s invitation to address two legal issues with four of the charges against Hunter Biden, let me emphasize: these two arguments are a sideshow. Even if Abbe Lowell’s argument that the statute of limitations expired for Count 1 and his argument that venue is improper for Counts 1-4 of the indictment succeeded, the guts of the indictment, three felony counts for the way in which Hunter paid his 2018 taxes, would remain, along with one misdemeanor each for 2018 and 2019. Lowell also challenged how Weiss charged one of the felonies and the 2019 misdemeanor, but still, the core felony conduct remains unchallenged with these technical challenges (as distinct from the more substantive motions to dismiss).

I’m interested in them, though, for what they might say about Weiss’ conception of his transition from US Attorney to Special Counsel. I’m interested in them for what they might say about a potentially more serious problem with the way Weiss is approaching discovery. I’m interested in them because of the way that Leo Wise and Derek Hines have persistently dodged the unrebutted evidence that David Weiss really did renege on assurances given to Hunter’s attorneys last June that there was no ongoing investigation into the President’s son when he signed the plea deal.

I laid out all the “technical” motions to dismiss here. I wrote about Judge Scarsi’s order for sur-reply briefing here. Links to all these filings are on this page.

I expected Weiss’ sur-reply to address the new legal questions Lowell raised: Did the tolling agreement Hunter signed with Delaware US Attorney David Weiss carry over after Weiss became Special Counsel? Does judicial estoppel prevent Weiss from claiming Hunter was a resident of California in 2018 when he asserted that Hunter was a resident of DC in 2018 in the tax information filed in Delaware?

Sadly, Weiss engaged with neither of those interesting legal questions. Instead, to both questions, he responded with an evidentiary claim, a legal dodge, and an attack (Leo Wise and Derek Hines seem to love such manufactured attacks).

Here’s how it looked in the tolling sur-reply:

  • Charging 2016 as a crime that occurred in 2020 was not a way to get around statutes of limitation; it was, instead, an allegation that willfulness pertaining to Hunter’s 2016 taxes only happened in 2020.
  • Weiss only raised the tolling agreement to demonstrate he wasn’t operating in bad faith by charging the 2016 year.
  • How dare Hunter Biden neglect to mention the tolling agreements that Hunter Biden believes are legally irrelevant for this indictment!

Here’s how it looked in the judicial estoppel sur-reply.

  • Hunter presented no evidence that the prosecution knew he only moved to California in 2019 and the grand jury found that Hunter was a resident of California in 2018, so there.
  • There’s no legal authority for dismissing an indictment based on a judicial estoppel claim.
  • How dare Hunter Biden neglect to mention that “the government” told Judge Noreika that “venue for these offenses and any other related tax offenses lies either in the Central District of California or in the District of Columbia,” which is irrelevant anyway because that statement would have incorporated the felony counts for which venue is California! [my emphasis]

In both retorts, though, Weiss evinced precisely the kind of legal slovenliness I suspect is behind any discovery problems and the refusal to deal with the unrebutted evidence about what Weiss said last June.

Start with the argument that Weiss is estopped from arguing that Hunter was a resident of California in 2018. Weiss relegates that claim — the entire purpose for this sur-reply — to a footnote. The footnote doesn’t address whether Weiss is estopped from making this claim. Rather, he says it’s not a basis to dismiss an indictment.

1 The defendant also argues that the doctrine of judicial estoppel bars the prosecution “from taking inconsistent positions before different courts,” although he cites no authority for the proposition that an indictment returned by a grand jury can be dismissed on that basis. Dkt. 53 at 5.

Is Weiss now arguing that a grand jury presentation is not a court proceeding? Because if he is estopped from making the argument, then how can he make it to a grand jury? Will this give Hunter opportunity to demand grand jury presentation records? And if he is estopped, how does he plan on making the argument at trial?

