The House Oversight Committee sent a proper letter to one among President Biden’s close former aides, who could have been involved in his mishandling of classified materials.
Kathy Chung, an executive assistant to Biden during his vice presidential years, helped the departing veep pack up his office and is one among several former staffers who’ve been questioned by the FBI.
“The Committee believes your proximity to Vice President Biden and role as handler of his personal matters gave you access not only to classified material he maintained after leaving the White House, but in addition to the Biden family’s business schemes,” wrote Committee Chairman Rep. James Comer (R-Kentucky)
“We request you make yourself available for a transcribed interview with Committee staff,” the letter continued. Chung had “keycard access to Penn Biden Center” where various President Biden’s classified documents have been found, Comer added.
The letter demanded Chung turn over a trove of documents from her time working with Biden including all communications with members of the Biden family and Eric Schwerin, the president of Hunter Biden’s investment firm.
Comer also asked for “all documents and communications related to then-Vice President Biden’s departure from office in 2017, including communications regarding Penn Biden Center.”
At least a dozen classified documents — some dating back to President Biden’s profession within the Senate — have been found on the Penn Biden Center and his private residence in Wilmington, Del. It stays unclear how the files got there or what unauthorized people have had access to them through the years.
Chung currently works as deputy director of protocol for Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin.
“If she sorted the documents and had access to them to choose what went that’s lot more significant than a minion who got tasked with moving them,” Jim Hanson, president of WorldStrat and data operations consultancy, told The Post.
“She could thoroughly have been aware about the scheming. They checked out the Penn Biden center as a option to money in, give their people no show jobs, and leverage Joe’s off-time when he wasn’t in politics.”