Professional Documents
Culture Documents
Abogados de Hunter Biden Contra El DOJ.
Abogados de Hunter Biden Contra El DOJ.
INTRODUCTION
unnecessary fight about tangential issues and then avoids addressing actual disputes that have been
identified. As one example, the opposition focuses more on what the prosecutors have produced—
rather than what it has not—and then steadfastly objects that it should not be required to declare
that it has fulfilled its Brady and related discovery obligations. (Opp. at 12.) Another example is
the prosecution’s rhetoric accusing Mr. Biden of making a “misleading omission” and being
“dishonest” (Opp. at 11, 19) for not addressing what the prosecution has produced, despite this
being a motion to compel the prosecution to disclose what it has not produced. The law does not
give the prosecution a participation trophy for playing in the event; they should finish the process
without a defendant cheering for the partial effort. For all its bluster, there is nothing improper
nor out of the ordinary for Mr. Biden to make the same request that virtually every defendant
makes, asking that the prosecution give him all the information that he is due so that he can prepare
ARGUMENT
Mr. Biden’s skepticism that the prosecution has produced all that is required is
compounded by the prosecution’s refusal to declare that it has met its discovery obligations. Mr.
Wise had no difficulty telling the Court at the July 26, 2023 hearing that the prosecution had done
so. (7/26/23 Tr. at 7 (“THE COURT: Has all Brady material been produced? MR. WISE: Yes,
Your Honor.”).) There was nothing unusual about the Court asking the prosecution whether it has
fulfilled all its Brady obligations. Prosecutors typically welcome the opportunity to confirm they
have done so, just as Mr. Wise did at the hearing. It is curious that the prosecution will not make
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that commitment now and opposes an order to comply with Brady and other applicable
requirements.
Perhaps the prosecution is gun-shy about now confirming that it has met its discovery
obligations because it was so very wrong in making that same claim to the Court seven months
ago. Three months after making that July 2023 representation, the prosecution made its first
production in October 2023, followed by subsequent productions in November 2023 and January
2024. These productions included Brady material (e.g., ATF and Delaware state police
investigative file; public statements by Mr. Biden; receipts and expenses related to payments made
to drug and alcohol rehabilitation programs in 2018; and lab reports related to a certain leather
pouch recovered with the gun in October 2018). The prosecution makes no attempt to explain Mr.
Wise’s misstatement to the Court in July that the prosecution had satisfied its Brady obligations.
Mr. Biden’s concern does not rest solely upon the fact that the prosecution was wrong in
mistakenly claiming Brady compliance previously. Those concerns have only grown as the
defense has increasingly come to realize the scope of the prosecution’s “curious” investigative
techniques.
Take, for example, the prosecution’s heavy reliance on a brown leather pouch that it claims
belonged to Mr. Biden and contained cocaine residue. (Opp. at 7–8.) Mr. Biden noted in his
motion to compel that law enforcement obtained that pouch in October 2018 from a garbage
scavenger who pulled it from a public trash can. (Mot. at 8–9.) The prosecution treats this
evidence as its smoking gun but, if that were so (despite the pouch’s questionable provenance), it
is dumbfounding that the prosecution waited five years before testing it for narcotics residue and
never chose to retrieve fingerprints from it. The prosecution offers no explanation for that either.
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The prosecution’s latest filing amplifies why Mr. Biden and the Court cannot take the
prosecution’s assertions concerning its discovery production or what that discovery reveals at face
value. Exhibit 1 to the prosecution’s opposition states: “During November and December 2018,
the defendant took multiple photographs of videos [sic] apparent cocaine, crack cocaine, and drug
paraphernalia” (DE 86-1 at 9, citing DE 68 at 9) (emphases added), and right below it, includes a
photo of three white powdery lines from “iTunes Backup (iPhone 11) - Production 1.” The
prosecution is flat out wrong—both that Mr. Biden “took” this photograph and in claiming that it
depicts “cocaine.” Multiple sources have pointed out, and a review of discovery confirms, this is
actually a photo of sawdust from an expert carpenter and it was sent to Mr. Biden, not vice versa. 1
More specifically, the discovery identifies this as a photo of a photo taken in the office of
Mr. Biden’s then-psychiatrist Dr. Keith Ablow, which Dr. Ablow initially received from an master
carpenter and later texted to Mr. Biden, stating: “This one in my office is of lines of sawdust sent
to me by a master carpenter who was a coke addict.”2 The message accompanying that photo was
meant to convey that Mr. Biden, too, could overcome any addiction. The prosecution does not
provide a date for the photo, but the message from Dr. Ablow is dated November 20, 2018.
1 Exp[o]rt Reports: When David Weiss Claimed Keith Ablow’s Sawdust Was Hunter Biden’s
Cocaine, EmptyWheel (Feb. 14, 2024), https://www.emptywheel.net/2024/02/14/export-reports-
when-david-weiss-claimed-keith-ablows-sawdust-was-hunter-bidens-cocaine/.
