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Friday, January 20, 2023

Biden's drive to tap 'earnings potential' led family to China-backed university, energy deal

 Just 18 months into his vice presidency, Joe Biden had a conversation with one of Hunter Biden's business associates that left an indelible impression about his desire to create future wealth.

"Your Dad just called me (about his mortgage) and mentioned he'd be out a lot soon and not really back until Labor Day," Rosemont Seneca executive Eric Schwerin wrote Hunter Biden on July 6, 2010 in an email on a laptop seized by the FBI. "So it dawned on me it might be a good time (also he could use some positive news about his future earnings potential!)."

Schwerin, who worked alongside Hunter Biden at the Rosemont Seneca investment firm and also doubled as a financial and tax adviser to the future president, asked Hunter Biden to consider meeting with his father soon to discuss the issue, according to the email.

"Does it make sense to see if your Dad has some time in the next couple of weeks while you are in DC to talk about it?" he wrote in the email entitled "JRB Future Memo" using the future president's initials as shorthand.

You can read that memo here:

By 2016, as Joe Biden was planning to leave the Obama White House, those conversations with Hunter Biden had graduated to "wealth creation" and the founding of a foreign policy think tank, according to emails that have taken on new significance after the discovery of classified documents in Biden's office and home renewed focus on the first family's foreign business deals.

Buried in a Hunter Biden laptop now in the FBI's possession are a series of emails, documents and messages that explain how America's first family got so deeply intertwined — especially in 2017-18 after he left the Obama White House — with Chinese interests now under federal and congressional investigation.

Matters under scrutiny include the University of Pennsylvania, which hosted the former VP's Penn Biden Center and received $47.7 million in gifts and contracts from Chinese sources while Biden worked as a guest lecturer, and CEFC, a Chinese conglomerate that formed a business venture with the president's son Hunter and brother James.

The most common link to the interests that have landed the Biden family in political hot water was Hunter Biden, who courted the University of Pennsylvania before it hired his father and pursued several Chinese deals, including an investment fund, the sale of a U.S. company that made sensitive technology, and eventually the creation of the CEFC venture aimed at buying up U.S. gas interests for China.

Today, both father and son are under DOJ investigation: the president for possible mishandling of classified documents and Hunter for taxes and other issues.

Just the News has reported over the last year that Hunter Biden and Schwerin occasionally discussed Joe Biden's finances, even discussing how the future president wanted to use a Delaware tax refund to pay back his son and identifying bills like cell phones and house repairs that Hunter Biden wanted to pay for his father.

As the prospect of Joe Biden's move from politics to the private sector drew nearer, entities and people associated with foreign interests — especially in China — surfaced more frequently.

A year after the 2010 conversation about Joe Biden's "future earnings potential," for instance, Hunter Biden began exploring an investment opportunity inside China with both excitement and trepidation.

"I don't believe in lottery tickets anymore, but I do believe in the super chairman," Hunter Biden wrote in one email exchange in September 2011, referring to a business partner in Hong Kong.

Hunter Biden seemed to understand that a political family tied to the White House also faced risks by dabbling in China business and why such interests wanted to be associated with him.

"Your question — 'why does Super Chair love me so much?' is easily answered," he wrote then-business partner Devon Archer. "It has nothing to do with me and everything to do with my last name."

That email suggested Archer and Biden "have to have a long talk about how we divide things going forward" if the deal was consummated and warned that their Chinese business partners might "come after us for f'ing up their relationships in Beijing."

In December 2013, Hunter Biden was flying aboard Air Force II with the vice president for a meeting in Beijing, which triggered the creation of an investment fund and occasioned a brief greeting between his father and one of the Chinese business partners.

By 2015, Hunter Biden had facilitated the sale of the Michigan-based auto parts maker Henniges Automotive, which made sensitive anti-vibration technology potentially usable for military fighter jets, to one of China's main military aircraft makers, Aviation Industry Corporation of China or AVIC.

That same year, Hunter Biden began courting the University of Pennsylvania and its top leader while also receiving a new overture from China that would eventually lead to one of the first family's most controversial deals, the CEFC energy partnership.

