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'EXIT DEALS WERE SIGNED': Peter Schweizer Analyzes Pardons for 'The Biden 5' With Mark Levin [LISTEN]


GAI President and New York Times bestselling author Peter Schweizer is certain that “exit deals” were made — possibly by Hunter Biden — to get Joe Biden to step away from his reelection efforts last year.

Schweizer, who wrote the book on Biden family corruption, spoke with radio host Mark Levin about Joe Biden’s 11th-hour pardons for family members almost certainly involved in influence-peddling schemes.

On Monday, Biden said he was “exercising my power under the Constitution to pardon James B. Biden, Sara Jones Biden, Valerie Biden Owens, John T. Owens, and Francis W. Biden. The issuance of these pardons should not be mistaken as an acknowledgment that they engaged in any wrongdoing, nor should acceptance be misconstrued as an admission of guilt for any offense.”

Schweizer calls bull on that statement, noting the dates covered by the pardons: “The pardons instruct us on where they have potential criminal liability.”

“If you look back at when Joe Biden had that disastrous debate with Donald Trump, and you remember afterward, there were all these calls for him to resign, and Joe Biden would not resign. He hung on for more than a month. Hunter Biden moved into the White House. Hunter Biden’s the family dealmaker. I am absolutely convinced that some exit deals were signed, that the Bidens got money to go away from Democrat donors.”

Schweizer continued: “And so any potential crimes that existed with those kinds of deals would be covered by these pardons as well. So the pardons instruct us that they know where they have a possible criminal liability. And that’s why those dates were signed, and they’re as specific as they are.”

“The is the boldness of this, even though they hit it right up to the end, but still the light of day,” Levin said. “They must be so damn corrupt that he’s prepared to completely destroy whatever little thimble of
a reputation he had left for history in order to protect his entire family. And in doing that, protect himself.”

Listen to Schweizer’s analysis on Levin above.