2 The message excerpt on the following page is found on the data image provided to Mr. Biden by
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and then-Vice President Biden that proved to be so outlandish and unsubstantiated that the FBI
field team recommended its investigation be closed and the then-FBI Deputy Director and then-
Principal Associate Deputy Attorney General (Richard Donoghue) agreed in August 2020.3 (Id.
Members of Congress (who initiated an impeachment inquiry of President Biden based on the
same baseless allegations) and the right-wing media, the prosecution team that was already
pursuing Mr. Biden resuscitated the baseless investigation of Mr. Smirnov’s ridiculous claims
against Mr. Biden thirty-four months later. (Id. ¶ 41.) It now seems clear that the Smirnov
allegations infected this case, and why, on July 26, 2023, the Special Counsel answered as it did
the Court’s question about whether the Diversion Agreement’s immunity provision would bar
charges under the Foreign Agents Registration Act (7/26/23 Tr. at 55).4
Lo and behold, some seven months later, the Special Counsel finally figured out that Mr.
Smirnov was lying—which should have been obvious to everyone, certainly by August 2020 when
3 Mr. Biden’s DOJ requests (see infra at 18–19), as well as his Rule 17 subpoena requests (DE 58)
seeking communications and records from, among others, Principal Associate Deputy Attorney
General Richard Donoghue and former U.S. Attorney for the Western District of Pennsylvania
Scott Brady, bear directly on and are probative of the allegations in the Smirnov Indictment. The
fact that Special Counsel Weiss handled the Smirnov investigation and is prosecuting the case
makes Mr. Biden’s requests all the more important.
4 The discussion about the scope of the immunity agreement appears shaped by the prosecution’s
investigation of the Smirnov allegations, which it began looking into just days before the July 26,
2023 hearing. (Smirnov Indict. ¶ 41 (noting the prosecution team began investigating Smirnov’s
claims in July 2023).) While a host of possible crimes had been investigated, the defense
understood that the FARA/bribery investigation had been closed and that the only pending issues
concerned gun and tax charges. The Diversion Agreement resolved the gun and tax charges, which
is why defense counsel believed the immunity agreement covered everything and would conclude
the investigation. The push back from the prosecution and its discussion of an “ongoing”
investigation—apparently tied to the Smirnov allegations—came as a surprise to defense counsel.
(7/26/23 Tr. at 50, 54.) Having taken Mr. Smirnov’s bait of grand, sensational charges, the
Diversion Agreement that had just been entered into and Plea Agreement that was on the verge of
being finalized suddenly became inconvenient for the prosecution, and it reversed course and
repudiated those Agreements.
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DOJ closed the investigation. The Special Counsel charged Mr. Smirnov with lying and
obstruction, but the more interesting part of this story is not that Mr. Smirnov lied. It is more
remarkable that beginning in July 2023, the Special Counsel’s team would follow Mr. Smirnov
down his rabbit hole of lies as long as it did. (Smirnov Indict. ¶¶ 41–46.) Disclosure about why
the Special Counsel abandoned its June/July 2023 agreements with Mr. Biden and the role played
by the Smirnov allegations may reveal flaws worse than mistaking sawdust for cocaine.5 Despite
the prosecution’s strong words in its opposition to this motion, its actions demonstrate that the
prosecution has gotten much wrong and provides good cause for Mr. Biden to question whether it
5 The prosecution’s outrage over criminal activity by those associated with its investigation
remains rather selective. Last month, a former government contractor working at the IRS, who
unlawfully leaked private taxpayer information concerning former President Trump , was
sentenced to five years in prison—a significant sentence for a serious crime. United States v.
Charles E. Littlejohn, No. 23-cr-00343-ACR (D.D.C. 2023). Nevertheless, two IRS agents on the
prosecution’s team investigating Mr. Biden blatantly and publicly did the same thing, on television
no less, and yet they have not been prosecuted or even fired by the IRS. Mr. Biden raised the
agents’ misconduct several times with the Inspector General and Mr. Weiss. Neither have yet
acknowledged the complaint. Thus, Mr. Biden brought a civil action based on these agents’
misconduct and their agency’s failure to act. Biden v. IRS, No. 23-cv-02711-TJK (D.D.C. 2023).