CEFC first approached Hunter Biden about making a donation to the U.S. World Food Programme, which he served as honorary chairman.

"Hunter was recently approached by a large privately owned Chinese corporation, called CEFC Energy China, that has a U.S. based foundation," Schwerin wrote in October 2015.

"They'd like to explore making a donation to WFP USA and their CEO would like to meet with the appropriate person at WFP USA the last week of October when he is in the U.S." he added. "My assumption based on the conversations I have had with them is that it would be more than just a token donation."

Soon, he and his partners would steer the discussion to personal business, when Hunter Biden was invited to a private meeting in December 2015 with CEFC's Chairman Ye in Washington D.C.

"I am confident that many interesting projects may come out of that in the future," a business associate wrote in explaining why Hunter Biden should attend.

As Just the News, The Washington Post and others have reported, the CEFC courtship eventually landed the Biden family a large diamond as a gift and a no-interest, forgivable $5 million loan that enriched the first family.

As the CEFC deals heated up, Hunter Biden also warmed the fires at the University of Pennsylvania, discussing with then-wife Kathleen hosting a pivate dinner for Penn president Amy Guttman.

"Maybe just ask her if Amy would rather just do dinner with mom dad and us — or if she wants we can do the larger dinner," Hunter Biden wrote in February 2015.

Calendar notations and other correspondence indicate that dinner was booked for April 2015.

Penn, like many other Ivy League schools, was growing its relationship with China, collecting millions in donations while also creating programs in the communist country, according to the university's own reports to the federal government and its website.

Data gathered by the National Legal and Policy Center and appended to a complaint in 2020 shows Penn obtained $67.6 million in grants and contracts from Chinese sources between 2013 and 2019, with most of it — $47.7 million — collected in the time Joe Biden was paid more than $900,000 by the university to work as a guest lecturer and lend his name to the Penn Biden Center think tank in 2017-19.

Hunter Biden's emails suggest he played a role in the meetings during the late Obama years that eventually landed his father the lucrative gig at Penn, including an April 2016 gathering at the Naval Observatory where the then-vice president lived.

Joe Biden eventually recalled the conversations with Guttman that landed him the Penn job, saying it became particularly attractive to him when he learned the university would not only employ him but also many staffers, like Antony Blinken, who would eventually follow him back to the White House as secretary of state after Biden's 2020 presidential election win.

"President Guttman, you came to me before the [Obama] administration was up and asked me would I consider being a professor at Penn," he recalled during a videotaped interview with NBC News' Andrea Mitchell at the Penn Biden Center when it opened in 2018. "The first thought I had was that it sounded like an intriguing idea.

"But it became even more intriguing after the outcome of the election when you said I could bring along with me some serious, serious people, serious staff people. And they're much more than staff. And I start with Tony Blinken and Steve Riccetti and others, so thank you for allowing me to bring along some really, really bright people."

You can watch Joe Biden's remarks about Penn here:

https://youtu.be/o107_hVNXJU

Eventually, President Joe Biden would reward Guttman with a prized ambassadorship to Germany and the school's chairman of the board of trustees with an ambassadorship to Canada.

While that Biden-Penn deal was being finalized, Hunter Biden became engaged in conversations with Craig Gering, an agent at the Creative Artists Agency, in April 2016.

Gering emailed Hunter Biden a rough plan for the vice president's private life after he left office. It included the Penn Biden Center, a Delaware University relationship, a private foundation and fourth item simply called "wealth creation."

"The Biden Institute of Foreign Relations at the University of Pennsylvania," Gering  wrote. "Focus on foreign policy. In addition to the institute at U of Penn, the school has an existing office in DC that will be expanded to house a DC office for VP Biden (and Mike, Hunter and Steve?). Operates like The Clinton Global Initiative without the money raise."

"Yes," Hunter wrote back, cautioning his father's plans were not fully formed. "In theory that's the way I would like to see it shake out. BUT please keep this very confidential between us because nothing has been set in stone and there's still a lot of sensitivity around all of this both internally and externally."