Plus, by focusing on his evidentiary claims rather than the legal question, Weiss has created a new problem for himself. He asserts that Hunter never moved back to the East Coast in 2018, even though Weiss has charged him for owning a gun starting on October 12, 2018, meaning Weiss is well aware Hunter had left California before his October 15, 2018 extension date for tax filing.

The defendant moved to California in the first week of April 2018 and expressed his intention to stay in California in a text message that he sent from California to his sister-in-law on April 12, 2018, writing, “I’m staying here indefinitely.” While he may have visited the east coast for brief periods later in 2018, he returned back to California, where he continues to live today. It is worth noting that defendant does not proffer any facts to support his claim that he lived in the District of Columbia through the summer of 2019.

This citation to something Hunter wrote to his “sister-in-law” is new; it’s not in the response. Hunter would be within his right to ask to file a sur-sur-reply on this point. And it might be worth doing.

That’s because, in his Delaware response to Hunter’s selective prosecution claim, Weiss relies heavily on this passage of Hunter’s memoir, almost the only thing Hunter said in his book about events from October 2018:

I had returned that fall of 2018, after my most recent relapse in California, with the hope of getting clean through a new therapy and reconciling with Hallie.

Neither happened. [my emphasis]

Only, Weiss replaced the bolded bit — which explains why Hunter returned, to attempt to salvage a romantic relationship with his sister-in-law — with an ellipsis.

Over and over again, Weiss has made the memoir the centerpiece of his reason for charging. Over and over again, Weiss has treated the memoir as transparent truth. Yet the memoir makes it clear that when Hunter moved back in fall 2018, he had the intent of staying, staying with Hallie (as reflected by Weiss’ obnoxious description of Hallie as Hunter’s “girlfriend” in this period), apparently the same person on whose communications with Hunter he relies to claim that Hunter moved permanently to California in 2018.

Weiss may well be able to establish that Hunter was in California for enough days to amount to residency. But he hasn’t addressed the legal question of whether he’ll be legally permitted to argue that.

His response to the tolling question is even nuttier.

Weiss argues that because the US Attorney for Delaware and DOJ’s Tax Division could have charged Hunter for an April 2017 violation, it’s proof that “the government” could have charged him.

The United States’ Attorney’s Office for the District of Delaware and the Tax Division are parties to the tolling agreement. Dkt. 29 at 1. Assuming for the sake of argument that the defendant is correct that the Office of Special Counsel would be time barred from bringing failure to pay charges for the 2016 tax year in April 2017 because it was not a party to the agreement, those two entities would not be. The Tax Division can file criminal tax charges in any judicial district in the United States with or without the participation of a United States Attorney’s Office. See 28 C.F.R. §§ 0.70. Further, even before he was made Special Counsel, David C. Weiss, as United States Attorney for the District of Delaware, had full authority to bring criminal tax charges in this case. While Mr. Weiss was appointed Special Counsel on August 11, 2023, he is still the United States Attorney for the District of Delaware and either that office or the Tax Division could have brought the charge in Count 1 and any of the other tax charges contained in the indictment. Nothing about Mr. Weiss’s appointment as Special Counsel precludes that. Thus, the argument that the government had to charge failure to pay for tax year 2016 in June 2020 because it couldn’t charge it in April 2017 is clearly incorrect.

Weiss uses “the government” ten times in the body of this filing, all but one in the section on the tolling agreements.

This is a version of an argument Weiss made aggressively in his Delaware response to Hunter’s Special Counsel challenge (and less aggressively in his Los Angeles response). Insisting that US Attorneys do what they’re permitted to do and Special Counsels do what they’re permitted to do is a “hypertechnicality,” Weiss argued in January.

[E]ven assuming the Attorney General’s delegation of authority under §§ 509, 510, 515, and 533 is unavailable, defendant’s argument boils down to a quibble that the indictment reads “Special Counsel” beneath David Weiss’s name and not “U.S. Attorney.” ECF No. 40, at 4. Such hypertechnicalities have no impact on the indictment’s validity or to the prosecutor’s statutory authority to conduct this litigation on behalf of the United States. Dismissal is thus wholly inappropriate.

