David Weiss Continues to Misrepresent the Damage Keith Ablow Did to Hunter Biden’s Addiction

Prosecutors have submitted their motions in limine in the Delaware case. Those include:

Most of these are pretty standard and uncontroversial — though Abbe Lowell made it clear that he reserves the right to contest whether Hunter’s iCloud and laptop had been tampered with before the government obtained them.

Where David Weiss has doubled down on past error comes in his choice of book excerpts he wants to use.

He wants to exclude everything from the book except the excerpts he has chosen.

The government intends to admit into evidence only the excerpts of the book and audiobook that are in Exhibit 1. Federal Rule of Evidence 801(d)(2) provides the statement must be “a statement . . . offered against an opposing party.” Thus, a defendant cannot elicit his own self-serving statements without taking the stand and submitting to cross-examination. United States v. Willis, 759 F.2d 1486, 1501 (11th Cir. 1985); United States v. Wilkerson, 84 F.3d 692, 696 (4th Cir. 1996).

A defendant cannot sidestep the prohibition against hearsay by invoking the so-called “rule of completeness,” contained in Federal Rule of Evidence 106. This rule is designed to prevent “misunderstanding or distortion” caused by the introduction of only part of a statement that could only be cured by admission of the full record. Beech Aircraft Corp. v. Rainey, 488 U.S. 153, 172 (1988). It does not allow adverse parties to introduce any unedited statement merely because the proponent party has offered an edited version. Indeed, “it is often perfectly proper to admit segments of prior testimony without including everything, and adverse parties are not entitled to offer additional segments just because they are there and the proponent has not offered them.” United States v. Collicott, 92 F.3d 973, 983 (9th Cir. 1996). The defendant has not identified for the government any portions of the excerpts that are misleading without additional surrounding context. The other portions of the book are therefore inadmissible hearsay.

The selections are not surprising. But in two ways, they are grotesquely dishonest. First, the chosen excerpts misleadingly lead from something that happened in August 2018.

 

 

To something that happened in February 2019.

Presented in the way it is, jurors will be wildly misled that Hunter’s New Haven exploits are what happened immediately after he relapsed in August 2018. They will be misled into believing the description of the New Haven depravity represent Hunter’s state in October 2018. They don’t.

Here’s what the language in the book describing his return to Delaware in fall 2018 looks like.

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.

For all the obvious reasons—my extended disappearances, my inability to stay sober, her need to stabilize and reorder her own life and family—Hallie and I called it quits. The relationship no longer helped either of us. Our attempt to reanimate Beau remained as doomed as it was from the start. The fallout piled up. I tried to explain things to my daughters, but how could I expect them to comprehend a situation I hardly understood myself?

Next on my agenda was getting clean. I drove up to Newburyport, Massachusetts, an old New England shipbuilding-turned-tourist town thirty-five miles north of Boston. A therapist ran a wellness center where he practiced a drug addiction therapy known as ketamine infusion. I would make two trips up there, staying for about six weeks on the first visit, returning to Maryland, then heading back for a couple weeks of follow-up in February of the new year.

Prosecutors were perfectly willing to use the transition into this passage in their response to Hunter’s MTD.

He wrote in Chapter 10 of his memoir, “I returned [to the East Coast] that fall of 2018, after my most recent relapse in California, with the hope of getting clean through a new therapy . . . Neither happened.” Id. at 203.

Perhaps now they’ve discovered that the book says nothing about Hunter’s state of mind when he was in Delaware, when he owned the gun.

More importantly, David Weiss repeats what might have been just another stupid error when he made it in response to Hunter’s motion to dismiss:

For example, the defendant admitted that he was experiencing “full blown addiction” to crack cocaine and by the fall of 2018 he had gotten to the point that:

It was me and a crack pipe in a Super 8, not knowing which the fuck way was up. All my energy revolved around smoking drugs and making arrangements to buy drugs—feeding the beast. To facilitate it, I resurrected the same sleep schedule I’d kept in L.A.: never. There was hardly any mistaking me now for a so-called respectable citizen. Crack is a great leveler.