Still, however, neither the IRS nor the prosecution has taken action against them. Ironically, the
same extremist Republican voices who now angrily complain that Mr. Trump’s leaker got off too
easy simultaneously claim the two IRS agents who leaked confidential tax information concerning
Mr. Biden should be hailed as courageous “whistleblowers.” Chairman Jordan Opens Inquiry
into DOJ’s Sweetheart Deal for Trump Tax Return Leaker, H. Judiciary Comm. (Feb. 8, 2024),
https://judiciary.house.gov/media/press-releases/chairman-jordan-opens-inquiry-dojs-sweetheart-
deal-trump-tax-return-leaker; Arjun Singh, Top GOP Rep Calls On More Whistleblowers To Come
Forward, Pledges ‘Zero Tolerance’ For Retaliation, Daily Caller (July 19, 2023),
https://dailycaller.com/2023/07/19/jason-smith-irs-whistleblower-retaliation/. The prosecution’s
various actions and inactions send the very message that Mr. Biden’s motions to dismiss allege—
misbehave when dealing with former President Trump and there will be consequences; do the
same in the unprecedented charges against Mr. Biden and you will be praised.
6 Among other things, the prosecution’s recent productions identified a new December 4, 2023
warrant, which Mr. Biden intends to challenge. Although Mr. Biden will address the deficiencies
with that warrant then, the prosecution makes a few points that are worthy of a brief response now.
First, the prosecution tries to head off claims about its unlawful seizure and then unlawful search
of Mr. Biden’s computer and electronic documents by saying this subsequent December 4, 2023
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The prosecution does not contest that Mr. Biden made a request for the discovery, and that
is sufficient to preserve a Brady claim on appeal whether or not he ever moved to compel. See,
e.g., United States v. Bagley, 473 U.S. 667, 682–83 (1985). The prosecution should appreciate
that Mr. Biden has made specific requests because the onus is not on him to guess at what evidence
the prosecution may have but has not shared; only the “prosecution [] alone can know what is
undisclosed.” Kyles v. Whitley, 514 U.S. 419, 437 (1995). Here, when new evidence suggests that
Mr. Biden has not received all that he is entitled, he has raised that first with the prosecution and
“retrospective test” that is applied “only in the context of appellate review.” United States v.
Bundy, 968 F.3d 1019, 1033 (9th Cir. 2020) (citations omitted). That is because a Brady violation
will be found only if the prosecution’s suppression was material to the question of guilt or
warrant “moots” its prior Fourth Amendment violations. (Opp. at 6.) That is flat out not the law;
even a valid new warrant cannot cure a prior Fourth Amendment violation. See, e.g., United States
v. Payton: 573 F.3d 859, 863 (9th Cir. 2009) (“A seizure of a computer to await a second warrant
is nevertheless a Fourth Amendment seizure . . . .”) (reversing the denial of a suppression motion).
Second, the prosecution advances a position of startling breadth in claiming that if it has a warrant
to search for anything on a computer or electronic database, it can search and seize everything
under the plain view doctrine. (Opp. at 4–5.) If accepted—and it should not be—that view would
transform every warrant to search a computer or electronic database into a general warrant, which
is the very thing the Fourth Amendment was designed to prevent. See, e.g., United States v.
Comprehensive Drug Testing, Inc., 621 F.3d 1162, 1167–72 (9th Cir. 2010) (en banc). Third, the
prosecution challenges the basis for a future motion to suppress by Mr. Biden, and suggests —
without authority or foundation—that Mr. Biden must “seek leave to file a belated motion to
suppress the December 2023 warrant.” (Opp. at 18.) Mr. Biden does not require leave to challenge
a newly discovered evidentiary issue that he did not become aware of until mid-January 2024. See
United States v. Neal, 2019 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 166526, at *1 (M.D. Pa. Sept. 27, 2019) (granting
motion for reconsideration of denial of defendant’s motion to suppress where, since the court’s
initial denial, “new evidence from [an Officer]’s personnel file bearing on his credib ility has come
to light”); see also United States v. Wrensford, 866 F.3d 76, 88 n.6 (3d Cir. 2017) (on motion to
reopen suppression hearing, among the factors to weigh, “courts may consider how the new
evidence came to light” and when).
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punishment, and that materiality analysis is difficult before a trial is complete. Consequently, the
task for the prosecution and a trial court at the discovery stage is to avoid a situation that may result
in reversal. See, e.g., id. (“[T]he government must always produce any potentially exculpatory or
otherwise favorable evidence without regard to how the withholding of such evidence might be
viewed . . . as affecting the outcome of the trial. The question before trial is not whether the
government thinks that disclosure of the information or evidence . . . might change the outcome of
the trial going forward, but whether the evidence is favorable and therefore must be disclosed.”)
(quoting United States v. Safavian, 233 F.R.D. 12, 16 (D.D.C. 2005)). The Court should decline
the prosecution’s suggestion that it ignore a Brady violation, hold a lengthy trial, and just wait for
any conviction that may be obtained to be vacated on appeal. The Court is certainly empowered
to compel the prosecution to provide Mr. Biden a fair trial before Your Honor.