Remember: That was a response to an argument that Weiss can’t be Special Counsel because DOJ regulations envision someone who can’t just flip back and forth between one title and another.

The argument is even worse here. The point is, though, that DOJ Tax didn’t charge Hunter with failure to pay his taxes in 2017.

And after that, David Weiss made some non-public argument to Merrick Garland that he legally required the independence granted by Special Counsel status, yet he keeps arguing that (perhaps now that he has discovered Alexander Smirnov was lying when he attempted to frame Joe Biden) he could flip back to US Attorney status with no legal bar. He’s making that argument even though public records indicate that DOJ Tax had real problems with even the charges Weiss was considering in 2022, much less the jerry-rigged charges as presented in Los Angeles. He’s making that argument even though, as Special Counsel, David Weiss appears to have withheld from discovery fairly damning details of the investigation conducted under US Attorney David Weiss. He’s making that argument even though he has never addressed the legal assurances the US Attorney’s Office in Delaware gave to Hunter’s lawyers.

In the diversion motions to dismiss, Hunter is arguing that Weiss breached a contract. Here, the US Attorney for Delaware, where so much of US contract law goes through, is arguing that even someone who is not party to a tolling agreement — which Hunter argues is a contract — can invoke it to deprive someone of his freedom.

Again, I don’t expect Judge Scarsi to be all that sympathetic to Hunter’s arguments and Scarsi could well just adopt Weiss’ argument that both are evidentiary issues for the jury to decide. But I also don’t imagine he’ll appreciate the way this sur-reply dodges both legal questions that Lowell raised.

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27 replies
  1. I Never Lie and am Always Right says:

    Judge Scarsi has another criminal tax sentencing under his belt. I’m not in a position to discuss details here, but the results are consistent with our prior experience- pro prosecution all the way. Does not bode well for HB.

  2. Rugger_9 says:

    Is there a rational explanation for SC Weiss deciding to focus on these irrelevancies instead of the things he can prove (thanks for laying it out so well)? The contrast to how SC Smith does his work is stark.

    It looks to me like this scenario is most apt: SC Weiss realized he can’t win his trial with all of the impediments in his case (including the self-inflicted ones) but he had to do something to keep this case going and so he’s grasping for more straws that are ‘scandalous’ enough to feed the RWNM. In doing so, Weiss has wiped out any chance of prosecuting either Biden.

    • emptywheel says:

      I think that’s a real misunderstanding. That’s why I noted that the guts of the felony tax case remain untouched. The most likely outcome is Hunter is prosecuted, convicted, and Scarsi tries to jail him before all appeals are exhausted.

      • Savage Librarian says:

        If Scarsi is successful at that, would that have any usefulness to Alvin Bragg in the case against Trump? Could Bragg cite that case, for example? Or might there be something else of relevance that could be useful?

    • The Old Redneck says:

      That goes way too far. Advocacy, even if based on marginal arguments, is part of what one does in that job. It’s his indictment, and he wants it to hold up, but that doesn’t mean he’s a stooge for the Republican party.

      You may be thinking of John Durham.

      • Rugger_9 says:

        Why then does Weiss persist with the irrelevancies? IIRC there is a legal principle about taint, where one lie affects all other testimony. So, as I had noted in my input, EW correctly observes that Weiss didn’t really need to do this, but he did and so Weiss just gave HB’s team an opportunity to create reasonable doubt.

  3. freebird says:

    I wonder if there is a violation of the fifth amendment in this case. Hunter Biden, in exchange for a plea, confessed to certain crimes, essentially testifying against himself. The prosecution takes the plea to the judge, the judge rejects the plea and then prosecution uses the information Hunter provided to indict him.

    If it was known that the deal would have been rejected, I doubt if Hunter would have plead out. Irrespective of Biden’s guilt or innocence Weiss was acting in bad faith.

