Perry Stein of The Washington Post asked the question that many others are asking: Did Special Counsel Robert Hur include inappropriate speculation about Biden in his voluminous report about the classified documents found in Biden’s home and offices? Why? The Justice Department typically does not disclose lengthy reports about a person who has been exonerated and will not be charged. Why did DOJ violate that long-standing policy? Who allowed Hur’s political ruminations to remain in the report? Why was it published? Did Hur recognize that his personal observations would affect the Presidential campaign? Did he “Comey” Biden? Why did Garland select a former Trump appointee to investigate Biden? Is he naive or was he trying to prove how nonpartisan he is?
She writes:
The conclusion laid out in special counsel Robert K. Hur’s final report was straightforward: Joe Biden mishandled classified materials in 2017, though there was not enough proof that he intended to break the law to meet the Justice Department’s high prosecution threshold.
But the 345-page report also contained explosive information about President Biden’s allegedly faulty memory, overshadowing the issue of how he stored sensitive government materials after his vice presidency ended.
Hur portrayed the president as an elderly man who shared sensitive information with his ghostwriter andstruggled to remember key details in his life — unleashing calls from Republicans that Biden is unfit to serve, and a furious backlash from Democrats who said assessments of the president’s memory were inappropriate.
The appointment of a special counsel is intended to make high-profile, sensitive investigations as independent and apolitical as possible. But current and former Justice Department officials said the increasing reliance on special counsels to handle such investigations has upended a central principle of the agency: to avoid prejudicing the public against people who are not charged.
“Special Counsel Hur report on Biden classified documents issues contains way too many gratuitous remarks and is flatly inconsistent with long standing DOJ traditions,” former Attorney General Eric Holder, a Democrat, wrote on social media Friday. “Had this report been subject to a normal DOJ review these remarks would undoubtedly have been excised.”
Hur’s blistering characterization of Biden has made the report intractable from politics during an election year in which Biden’s opponents already were focused on his age and questioning his mental fitness.
Some legal experts say aspects of thereport have echoes of FBI Director James B. Comey’s decision in 2016 to call Hillary Clinton “extremely careless” as he publicly announced that he would be closing an investigation into her use of a private email server while she was secretary of state.
Comey was a top federal law enforcement official whose agency is not responsible for deciding when to prosecute. Unlike Hur, he was not tasked with issuing a report to explain his investigation. But he broke with FBI protocol by publicly discussing an investigation that ended without charges. And his words impugned Clinton’s credibility ahead of the presidential election in which she was the Democratic nominee, just as Hur’s report seems to have done with Biden as he seeks a second term.
Attorneys general typically name special counsels to lead investigations when the public could reasonably perceive a conflict of interest if the attorney general — a presidential appointee — were to oversee it. A special counsel has more independence from Justice Department leaders than other federal prosecutors, but still ultimately answers to the attorney general.
Hur was appointed by Attorney General Merrick Garland, who promised Congress even before he saw the report that he would make as much of it public as he was legally allowed to do.
Garland named Hur to investigate classified material found in Biden’s private home and former think tank office months after he appointed a special counsel to investigate former president Donald Trump’s potential mishandling of classified materials, as well as Trump’s alleged efforts to overturn the 2020 election results. Garland also appointed a special counsel to investigate Biden’s son, Hunter. Both the Trump and the Hunter Biden special counsels have led to criminal charges detailed in federal grand jury indictments, which contain far less information than special counsel reports.
Under department regulations, a special counsel submits a confidential report to the attorney general, explaining his or her decisions whether to prosecute (Justice Department policy precludes charging sitting presidents). It is up to the attorney general to decide whether to make that report public.
When Garland received Hur’s report Monday, he could have made redactions before he sent it to Congress. President Biden could have also exerted executive privilege and made redactions. But neither did. Had they wanted to, legal experts said, they would have had to inform Congress, and likely would have received intense backlash from Republicans.
Congressional leaders are likely to ask Hur to testify about the report. Lawmakers have already asked the Justice Department to release the transcripts and records of the interviews that were part of the investigation.
Hur’s report lists many reasons it would be difficult to convict Biden of willfully mishandling classified documents when he was out of office — including that Biden knew some of his predecessors also had kept notebooks with sensitive information, and that his handling of his own notebooks in 2017 showed instances where he “took steps to ensure” he did not share classified information with the person helping him to write a memoir. The report said some classified material found in Biden’s possession appeared to have been packed up by staff by mistake, and noted that, as president, Biden quickly handed over classified material his aides found last year.
But Hur also used scathing details about Biden’s memory lapses to help explain why he was declining to recommend pursuingcharges against the president after he leaves office. Among the reasons: Biden’s memory was reportedly so bad that a jury would struggle to believe he intentionally retained the classified information.
“We have also considered that, at trial, Mr. Biden would likely present himself to a jury, as he did during our interview of him, as a sympathetic, well-meaning, elderly man with a poor memory,” Hur wrote in the report. “It would be difficult to convince a jury that they should convict him — by then a former president well into his eighties — of a serious felony that requires a mental state of willfulness.”
