


All roads lead to Americore.
On March 1, 2018, Joe Biden got a $200,000 check. The story of where that check came from involves everything from “bloodstained currency” to smuggled gold bars to ‘The Exorcist’.
When I first broke the story a week before Election Day, it was about how hospital patients in smaller poorer hospitals, including one that had inspired ‘The Exorcist’, had suffered because of the corrupt greed of the Biden family. But even then there was a strange element which led to one of the key figures in the case receiving “blood-stained currency from a Middle Eastern country” and a “torture ticket” after suing James Biden: Joe’s brother.
The health care business that brought together the Biden family and an Islamic terror state had targeted stricken rural hospitals in Kentucky, Missouri and Pennsylvania.
Americore’s CEO was introduced by James Biden to Joe at a fundraiser for the Beau Biden Foundation: co-chaired by Hunter Biden whose infamous laptop bore the foundation’s sticker.
James Biden allegedly promised that Joe would get behind the company, join its board and that the company’s work would even “help his brother get elected.”
The whole thing fell apart, but there seems to be a number of people linked to the Americore deal around Biden. Now that Biden’s medical status is being debated, some are taking a closer look at his doctor.
President Biden’s White House physician helped the Biden family secure a big payout from a failed hospital venture in 2018, and lawmakers are now questioning whether his doctor’s involvement in family business marred his objectivity in diagnosing Mr. Biden’s cognitive abilities.
Lawmakers are now questioning Dr. O’Connor’s medical independence, pointing to his involvement in helping the president’s younger brother pull in $600,000 from a deal with Americore, a rural hospital corporation, beginning in 2017.
Some of the money from the deal Dr. O’Connor helped secure went directly into Mr. Biden’s bank account in the form of a $200,000 check labeled as a loan repayment, House investigators determined.
The president’s brother James Biden told House lawmakers in a closed-door deposition earlier this year that Dr. O’Connor served essentially as a consultant in helping him come up with proposals for “filling these hospitals” from which Americore sought to profit.
Also, O’Connor is a D.O. rather than an M.D. And he’s acted as a family doctor to the Biden clan.
O’Connor regularly dispensed medical advice to members of the Biden clan, according to a deposition given by Jim Biden’s wife Sara Biden in a New York state medical malpractice case filed by the president’s niece, Caroline Biden, against a specialist she sought treatment from on the strength of a referral from O’Connor.
“Colonel O’Connor was actually a friend and he — we would frequently ask for his recommendations if any of us had a medical issue,” Sara Biden said in the deposition for the case, by way of explaining O’Connor’s 2013 referral of the specialist to her stepdaughter.
In October 2016, as the end of the Obama administration approached, O’Connor emailed Hunter Biden, Jim Biden and a dozen other family members to invite them to his retirement ceremony ahead of a planned July 2017 departure from the military, according to one of Hunter Biden’s leaked emails.
“You’ve all been a really important part of my life for the past eight years,” O’Connor wrote, “and I hope that will continue.”
Indeed, O’Connor’s relationship with Biden family members did continue after Joe Biden left the vice presidency. In mid-2017, Jim Biden began pursuing health care ventures with a troubled hospital chain, Americore.
And it’s not the first time O’Connor had been behaving oddly while treating Biden when he had COVID.
O’Connor has not been seen in public over the past week, despite tending to the world’s most powerful man as he deals with contracting the virus. Instead, he simply writes short daily letters that update the public on Biden’s condition, which the White House puts out.
Publicly, Jha and Jean-Pierre say there’s nothing unusual about the arrangement even though it’s been de rigueur for the president’s physician to brief the press on certain occasions for decades.
They didn’t want him in the spotlight.