BREAKING: Emails Show Joe Biden’s Chief of Staff Requested $20,000 from Hunter in 2012

Recently released documents show White House Chief of Staff Ron Klain asked Hunter Biden for $20,000 in 2012 for a foundation related to the Vice President’s private residence.

“The tax lawyers for the VP Residence Foundation have concluded that since the Cheney folks last raised money in 2007 and not 2008, we actually have to have some incoming funds before the end of this fiscal year (i.e., before 9/30/12 – next week) to remain eligible to be a ‘public charity,’” wrote Klain, referring to former VP Dick Cheney.​

“It’s not much — we need to raise a total of $20,000 — so I’m hitting up a few very close friends on a very confidential basis to write checks of $2,000 each,” Klain ​explained. 

“We need to keep this low low key, because raising money for the Residence now is bad PR — but it has to be done, so I’m trying to just collect the 10 checks of $2,000, get it done in a week, and then, we can do an event for the Residence Foundation after the election​,” he added.

From the NY Post:

Schwerin responded by saying they could “discuss this and some other bills on Monday,” and asked Hunter whether he thought “they would take a corporate check from Owasco,” ​an apparent reference to Hunter Biden’s law firm, Owasco PC.

T​hree days after the Klain email, Schwerin emailed the younger Biden to say he had talked to Klain, who was checking to see if the foundation would take a check from Owasco, the report said.

It remains unclear whether Owasco contributed to the foundation, but a 990 tax form from fiscal year 2012 shows that the foundation received $20,500 in contributions, just over Klain’s ask.

The president’s son has come under renewed scrutiny 18 months after The Post’s blockbuster series of reports about his business dealings in Ukraine and China, which were based on emails and documents found on a laptop Hunter Biden left behind at a computer repair shop in Delaware in April 2019.

After initially questioning the authenticity of the laptop, the New York Times and the Washington Post in recent weeks have confirmed the information it contained.