All the prosecution had to do to respond to Mr. Biden’s October 8, 2023 or November 15,
2023 Rule 16 material requests was to state that it had fulfilled its Rule 16 obligations. Instead,
the prosecution ignored Mr. Biden’s outreach. Then, after the prosecution told Mr. Biden’s
counsel on a phone call on December 1, 2023, that the prosecution believed it had satisfied its
January 2024. But, without receiving further communication from the prosecution that it had
fulfilled its Rule 16 obligations, it was more than appropriate for Mr. Biden to seek confirmation
via the Court that no further responsive Rule 16 material exists in the prosecution’s possession. A
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criminal defendant is rightfully entitled to ask for all that he is lawfully entitled to receive—a
Mr. Biden’s skepticism that the prosecution has completed its obligations rests upon more
than just the prosecution inaccurately claiming in July 2023 to have met its Brady obligations then.
Those concerns are compounded by the prosecution’s failure to even describe its Brady obligations
accurately, and acknowledge that its ethical duties to produce discovery are even broader than
Brady.8 It frames those requirements exclusively in terms of evidence of the question of guilt, but
Brady itself makes clear that it applies to “evidence [that] is material either to guilt or to
punishment, irrespective of the good faith or bad faith of the prosecution .” Brady v. Maryland,
373 U.S. 83, 87 (1963). Indeed, the defendant in Brady conceded guilt and the case solely
concerned evidence relevant to sentencing. Id. at 84. The prosecution cannot substantially limit
the scope of Brady by excluding evidence relevant to punishment (e.g., evidence that the
prosecution does not typically prosecute similar cases would show a lack of need for deterrence
7 The prosecution describes Mr. Biden as being “incorrect” about its failure to produce expert
materials, noting it provided two reports (of which Mr. Biden was aware) prepared by an FBI
chemist examiner and an ATF Special Agent. (Opp. at 7–8.) The prosecution, however, has not
yet designated its experts and did not identify these materials as expert reports as required under
Rule 16 when it made the production. That they were among more than 700,000 pages of material
produced to Mr. Biden on November 2, 2023, without more, is not what the rule envisions.
8 Ethically, prosecutors are required to make disclosures without regard to materiality. See ABA
Standards for Criminal Justice, Prosecution Function and Defense Function 3 –3.11(a) (3d ed.
1993) (“A prosecutor should not intentionally fail to make timely disclosure to the defense, at the
earliest feasible opportunity, of the existence of all evidence or information which tends to negate
the guilt of the accused or mitigate the offense charged or which would tend to reduce the
punishment of the accused”); ABA Model Rule of Professional Conduct 3.8(d) (1984) (“The
prosecutor in a criminal case shall . . . make timely disclosure to the defense of all evidence or
information known to the prosecutor that tends to negate the guilt of the accused or mitigates the
offense”).
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Additionally, for the reasons discussed infra at Section II.H, obtaining limited discovery
of “the internal deliberative process and work product” of DOJ (Opp. at 9) is relevant to the
evidence of selective and vindictive prosecution and, if Mr. Biden satisfies his threshold showing,
indicating that this prosecution is motivated by improper bias may implicate the bias by
government witnesses and their manner of collecting evidence. Similarly, evidence that others are
not typically charged in similar circumstances is Brady mitigation evidence offered at sentencing.
If the prosecution believes it has now fully satisfied its Brady obligations, rather than deny
Mr. Biden’s motion, the prosecution should just affirmatively confirm as much to defense counsel
The prosecution’s response acknowledges that, while not mandated under 18 U.S.C. § 3500
and Federal Rule of Criminal Procedure 26.2, the provision of Jencks Act material to the defense
well before trial is both routine in this Circuit (and elsewhere) and warranted in the instant case.
Yet, they argue that just one week prior would be enough (if, despite the various motions to
dismiss, there would be a trial in this case). (Opp. at 12.) There is no good reason for their limited
offer here. See United States v. Blackwell, 954 F. Supp. 944, 970 (D.N.J. 1997) (noting that while
courts in this Circuit “cannot compel disclosure of Jencks material . . . the [Third] Circuit
encourages early disclosure”) (citations omitted); see also United States v. Bianchi, 2007 WL
1521123, at *3 (E.D. Pa. May 22, 2007) (ordering production of all Jencks materials, in addition
to any other discovery, months in advance of trial). The prosecution is familiar with this practice
as Judge Scarsi advised these same prosecutors at Mr. Biden’s initial appearance in California last
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month: “[I] just suggest that the Government provide Jencks material well in advance of trial, just
so we don’t have unnecessary continuances and things during trial. . . . I know it’s not required,
but it certainly helps when the Government makes early Jencks material disclosures.” United
States v. Biden, No. 23-599-MCS (C.D. Cal.) (1/15/2024 Tr. at 25.) If, as the prosecution claims,
only “a small volume of unproduced Jencks materials [exists] in this case” (Opp. at 13), there is
no reason to delay proceedings due to late Jencks disclosures that the prosecution could make well
ahead of trial, and give the defense time to review and brief in a timely manner any evidentiary
For example, in its response to Mr. Biden’s motions to dismiss the indictment (DE 68 at 7,
12, 24), the prosecution repeatedly referenced “defendant’s brown leather pouch” that, after
recovered by a scavenger from a public trash can, purportedly contained trace amounts of cocaine
residue (among whatever else as it traded hands before and after passing through the trash).