    • Susan D Einbinder says:

      Isn’t this what happened to Bill Cosby and why he was released from his incarceration? Purportedly confidential information he provided was leaked and used in the trial where he was found guilty…

      • freebird says:

        You are correct about Cosby. Furthermore, from what I understand because I am not a lawyer, evidence disclosed in plea negotiations cannot be used at trial under Federal Rules of Evidence section 410. This may explain the reason why Weiss is relying on passages in a book, a change of venue and his alter ego status as Special Counsel.

  4. earlofhuntingdon says:

    If one wanted the benefits of residency in California for most purposes – to use public benefits or to pay in-state tuition rates, for example – one would have to demonstrate having taken steps to make the move permanent: filing a change of address with the USPS; obtaining a state driver’s license, and giving up the old one in another state; registering to vote; buying or renting a property. It would take more than a reference in a message.

    • emptywheel says:

      Not to mention there’s a slew of traffic with his assistant trying to figure out where he lived. Even Burisma had NFC where to send things.

    • earlofhuntingdon says:

      Well, it is useful to know where your boss lives, if you’re trying to help him, for example, sort out his state and local tax filings, register a car, or send him money.

  5. earlofhuntingdon says:

    How is it possible to claim that an element of a crime that allegedly took place in 2016 – willfulness – occurred four years later, in 2020? Or is Weiss arguing that no crime took place in 2016, only in 2020, when he says the elements were satisfied?

  6. earlofhuntingdon says:

    Why would HB have to provide evidence that the prosecution knew he moved to California only in 2019, not 2018? I can see why he might do so to rebut a false prosecution claim, but the prosecution still has the initial burden to show which year he moved there in the first place.

  7. zscoreUSA says:

    There is some murkiness about the timeline of residency. I’m trying to follow along with what is relevant for which year of tax violations. Here are some examples:

    1) May 2018, Hunter issued a Delaware driver’s license at an address I think belongs to his parents
    2) June 2018 Wells Fargo email about goals includes goal of ending 2018 back in California
    3) October 2018 [Fall] returns to East Coast, per Beautiful Things to seek treatment and reconcile, but there may be other purposes as well
    5) December 2018 [Winter] updates Wells Fargo address to Delaware
    6) early March 2019 [Winter] emails about Airbnb in California indicates plan to return to California
    7) March 2019 [Spring] Beautiful Things says flew back to California
    8) May 2019 [Spring] marries Melissa in California
    9) Summer 2019 defense claim beginning of California residency

    • thequickbrownfox says:

      Having been a CA resident, I can say definitively that becoming a CA resident is not simply a matter of having a CA address, and even having an address and a CA driver’s license won’t satisfy the state.

      When I enrolled in college in CA, I had to show not only the above two items, but show that I had paid CA state income taxes the previous year, before CA would grant me in-state tuition.

      Biden’s 2018 driver’s license would indicate state of residence as Delaware, which begs the question as to where he filed state income taxes for the year. That seems to be the definitive answer to the question of state of residence.

    • emptywheel says:

      My guess is both the April intent to move and the October one would be viewed as intended to be permanent. I THINK that ends up being less than 6 months in CA. Not sure that resets DC.

      Prosecutors are right: Normally this would be matter for a jury. Except that they did already argue he was a DC resident.

  8. Brad Cole says:

    IANAL but it sure seems like Weiss plays fast and loose with the system. Not unusual for prosecutors, of course, but this is a high visibility case.

    • Shadowalker says:

      This is why SCO’s should be appointed from outside of the DOJ, and not someone who’s been working on the case(s) for 5+ years.

    • earlofhuntingdon says:

      It’s why more care has to be given to their selection, wherever they come from, rather than acceding to pressure from an activist USA.

  9. misnomer bjet says:

    In his response to the tolling question, Weiss cites 28 C.F.R. §§ 0.70; “functions [that] are assigned to and shall be conducted, handled, or supervised by, the Assistant Attorney General, Tax Division”

    Shall

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