You can read that email exchange here:

Today, the Biden family's pursuit of "earnings potential" and "wealth creation" are at the center of a burgeoning investigation by House Republicans.

House Oversight and Accountability Committee Chairman James Comer (R-Ky.) told Just the News last week his investigation into the classified government documents discovery was being expanded to include whether the flow of China money to Penn and the Biden family businesses were part of a coordinated effort by the communist country.

"This is very concerning," Comer told the "Just the News, No Noise" television show. "We're sending a letter to Penn requesting documents related to the Chinese donations. We want a list of individuals involved, whoever was involved in soliciting donations from China. We want all communications because I think this is very important.

"This is another aspect of the potential for this family to be compromised."

https://justthenews.com/accountability/political-ethics/bidens-drive-earnings-potential-led-family-china-backed-university

Joe Biden named in 2017 email to Hunter seeking China natural gas deal

 Joe Biden’s name was mentioned prominently in an October 2017 email seeking to firm up a controversial, multimillion-dollar deal to ship natural gas from the US to China, the communication, found on first son Hunter Biden’s abandoned laptop, reveals.

In a missive dated Oct. 27 of that year, Louisiana attorney Robert W. Fenet told Hunter and his uncle, first brother Jim Biden, that he had secured a contact for them at Houston energy company Cherniere, the Daily Mail reported Friday.

“I confirm I have requested [the contact] to be available for a call from Joe Biden and Hunter Biden on Monday morning,” Fenet wrote.

Vice President Joe Biden with his son Hunter in 2016.
Teresa Kroeger

The attorney did not immediately return a message from The Post requesting clarification on why the then-former vice president was name dropped.

President Biden has a history of ties to Cherniere’s executives: He named former company lobbyist and vice president Ankit Desai as his political director in 2005, and former board member Heather Zichal became his campaign climate adviser in 2020.

Robert Fenet referred to Joe Biden in a 2017 email.
Robert Fenet referred to Joe Biden in a 2017 email.

At the time the email was sent, however, Biden was the former Obama administration vice president and about a year-and-a-half away from announcing a presidential run. The White House did not respond to The Post’s request for a comment on the note.

Although Biden has repeatedly denied involvement in his ne’er-do-well son’s Chinese business dealings, records from Hunter’s laptop and witness testimony suggest he was aware of, if not directly connected to, the transactions.

In emails with Fenet, Jim Biden referred to the Biden clan’s involvement in the project, which involved supplying millions of tons of liquid natural gas (LNG) from Louisiana to Chinese state-backed conglomerate CEFC Energy.

“We Biden’s [sic] often fraught with problems, that they can can [sic] come from working with family members, are of a different mind. It’s all about family, and people we choose to do business with,” Jim wrote Fenet on Oct. 19, 2017.

On May 13, 2017, Hunter’s business partner James Gilliar said in an email that 10% of equity in the CEFC venture would be kept in equity “by H for the big guy.”

Both Gilliar and another Biden business partner, Tony Bobulinski, have said “the big guy” is a reference to Joe Biden.

Robert Fenet is a Louisiana-based attorney.
Robert Fenet is a Louisiana-based attorney.
Facebook/ Robert Fenet

A week later, Gilliar also warned Bobulinski to avoid referencing Joe Biden’s involvement in the deal in correspondence.

“Don’t mention Joe being involved, it’s only when u are face to face, I know u know that but they are paranoid,” he texted Bobulinksi after Hunter referred to his father in a group text as “my Chairman.”

Bobulinski later alleged that he met with Joe Biden to discuss the China deal on May 2, 2017, in the lobby bar of the Beverly Hilton with Hunter and Jim.

Joe Biden has repeatedly denied involvement in his son's Chinese dealings.
Joe Biden has repeatedly denied involvement in his son’s Chinese dealings.
AP

Biden shakes hands with Chinese President Xi Jinping in November 2022.
AP

CEFC Chairman Yi Jianming and his No. 2, Patrick Ho, ultimately funneled over $10 million into the Biden deal before they were arrested in 2018 for bribery and corruption.

voicemail on Hunter Biden’s scandalous laptop revealed that his father called him in the wake of a December 2018 New York Times story on his connection to the shady businessmen.

