


Rep. Nancy Mace (R-SC) said she thinks all evidence for and against the Hunter Biden investigation should be released to the public after Rep. Jamie Raskin (D-MD) called on the House Oversight Committee to release more FBI interviews that go against GOP claims.
Mace said on Fox News Sunday with Shannon Bream that she believes in transparency and all evidence, regardless if it is from Republicans or Democrats, should "absolutely be released to the American people."
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"They don't trust Congress because often it's a bunch of political games," Mace said of the public. "So, trust the evidence that comes out."
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Raskin wrote a letter to Oversight Committee Chairman James Comer (R-KY) on Friday asking him to release the transcript of an interview with an FBI agent that he thinks proves the Republicans' investigation into the Biden family's alleged criminal scheme is a dead end.
Not releasing the transcript is the "latest in your troubling pattern of concealing key evidence in order to advance a false and distorted narrative about your 'investigation of Joe Biden,'" Raskin wrote to Comer.
However, Mace said all of the evidence provided to the committee is "overwhelmingly piling up" against Hunter Biden's foreign business dealings. The committee will hear testimony from Devon Archer, a former business partner of Hunter Biden, behind closed doors on Monday. Archer is expected to offer insight into whether President Joe Biden was aware of his son's foreign involvements.
"It's really important, in my estimation, no matter what side of the aisle you are on, release everything. At the point that you can, release it all to the American people," Mace said.
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Archer's testimony comes after IRS whistleblowers Gary Shapley and Joseph Ziegler testified before the House Oversight Committee on federal interference in the agency's investigation into the younger Biden's alleged tax misconduct.
Hunter Biden pleaded not guilty in court last week despite having an original plea deal. He was expected to plead guilty to two tax misdemeanor charges to avoid a felony gun charge, but U.S. District Judge Maryellen Noreika's concerns over the deal led to a deferral on the case.