Understanding what various eyewitnesses to that pouch said or did not say about it, who handled
the pouch, where it was found, and the chain of custody in the days leading up to and after October
12, 2018 will all be critical issues at any trial and require advance preparation.
There is no question these statements are discoverable Jencks, if not Brady, materials. See
United States v. Gonzalez-Melendez, 570 F.3d 1, 4 (1st Cir. 2009) (witness statements in FBI 302
Forms and other interview reports and summaries are discoverable Jencks). Moreover, discovery
produced to date (notably, the ATF case file) indicates the individual who retrieved the firearm
from the trash can possessed a second firearm that was not registered to him and belonged to
someone else. Understanding what this individual did with the items he collected from the trash,
and what he told law enforcement about the various firearms he had, will be another critical issue
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for defense counsel at any trial. Should this case proceed, having Jencks Act disclosure no later
Mr. Biden agrees with the prosecution in seeking a deadline for disclosure of Rule 404(b)
materials in advance of trial. “What constitutes ‘reasonable notice in advance of trial’ [pursuant
to Rule 404(b)] is determined by the circumstances and complexity of the prosecution.” United
States v. Johnson, 218 F. Supp. 3d 454, 462 (W.D. Pa. 2016). To give the defense an adequate
opportunity to consider such evidence, Mr. Biden respectfully requests the Court order the
prosecution to disclose any 404(b) evidence it intends to use by the same four weeks suggested
above for Jencks Act disclosures. Finally, if the prosecution intends to use any evidence of past
acts or crimes that it believes are not subject to Rule 404, the prosecution should be required to
identify those materials and its reasoning so that Mr. Biden has an opportunity to respond .
The prosecution seeks to transform Rule 6(e) protection of the internal deliberations of
grand juries into a shield that loses any relationship to that purpose. Grand jury deliberations are
not compromised by addressing how the grand jury is structured and reviewing the ground rules
for how it will operate (e.g., empanelment records, efforts to screen grand jurors for bias, and the
legal instructions they receive). There is a strong need to examine these materials to determine
whether the grand jury proceedings were flawed. Mr. Biden does not need to prov e the flaw first
to obtain discovery, as the prosecution suggests, because there would be no need for discovery if
9Should the Court schedule an evidentiary hearing, Mr. Biden requests the disclosure of Jencks
Act materials two weeks before then.
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None of these requests implicate Rule 6(e) in the first place. Grand jury secrecy protections
simply “do[] not govern matters such as the court’s charge to a grand jury.” Susan Brenner & Lori
Shaw, Federal Grand Jury: A Guide to Law and Practice §16:11 (2d ed. 2021). “The legal
instructions given to the grand jury regarding the charges on which they are deliberating are a part
of the ‘ground rules’ by which the grand jury conducts its proceedings. The instructions do not
reveal the substance of a grand jury’s deliberative process or other information that would
compromise the secrecy that Rule 6 seeks to protect.” United States v. Belton, 2015 WL 1815273,
at *3 (N.D. Cal. Apr. 21, 2015); see In re Cudahy, 294 F.3d 947, 951 (7th Cir. 2002) (Posner, J.)
(“[M]inisterial grand jury records, such as records reflecting the empaneling and extension of the
grand jury, are not within the reach of Rule 6(e) because they reveal nothing of substance about
the grand jury’s investigation.” (quoting 1 S. Beale et al., Grand Jury Law and Practice §5:6 (2d
ed. 2001))); United States v. Alter, 482 F.2d 1016, 1029 n.21 (9th Cir. 1973) (“Alter was entitled
to know the content of the court’s charges to the grand jury. The proceedings before the grand
jury are secret, but the ground rules by which the grand jury conducts those proceedings are not.”);
United States v. Diaz, 236 F.R.D. 470, 477–78 (N.D. Cal. 2006).