“I thought the article released online — it’s going to be printed tomorrow in the Times — was good. I think you’re clear. And anyway if you get a chance, give me a call, I love you,” Biden told his younger son on Dec. 12, 2018.

The revelation is the latest blow to scandal-ridden Hunter, who is now under scrutiny after it was revealed that he had access to his father’s Corvette in the same garage where classified documents were improperly stored.

https://nypost.com/2023/01/20/joe-biden-named-in-2017-email-discussing-hunters-china-deal/

CNN's Wen Concedes US Has Been 'Overcounting' COVID-19 Deaths

 by Jack Phillips via The Epoch Times (emphasis ours),

A doctor who appeared prominently in the media during the pandemic acknowledged this week the United States is “overcounting” COVID-19 deaths and stressed the need for “transparent reporting” on the real numbers.

Leana Wen, a former Planned Parenthood director who now works for CNN and the Washington Post, told the channel that natural immunity and vaccinations have reduced severe COVID-19 cases since the start of the pandemic.

“Hospitals are still routinely testing everyone who’s getting admitted for COVID,” Wen, also a former director of the Baltimore City Health Department, said in response to a question about whether her statements could be “fodder for conspiracy theorists.”

We’re seeing many people who are hospitalized with COVID, and I think it’s important to separate out who is being hospitalized because of it,” Wen added. “Because there are a lot of people who are still very concerned about their risk from COVID and we need to give them the most accurate data possible so that they can better gauge their risks. There are people still not resuming indoor dining or going to the gym or socializing. We have to give them the most accurate reporting as possible.”

In a Washington Post opinion piece, Wen noted that current Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) data show that about 400 people are dying from the virus every day. She then asked a question that many others have asked over the past three years: “But are these Americans dying from COVID or with COVID?”

Two infectious-disease experts I spoke with believe that the number of deaths attributed to COVID is far greater than the actual number of people dying from COVID,” she wrote. “Robin Dretler, an attending physician at Emory Decatur Hospital and the former president of Georgia’s chapter of Infectious Diseases Society of America, estimates that at his hospital, 90 percent of patients diagnosed with COVID are actually in the hospital for some other illness.”

Some patients have several concurrent infections, not just COVID-19.

“People who have very low white blood cell counts from chemotherapy might be admitted because of bacterial pneumonia or foot gangrene,” Dretler was quoted as saying. “They may also have COVID, but COVID is not the main reason why they’re so sick.”

‘With COVID’?

But if those patients die, the doctor said that COVID-19 may get added to their death certificates—meaning, they’re counted as a COVID-19 death. That’s despite COVID-19 not being the primary factor that caused the deaths.

Notably, several Northern California counties in mid-2021 changed how they counted COVID-19 deaths. In one county, the death figure dropped by 22 percent, while in another, 400 fewer deaths were reported following the changes.

A health care worker wheels in a stretcher in the ER at Oakbend Medical Center in Richmond, Texas, on July 15, 2020. (Mark Felix/AFP/Getty Images)

Months before that, an article published by the Association of American Medical Colleges noted that counting COVID-19 deaths is “complicated” and provided an example. An elderly man in Atlanta was stricken with advanced cancer in early 2021, later contracting COVID-19 before ultimately passing away.

“Given his already fragile state, his condition quickly took a turn for the worse” and he later died, a doctor said. Despite having advanced cancer, medical officials listed his death as caused by COVID-19.

https://www.zerohedge.com/covid-19/prominent-cnn-doctor-concedes-us-has-been-overcounting-covid-19-deaths

Atai Target cut by Wainwright

 