David Weiss misrepresented this passage to Judge Noreika (and has not alerted her to the error). The scene in the Super 8 took place in February 2019.

Which means it took place after Keith Ablow’s treatment made Hunter Biden’s addiction worse.

The therapy’s results were disastrous. I was in no way ready to process the feelings it unloosed or prompted by reliving past physical and emotional traumas. So I backslid. I did exactly what I’d come to Massachusetts to stop doing. I’d stay clean for a week, break away from the center to meet a connection I found in Rhode Island, smoke up, then return. One thing I did remarkably well during that time was fool people about whether or not I was using. Between trips up there, I even bought clean urine from a dealer in New York to pass drug tests.

Of course, that made all that time and effort ineffective. I didn’t necessarily blame the treatment: I doubt much good comes from doing ketamine while you’re on crack. [my emphasis]

Weiss wants to exclude this critical context, imagining that Hunter included the Keith Ablow description because he knew that right wingers would demand he be prosecuted for the gun when he wrote it (Weiss emphasizes that Hunter started writing this in 2019, before he even knew of the investigation), and so said that the Ketamine treatment made his addiction worse for the moment he would be prosecuted.

I get what self-serving hearsay is. This is not it (though Judge Noreika has thus far been wildly favorable to Weiss’ misrepresentations).

This is basic facts of timeline — or more specifically, Weiss’ continued effort to misrepresent events that clearly happened in February 2019 as if they’re his smoking gun about 2018.

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23 replies
  1. OmegaMan says:

    It’s pretty gross how Weiss is misleading the judge with hopes to mislead the jury to get a conviction. At least Hunter as a lawyer to try to poke holes in the case. Imagine the normal criminal defendant who has no means to defend every government position in a normal case. And yet there will be no accountability for Weiss. Same could be said for any defendant prosecuted by the Kracken but at least she is not a govt atty anymore (for the time being)

  2. zscoreUSA says:

    About what’s included in the book.

    ECF 118 states:
    “In his book, he wrote about his return to Delaware in October 2018…”

    But, the book states, as this article quotes, from the beginning of Chapter 10:
    “I came back east.

    I had returned that Fall of 2018…”

    The prosecutor exhibit with portions from the book skip this page for some reason. Seemed odd to me, the difference in language, and to exclude those pages.

    • emptywheel says:

      Right: As I note, I think they believed for a period that the book said ANYTHING about what happened in October. It doesn’t, really. So they keep trying to massage it to mislead on that point.

  3. zscoreUSA says:

    One of the tech guys writes

    I am familiar with the electronic device, storage medium, and files referenced in my Disclosure attached hereto, including Apple Backup 1, Apple Backup 2, Apple Backup 3, and Apple Backup 4, and certify that those files were derived and authenticates through a process of digital identification, as explained in my Disclosure.

    … [Signed on 4/15/24]

    When does the public get access to this “Disclosure”?

  4. NYsportsfanSufferer says:

    What a timeline we live in. The first politically motivated trial and probable conviction of a sitting presidents kid. And it’s over the dumbest thing that literally nobody else would ever or has ever been charged with as a stand alone offense.

    The fact that the prosecutors didn’t offer the plea deal back or try to agree to a new one that is fair and just after the Smirnov indictment just shows what dicks they are.

    • Savage Librarian says:

      Not to mention that Putin must be smirking with all the dick pickings he has in all these useful idiots.

      • bmaz says:

        I tried to respond to your comment but, yet again, Rayne entered some “throttling” protocol that prevented it. Which she constantly threatens but dishonestly refuses to admit. It was an innocuous comment I made that should never have been treated that way. Oh well.

        [Moderator’s note: there are zero comments in either Pending or Trash authored by you in reply to Savage Librarian, just as there is zero protocol to block your comments as this comment proves. Perhaps the problem is at your end. Secondly, once again you are reminded your whining about moderation and site operations will be deleted. I’m leaving this up so that you and the rest of the community know you’ve been warned today. Again. /~Rayne]

    • bmaz says:

      Why do you say “probable conviction”?? That may….may…come to pass, but there are enough holes and evidentiary admissibility problems that such is no given whatsoever.