In addition, the Jury Selection and Services Act of 1968 (JSSA) acknowledges that
defendants “have the right to grand and petit juries selected at random from a fair cross section of
the community in the district or division wherein the court convenes.” 28 U.S.C. § 1861. To
determine compliance with JSSA, Mr. Biden requested access to certain records from the
prosecution with respect to grand jury proceedings, including (i) “Dates on which each such grand
jury sat, the number of grand jurors present on those dates, and the dates on which each grand juror
was in attendance,” and (ii) the record of any grand jurors who were summoned but excused from
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service. (See Mr. Biden’s October 8, 2023 letter). The prosecution has not yet provided any such
Without inspection of this data, Mr. Biden is unable to assess whether the grand jury that
returned the three-count indictment against him was selected, and treated, in accordance with the
provisions of JSSA, and whether he has a potentially meritorious jury challenge. See Test v. United
States, 420 U.S. 28, 30 (1975) (under JSSA § 1867(f), “a litigant has essentially an unqualified
right” to such inspection, and “without inspection, a party almost invariably would be unable to
determine whether he has a potentially meritorious jury challenge.”); United States v. Beaty, 465
F.2d 1376, 1382 (9th Cir. 1972) (holding defendant “had a right to make the inspection before he
made a motion to challenge the jury under § 1867(a)”). The attendance record and reasons for
absence are also necessary to ensure that, even assuming the grand jury represented a fair cross -
section of the community, enough of the same jurors heard the key evidence of this case.
Moreover, courts have rejected the notion that only information regarding the creation of the
Master Jury Wheel—and not information regarding subsequent selection procedures—is subject
to disclosure under Section 1867(f), particularly where, as here, evidence suggests that the grand
jury was empaneled during the Covid-19 pandemic which may have distorted the grand jury
selection process. United States v. Holmes, 2020 WL 5408163, at *4 (N.D. Cal. Sept. 9, 2020).
Finally, disclosure of voir dire questions presented to potential grand jurors is warranted
here to avoid possible injustice in this prosecution. The Supreme Court has repeatedly declared
that a defendant has a constitutional right to have an indictment “returned by a legally constituted
and nonbiased grand jury.” See, e.g., Lawn v. United States, 355 U.S. 339, 349–50 (1958). How
else can a grand jury be screened for bias except to ask them about their biases, just as courts
screen petit jurors for bias in the same way? “Trust us, we are from the government,” is no way
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to ensure that a constitutional guarantee is fulfilled; rather, defendants are entitled to look at the
precautions actually taken to exclude grand jurors with improper biases or to know if no such
More than in most cases, this is undoubtedly a high-profile, politically charged case
involving the President’s son that garners significant media attention and evokes strong feelings
of hate or adoration. Some effort is required to screen jurors for bias in these circumstances. To
eliminate those grand jurors who would indict Mr. Biden based upon prejudice , rather than the
merits of the prosecution’s case, it would not have been difficult to voir dire all potential grand
jurors. Specific questions should have and could easily have been asked to elicit conscious and
unconscious prejudices of the jurors concerning political affiliation, politics, and foreign
influences. Such screening is routine in selecting trial juries, see, e.g., Sheppard v. Maxwell, 384
U.S. 333, 362 (1966); Gov’t of Virgin Islands v. Dowling, 814 F.2d 134, 139 (3d Cir. 1987); United
States v. Dansker, 537 F.2d 40, 55 (3d Cir. 1976). If the grand jury is going to fulfill its function
to sort out and bring only charges based on the facts and law, then these same protections should
apply to prohibiting biased individuals from serving on this body as well. Actual bias cannot be
Not only does production of the requested materials not implicate Rule 6(e), that rule would
not preclude production if it were applicable because Mr. Biden has demonstrated a “particularized
need” for such items that outweighs the public interest in secrecy. See Douglas Oil Co. of Cal. v.
Petrol Stops Nw., 441 U.S. 211, 223 (1979) (disclosure of grand jury proceedings is appropriate
“where the need for it outweighs the public interest in secrecy”); see also United States v. Procter
& Gamble Co., 356 U.S. 677, 682 (1958) (recognizing the “secrecy of grand jury proceedings”
may be broken “where there is a compelling necessity” that is “shown with particularity” ). Here,
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Mr. Biden has demonstrated a particularized need given the conduct and behavior of the
investigating agents and prosecutors, particularly as it relates to his motion to dismiss for selective
and vindictive prosecution and breach of separation of powers. See United States v. Abounnajah,
1991 WL 42895, at *2 (E.D.N.Y. Mar. 26, 1991) (defendant demonstrated a particularized need
sufficient to warrant disclosure of instructions given to a grand jury, finding the instructions “are
The prosecution complains that Mr. Biden did not offer sufficient legal authority “for most
of his requests” (Opp. at 14), more so than about the requests themselves. Mr. Biden will clarify
that authority as follows. On the issue of instructions provided to the grand jury, due to the
inherently prejudicial impact of mis-instructing a grand jury, numerous courts have ordered
• United States v. Stevens, 771 F. Supp. 2d 556, 564, 567–68 (D. Md. 2011)
(dismissing indictment where prosecutor gave erroneous advice to grand jury
on advice-of-counsel defense that negated wrongful intent);
• United States v. Breslin, 916 F. Supp. 438, 442–46 (E.D. Pa. 1996) (dismissing
indictment on several grounds, but labeling “most disturbing” the prosecutor’s
erroneous legal instruction as to the grand jury’s deliberation on a conspiracy
charge);
• United States v. Peralta, 763 F. Supp. 14, 19–21 (S.D.N.Y. 1991) (dismissing
indictment where there was “grave doubt that the decision to indict was free
from the substantial influence” of the prosecutor’s “misleading statements of
the law” regarding constructive possession of a firearm); and
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• United States v. Vetere, 663 F. Supp. 381, 386–87 (S.D.N.Y. 1987) (dismissing
indictment, even after a guilty verdict at trial, on grounds that the independent
role of the grand jury was impaired based on the prosecutor’s misleading
“presentation both with respect to the facts and the law”).