  • HC Wainwright lowered the price target for Atai Life Sciences N.V. 
    ATAI
     from $50 to $20 to reflect recent adverse outcomes in programs such as PCN-101 in treatment-resistant depression and KUR-101 in opioid use disorder.
  • Most recently, Atai Life Sciences-owned Perception Neuroscience announced that the Phase 2a trial of PCN-101 (R-ketamine) did not meet its primary endpoint of a statistically significant change from baseline in participants' depression rating scale score at 24 hours compared to the placebo.
  • In December, data comparing the respiratory effects of KUR-101 to oxycodone and placebo were inconclusive. The company said additional research would be needed to characterize the therapeutic potential of KUR-101 further.
  • But the analyst maintains the Buy rating due to confidence in several programs, including VLS-01, RL-007, and GRX-917, all of which are in Phase 1 or 2 development with multiple data updates expected in the next 12 months.
  • HC Wainwright notes that Atai's cash balance of $313 million is sufficient to fund these programs through value-generating Phase 2 data readouts. 

Unmedicated nation: COVID cuts heart drug use in Britain

 Hundreds of thousands of people in Great Britain have missed out on receiving medication that could protect them from serious cardiovascular disease (CVD) as a result of the COVID-19 pandemic, says a new study.

The research – carried out by the British Heart Foundation charity and published in the journal Nature Medicine – suggests that reduced use of drugs for high blood pressure and lowering cholesterol is placing patients at increased risk of an avoidable heart attack or stroke.

Using 1.32 billion prescribing records harvested from patients in England, Scotland, and Wales, the scientists estimated that more than 491,000 fewer people than expected started taking blood pressure-lowering medication when the pandemic was at its peak between March 2020 and the end of July 2021.

Over the same period, around 316,000 did not get treatment to lower their cholesterol. It’s worth noting here that health technology assessment (HTA) organisation NICE has just recommended much broader prescribing of statins – the most widely-used cholesterol-lowering drug class – which should boost usage.

This is the first time that medicines data has been used to follow changes in day-to-day management of chronic conditions, according to the BHF team, led by Professor Reecha Sofat of the BHF Data Science Centre and University of Liverpool.

While the reduced prescribing rates can be explained by the severe disruption facing the NHS as COVID-19 took its toll, which could only be partially offset by remote care, the BHF researchers behind the study are concerned about the future implications.

If individuals who missed out on high blood pressure drugs remain untreated over their lifetime, that could lead to more than 13,500 additional cardiovascular events, including over 2,000 heart attacks and 3,000 strokes.

While there will no doubt be some catch-up in prescribing, that will take time, and in the meantime could lead to additional pressure on an NHS already being stretched to the limit. Identifying those who missed out on blood pressure treatment within five years would reduce the total number of cardiovascular events to just over 2,700.

“The NHS has already taken important and positive steps towards identifying people with high blood pressure as early as possible,” said Professor Sofat. “[However,] despite the incredible work done by NHS staff, our data shows that we’re still not identifying people with cardiovascular risk factors at the same rate as we were before the pandemic.”

Dr Sonya Babu-Narayan, a consultant cardiologist and associate medical director at the BHF, struck a hopeful note, saying it is “not too late to limit the damage.”

“These findings demonstrate how getting heart healthcare back on track can curb the additional strain that untreated risk factors – such as high blood pressure – would otherwise place on the NHS,” she added.

“We need to make it easier and more accessible for everyone to know their numbers – particularly their blood pressure and cholesterol. This means empowering people to access the help they need when they need it, so they can be supported to manage their own health.”

Diabetes, anticoagulant prescribing up

While the impact of the pandemic lockdowns on blood pressure and cholesterol drugs was dramatic, there did not seem to be such an effect on prescribing of drugs for diabetes and blood-thinning anticoagulants.

That seems like good news on the face of it. However, the team suggests it could point to an increase in the prevalence of type 2 diabetes in the UK, or a ‘catch up’ in diagnosis rates which may indicate that individuals are being diagnosed later with more advanced disease.

And while direct-acting oral anticoagulants (DOACs) maintained growth over pre-pandemic levels, prescribing grew at a slower rate, which may signal reduced diagnoses of conditions like atrial fibrillation and thrombo-embolic disease.

https://pharmaphorum.com/news/unmedicated-nation-covid-cuts-heart-drug-use-in-gb/