Biden White House Cocaine Incident Gets Renewed Attention After Hunter Biden Revelations in New Book

AP Photo/Andrew Harnik, File

Earlier, RedState reported on new information from the just-released book "Original Sin," which not only detailed the extent of the Biden-Harris White House's cover-up of then-President Joe Biden's decline but also other information that was not previously known.

Advertisement

For instance, we learned that the Bidens have a long history of covering up major health issues in the family, dating back to the 2013 terminal cancer diagnosis of Joe Biden's late son, Beau Biden, who at the time was the Delaware Attorney General and who would later announce a run for governor in 2014.

After the diagnosis, the then-Vice President had a family discussion to determine how much, if any, information about the diagnosis should be released to the public. They agreed none would, which began a roughly two-year period of keeping the information under wraps, with doctors even releasing fraudulent "clean bill of health" reports on Beau Biden even as his health declined and as he was being flown to other parts of the country to try out treatments under an alias. Tragically, Beau Biden passed away in May 2015 at the age of 46.


READ MORE: Shocking Report Reveals Just How Far Back the Biden Family Cover-Ups of Health Issues Goes


Something confirmed with the new Joe Biden exposé concerned another family member, convicted felon Hunter Biden, who book co-author Jake Tapper stated, "was driving the decision-making for the family" in the final two years of his dad's presidency and "was almost like a chief of staff."

Though that was hardly surprising considering, as my RedState colleague Bonchie noted, "Hunter Biden was everywhere over the last two years of his father's term, even allegedly accompanying him into classified meetings," the news has brought renewed attention to the infamous summer 2023 incident where cocaine was reportedly found, according to the Secret Service, "“in a work area in the West Wing" even though initial reports were all over the map in terms of where the public was being told it was.

Advertisement

Though speculation was that it belonged to Hunter Biden, National Security Advisor Jake Sullivan seemingly blamed "workers" at the time for the cocaine baggie that was allegedly found near the Situation Room, which Sullivan noted during a press briefing had been closed “for months” as it was under construction. 

But as former Secret Service agent Dan Bongino had already observed, the White House has thorough security measures that would ensure no one outside of someone who could sidestep White House security (like a family member) would be able to get drugs through.

At the end of the "investigation," the Secret Service determined that "Without physical evidence, the investigation will not be able to single out a person of interest from the hundreds of individuals who passed through the vestibule where the cocaine was discovered. At this time, the Secret Service’s investigation is closed due to a lack of physical evidence."

In the minds of Biden’s critics, this looked like the Secret Service was leaning in heavily on the “Secret” part of their jobs, perhaps covering up for Biden, more specifically, Hunter, who has admittedly dealt with extensive substance abuse issues, including cocaine addiction.

And now, knowing how far the Biden family is willing to go to cover up family health issues and how Hunter Biden was apparently pulling more strings than we thought in 2023 and 2024 (with the POTUS granting him a "full and unconditional" pardon in December 2024) seems to lend itself to a confirmation of sorts that the cocaine probably did belong to Hunter Biden:

Advertisement

Ding ding. We have a winner.

Please help us continue to report on and expose the bias, lies, and left-wing narratives of the corporate media. Join RedState VIP and use promo code FIGHT to get 60% off your membership.

Recommended

Join the conversation as a VIP Member

Trending on RedState Videos