Mr. Biden does not “misunderstand[] Brady” (Opp. at 16) in arguing that he is entitled to
material responsive to his November 15, 2023 discovery requests for DOJ materials. Documents
in DOJ’s possession that, for example, would discredit or undermine the credibility of government
witnesses (e.g., agents) may indeed “be determinative of a defendant’s guilt or innocence” and are
squarely Brady. (Opp. at 17 (citing Giglio v. United States, 405 U.S. 150, 154, (1972), and United
States v. Gengler, 574 F.2d 730, 735 (3d Cir. 1978)).) As explained in Mr. Biden’s opening motion
and his motion requesting Rule 17 subpoenas (DE 58), certain communications, memoranda, or
notes in DOJ’s possession, from the prior administration, may reflect the potential actions and
motivations behind the investigation of Mr. Biden, and later the charges—an issue for which
witnesses may be called during an evidentiary hearing. Accordingly, such records are probative
of bias and needed for impeachment of government witnesses. If the prosecution is stating that
those most responsible for any misconduct (e.g., the IRS agents who were on the case for years)
will not be called as witnesses (hardly a surprise now), that does not end the issue. What they said
to others and what others said to them very well can be or lead to impeachment or other exculpatory
evidence. Mr. Biden may even choose to call those witnesses themselves.
Nor are Mr. Biden’s requests “far-reaching” (Opp. at 17); in fact, they are narrowly tailored
to focus on documents and records from five former DOJ officials specifically connected to this
investigation in one way or another, plus the former President. (See DE 63 at 29–31.) To the
extent communications exist concerning prosecuting or investigating Mr. Biden (or a request from
one DOJ official to another to do so), such documents would be exculpatory in demonstrating
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DOJ’s lack of independent investigatory and prosecutorial decision -making concerning Mr. Biden.
This information would be directly pertinent to Mr. Biden’s pending motion to dismiss, and as of
Moreover, the Special Counsel’s recent Indictment of Mr. Smirnov, discussed supra at 4–
5, bears directly on the significance of Mr. Biden’s DOJ requests. The requests seek, among other
things, documents and records reflecting communications from January 20, 2017 to the present by
or among Scott Brady (then-U.S. Attorney for W.D.P.A.) or Richard Donoghue (then-Principal
Mr. Biden. (Mot. at 15.) As it turns out, the involvement of these two individuals was central to
vetting the claims raised by this former FBI informant, and who concluded in August 2020 that
“all reasonable steps had been completed regarding [Mr. Smirnov]’s allegations and that their
assessment . . . should be closed.” (Smirnov Indict. ¶ 40.) The fact that Special Counsel Weiss,
beginning in July 2023, then elected to chase the goose making these unsubstantiated claims—
after several DOJ and FBI officials agreed the matter should be closed—is all the more justification
for granting Mr. Biden’s request for these DOJ materials. Not only is this relevant to the evidence
of selective and vindictive prosecution addressed below in Section II.H, it also would constitute
G. Laptop
The prosecution mixes apples with oranges in charging that Mr. Biden is being “dishonest
and misleading” in objecting to what the prosecution contends was a laptop it obtained being
produced in the native format that he requested (Opp. at 19), but that is disingenuous. To be sure,
Mr. Biden asked for an exact copy of the laptop so it could be examined in the same way in which
it was originally found, which is helpful in making a forensic examination of the laptop. That will
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be needed, for example, to challenge the chain of custody, provenance, or likely tampering with
discovery. The crux of Mr. Biden’s complaint here is that the prosecution has not supplemented
that production with an index or some other means that would identify which of the vast materials
on the laptop the prosecution believes are relevant to this case. The request for the forensic copy
is not the same. If the prosecution is claiming that it has not indexed the 220 gigabytes of data
(which would be an odd statement), then it needs to say that, and, as with other requests, the dispute
will end. If it does have what it normally has with vast amounts of e-data, without providing more,
This amount of mixed media data in this tech age is difficult to navigate. The text messages
and photos cited by the prosecution in its motions, for example, are difficult to locate. They are
“buried” in a convoluted collection of different backup folders and files and are not stored in one
streamlined digital backup or application. The messages and photos cited come from “Apple
iCloud Backup 01”; “Apple iTunes Backup”; “Apple iCloud Backup 04”; and “iTunes Backup
(iPhone 11),” titles that are not even remotely descriptive of what they contain. (See DE 86-1.)
