Hunter’s Daughter Was Living In White House While Representing Foreign Country

OPINION | This article contains the author's opinion.

The Biden family is facing serious scrutiny over Naomi Biden, Hunter Biden’s eldest daughter, residing in the White House while representing the government of Peru in a legal matter.

The family is accused of accepting cash from foreign nationals in exchange for peddling their political influence and putting the U.S. government on sale.

Naomi, aged 29, has been employed at the DC-based law firm Arnold & Porter since January 2021, the same month her grandfather assumed the presidency. (Trending: Trump Makes The Biggest Promise Of His Political Career)

She resided at the White House from August 2022 to March 2023.

In September 2021, she was identified in a legal filing related to a case involving Worth Capital Holdings 27, LLC, alleging interference by Peru in the operation of their Amazon-based oil refinery.

“Everywhere we look it seems there are major conflicts of interest in which the Biden family leveraged their name, access, and patriarch’s power to benefit personal business dealings.”

“All of this must continue to be investigated and exposed – perhaps Biden’s granddaughter should be the next person to come before the Oversight Committee.”

“Naomi Biden’s international arbitration work doesn’t include matters involving the United States government — she is a junior lawyer and a member of international arbitration teams involving private sector plaintiffs. She doesn’t discuss confidential client work with anyone inside or outside the White House.” a spokesman for Arnold & Porter said. (Trending: Woman Raised in USSR Says Biden’s DOJ Acts Like KGB)

According to emails from his abandoned laptop Hunter Biden wrote to Burisma CFO, Vadym Pozharsky, “She is very excited to join us. Maybe we can find her a job now that she’s graduating college.”

Most Popular:

Merrick Garland Caught Sabotaging Hunter Biden Case

Democrat Blames Global Cooling For Causing Major Problem

Pastor Sentenced to Prison for Protesting Coronavirus Lockdowns