House Oversight Committee Chairman James Comer believes that greater than half a dozen members of the Biden clan can have been involved in various worldwide business schemes that profited off their family name.
Comer, whose committee is investigating the Biden family’s business dealings, shared the insight in a Wednesday night interview with Fox News host Laura Ingraham.
“At the tip of this I feel we’re gonna see there are probably six or seven Biden members of the family that were involved in various business schemes all over the world,” Comer (R-Ky.) told Ingraham, referring to his panel’s far-reaching probe.
Comer didn’t mention any names within the interview and declined to disclose the identity of the unnamed Biden member of the family who got proceeds from a $3 million wire to Hunter Biden associate John “Rob” Walker just weeks after Joe Biden left the vice presidency in 2017.
The Oversight Committee chairman first revealed on Monday that bank records obtained via subpoena implicate three Bidens, including one which’s “never before been identified” as being involved within the family’s alleged influence-peddling operation.
“So this just shows how deep the Biden family was involved on this influence peddling scheme,” Comer told Ingraham, adding that it stays unclear what the $3 million transaction was for.
“It looks to me like these people, who’re closely aligned with the Chinese Communist Party, sent $3 million to a shell corporation then they turned around and split it 3 ways with a 3rd going to the Biden family – three different members of the family for no apparent reason,” Comer said.
“They didn’t invest it in a business. They simply, it appears, stuck it of their pocket,” he added.
Comer also revealed in the course of the interview that his committee is “on the hunt for a couple of dozen more” similar shady wire transfers.
“There’s no explanation for why the Biden’s have received this much money from our adversaries all over the world,” Comer argued.
House Oversight Committee staff are currently within the strategy of reviewing greater than 150 suspicious activity reports sent by banks to the Treasury Department alerting of potential criminal activity involving the Biden family.
“Oversight Committee staff will begin reviewing suspicious activity reports in camera on the Treasury Department Wednesday afternoon,” a spokeswoman for the panel told The Post, using a Latin phrase referring to a non-public review.
The Treasury Department granted the oversight panel access to the suspicious activity reports on Monday after reportedly attempting to stonewall the committee.
Republicans argue that the Biden family’s international business deals create conflicts of interest for the commander-in-chief and will even reveal corruption.