For this reason, Mr. Biden requested an index of material (which the prosecution has now clarified
it does not have), or Bates stamps for that which it had cited. (Opp. at 19.)
In his opening motion, Mr. Biden merely requested, following the prosecution’s citation to
myriad text messages and photos in its responses, that the prosecution indicate where on the image
it provided Mr. Biden could find those referenced materials. (Mot. at 18.) The reason for this
request was straightforward at the time: defense counsel could not locate certain of the messages
and photos given the broad date ranges used by the prosecution to describe them (e.g., photos taken
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“Prior to October 12, 2018”; messages sent “prior to his gun purchase”; and photos taken “During
November and December 2018”). (DE 86-1.) Mr. Biden appreciates that with the Exhibit filed
with its opposition, the prosecution has now fulfilled this part of his request.
As to the meeting between Mr. Biden’s counsel and prosecutors in Wilmington on August
29, 2023 (Opp. at 19), Mr. Biden notes that prosecutors indicated, during that meeting, that they
possess “independent sources” for any material on the laptop device that would be helpful to the
prosecution’s case, presumably referring to material subpoenaed from third parties, such as Apple,
Inc. or various cellphone carriers. For this reason, it was curious to Mr. Biden’s counsel when
reviewing the prosecution’s response that it elected to cite to and quote from messages and photos
contained on the device it possessed (lacking any Bates stamps) rather than from those
“independent sources” included in the discovery produced to the defense. That is precisely why
Mr. Biden requested the prosecution indicate where on the device he could find the quoted
messages and referenced photos, and why he suggested these files were “left buried” among a set
of voluminous files that, as made clear now, span multiple iPhone, iTunes, and iCloud backups.
(Opp. at 19 (quoting Mot. at 17).) Nevertheless, Mr. Biden appreciates the prosecution providing
The prosecution erroneously claims that it can withhold evidence that it has engaged in
selective or vindictive prosecution because it is not Brady. (Opp. at 11 n.5.) The prosecution is
overly fixated on labels, when what matters is whether discovery can be compelled. The Due
Process Clause is the source of both the prosecution’s Brady obligation to produce evidence and
that the Supreme Court has held that discovery pursuant to the Due Process Clause is appropriate
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concerning selective or vindictive prosecution. See United States v. Armstrong, 517 U.S. 456, 463
(1996). Mr. Biden’s Motion for Discovery and an Evidentiary Hearing addresses that case law at
Brady materials and its right to certain materials relevant to a selective or vindictive prosecution
claim under the broader provisions of the Due Process Clause. The prosecution’s obligation to
produce Brady materials always exists, while a defendant must establish a basis for seeking
evidence of selective or vindictive prosecution. That extra burden, however, is a low bar. To
obtain discovery on a selective or vindictive prosecution claim, a defendant need only “make out
some evidence tending to show the existence of the essential elements of the defense.” United
States v. Bradley, 880 F. Supp. 271, 279 (M.D. Pa. 1994) (citations omitted). As Justice Marshall
remarked, the low standard for discovery on a selective or vindictive prosecution claim “is
consistent with our exhortation that the need to develop all relevant facts in the adversary system
is both fundamental and comprehensive” and that “most of the relevant proof in selective
prosecution cases will normally be in the Government’s hands.” Wayte v. United States, 470 U.S.
598, 624 (1985) (Marshall, J., dissenting) (citations omitted). Mr. Biden has explained why he has
Additionally, much of the evidence sought by Mr. Biden would fit comfortably under
Brady as well. Evidence that a prosecution is motivated by improper bias may implicate the bias
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by government witnesses and their manner of collecting evidence. Similarly, evidence that others
are not typically charged in similar circumstances is Brady mitigation evidence at sentencing. 10
The bottom-line is that the prosecution is obligated to produce the discovery that Mr. Biden
has requested, regardless of whether his due process-based right to it is grounded in Brady or
Armstrong.
CONCLUSION
Mr. Biden respectfully requests that the prosecution be required to produce the discovery
requested herein, pursuant to any deadlines set by the Court for doing so.
10 Sentencing courts are required to consider both the need for the sentence proposed and the need
to avoid sentencing disparities. 18 U.S.C. § 3553. There is no compelling need for “deterrence”
or “to promote respect for the law,” when prosecutors typically charge no one under similar
circumstances, and imposing a punishment here when others are not typically charged at all is the
worst kind of sentencing disparity. Id. § 3553(a)(2).
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CERTIFICATE OF SERVICE
I hereby certify that on this 20th day of February, 2024, I filed the foregoing Reply in
Support of Mr. Biden’s Motion to Compel Discovery and Set Discovery Deadlines with the Clerk
of Court using the CM/ECF system, which will send a notification of such filing to all counsel of
record.
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