      • NYsportsfanSufferer says:

        I guess it depends on what gets submitted and the judge has been very favorable to Weiss. I just think he probably has something damning. One thing he doesn’t have is a drug test though.

        • bmaz says:

          Nothing ever depends on “what has just been submitted”. Where do you come up with that? Jesus, have you ever practiced in a trial court?

        • originalK says:

          Can I get some assistance to see if I understand this correctly? With the motions in limine, the prosecution is:

          1) taking a basic (“common-law”) principle of evidence, doctrine of completeness, and
          2) pairing it with a few not-comparable cases where it was found to not apply,
          3) presenting it to a judge who is already outside her lane and up to her eyeballs in her own invented facts and faulty logic,
          4) asking her to reject potentially exculpatory information from the same source,
          5) before they have even presented any inculpatory evidence to a jury?

          And let me guess, any appeal would happen after the verdict?

        • NYsportsfanSufferer says:

          bmaz

          I’m aware that it’s not just about that. I worded that poorly. There are other factors for jurors to consider. And no I’m not even a lawyer.

  5. Booksellerb4 says:

    Really, Hunter’s situation is quite tragic to me, for a variety of reasons (I had a brother who could not deal with a couple of childhood hard knocks from life and sought relief through various addictions) but if the whole effort is somehow to get at Joe, or some weird-ass political rat-fuck, it just seems so depraved. And so . . .

    I carried this quote over from another post partly to connect (again) former AG Barr of the truly Depraved (Morally corrupt; perverted. Describing a person or action that is perverted or extremely wrong in a moral sense) with the Deplorable (Worthy of severe condemnation or reproach) pursuit of these (Maryland and Cal) charges and partly to connect the dots . . . like in the old activity books, a clear image is drawn. (It’s obscene and I know it when I see it)

    To this day, we don’t know who those Ukrainians are (and all this would be in addition to discussions with Victoria Toensing about Dmitry Firtash, discussions that Parnas claims involved a quid pro quo for a Hunter Biden laptop). *Barr 1 post

    Thanks again Dr. Wheeler – I am in awe of your powers of deduction!!

  6. tje.esq@23 says:

    I don’t have time to dig in right now, but on the off chance that Lowell’s attorney team reads comments and not just your amazing colums, Marcy…Original K’s list number 2 above made me think this came to mind to not only me:

    There is a lot to Beech Aircraft that might not be favorable to the position Weiss appears to be taking (?). I haven’t yet read the filings, so it would be unwise to say for sure, but there existing-in-advance, a book-length prior writing, makes me hope someone on Lowell’s team reads Beech Aircraft in full, and doesn’t stop at scanning headnotes. And Oral Arguments (“OAs”) online might be worth a listen during morning commute, assuming briefs aren’t available back that far. The case has a weird procedural history, if I recall correctly, and OAs clear up the tangle.

    As with any ‘initial offer,’ Weiss’s MiL requests appear to be shooting for the moon. Seems especially galling to seek to prevent Biden from mentioning he paid his taxes in 2020. (Over paid them?) Did I read that right? (It’s in your post just after this one, I believe).

    I assume there’s a nuance I missed, but it brought to mind that this would be akin to seeking to prevent a defendant from using “truth” to defend against a charge of defamation. I’m sure my re-familiarizing myself with case facts will show my analogy to be inapt. Or, at least, I hope that will be the case!

    • emptywheel says:

      I think Hunter has dropped the overpay claim and in one of the filings Wise says Hunter still hasn’t paid everything (possibly not 2014 or 2015).

      But I also think it is normal to only be able to raise paying the taxes at sentencing.

      I think IN THIS CASE, the circumstances of why Hunter filed when he did are a key part of the story though — partly bc of the two lawsuits, but also partly bc of threats to call him on impeachment.

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