Hur is a well-respected attorney who served as U.S. attorney in Maryland and as a senior Justice Department official during the Trump administration. When he was appointed special counsel, his former colleagues described him as fair-minded and apolitical. He vowed to lead the investigation with “fair, impartial, and dispassionate judgment.”
Harvey Eisenberg, a recently retired assistant U.S. attorney who worked with Hur in Maryland, said that Justice Department rules require prosecuting decisions based on a “reasonable probability of conviction.”
In the report, Harvey said that Hur appeared to include details about Biden’s memory to show how he assessed whether there was a strong chance that Biden would, hypothetically, be convicted at trial. Hur wrote that the president’s struggle to recall specific details of when and where he handled documents would have made it harder to convince a jury that he deliberately broke the law.
“He never uttered a political word to me or showed an inclination to have politics play a part in any decisions that I was making,” said Eisenberg, who was not involved with the special counsel. “I’m sure he didn’t take it lightly, that would be atypical of who I know the man to be.”
Neal Katyal, a former acting solicitor general under President Barack Obama, helped craft the special counsel regulations in the 1990s, as a young Justice Department lawyer. Katyal said officials at the time expected that most special counsel reports would not be made public, given long-standing Justice Department guidelines to not comment when prosecutors decline to indict someone.
But that’s changed in recent years. In 2019, special counsel Robert S. Mueller III’s investigation into possible Russian interference in the 2016 presidential election helped establish a new norm: Reports would be made public, in an effort to demonstrate transparency and that an investigation was thorough and fair.
Katyal, citing his own role in creating the special counsel rules, wrote an op-ed in The Washington Post that year saying Mueller’s report should be released so that the public would “have confidence that justice was done.”
On Friday, Katyal questioned Hur’s decision to include Biden’s alleged mental lapses during hours of interviews, including that he could not remember the year his son Beau died of cancer and struggled to recall the years of his vice presidency (Biden angrily denied those characterizations after the report was released).
“Perhaps there was some justification for special counsel Hur to comment on the president’s age and mental fitness, but I severely doubt it, and the report is not reassuring in this regard,” Katyal said in an email. “It seems gratuitous and wrong.”
Justice Department declination memos — which prosecutors write when they decide not to pursue charges, essentially ending an investigation — are virtually never made public. That’s in part because Justice Department guidance says that prosecutors should be sensitive to the privacy and reputation of people they are not charging. When charged,criminal defendants have the chance to defend themselves in a court of law. But when a person is publicly accused of problematic behavior but not charged, they have no opportunity to present evidence and mount a defense. [My emphasis added-DR]
Legal experts said that what’s so striking about the Hur report.
“It would have been sufficient to say that we did not have sufficient evidence that he was acting willfully,” Barbara McQuade, a law professor at the University of Michigan Law School and former federal prosecutor, said at a public roundtable on Friday. “To instead besmirch his reputation struck me as going a bit above and beyond what you would expect from an ordinary prosecutor.”
As a special counsel, Hur’s “legal outcome is indeed fair and appropriate,” said Anthony Coley, a former Justice Department employee who was the agency’s top spokesman when Garland appointed Hur last January. “But the editorializing — the excessive, unnecessary commentary about an uncharged individual — does not reflect DOJ’s best traditions.”
Aaron C. Davis and Ann E. Marimow contributed to this report.
Perry Stein covers the Justice Department and FBI for The Washington Post. She previously covered D.C. education. Before she joined The Post in 2015, she was a staff writer for Washington City Paper and wrote for the Miami Herald.

I agree with Heather Cox Richardson.
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At a rally yesterday Trump taunted Nikki Haley about the whereabouts of her husband asking “where is he”? Trump: (a) Didn’t know that Mr. Haley is on military deployment for a year in Africa, or (b) He did know but he is implying that Mr. Haley is deliberately trying to get away from his wife. Whatever the truth is, it was a disgusting comment, but totally in character for Donald Trump. Already Trump’s fan club is trying to justify the indefensible. Blind partisanship means you rationalize everything your preferred politician says and does.
I regret to conclude that this blog and almost all commenters here are doing the same regarding the unflattering description of Joe Biden in the Hur report. Biden clearly violated federal laws regarding record retention of classified documents. What is it with these politicians taking home sensitive information: Trump, Pence, Biden, Hillary Clinton, and others? I worked in public accounting for many years and had access to confidential information about the organizations we audited. It was made clear on day one of employment that never, ever were we to take home client documents – doing so was a firing offense.
But let’s deal with the bigger issue here. Long before the Hur report was released, there was plenty of probable cause to suspect that Biden has suffered serious cognitive decline, very common among humans as we age. Hur corroborated what even 70% of Democrats (recent poll) believe: there is credible reason to suspect that Biden is suffering from clear cognitive decline. Hur pointedly noted that he recommended against prosecution because Biden’s mental decline made proving criminal intent impossible to prove beyond a reasonable doubt.
Yesterday I asked a psychologist friend about Biden not being able to remember when his son Beau died within several years of the exact year. She mentioned the psychological term “vivid impressions”. In laymen’s terms, that’s a life event that is so out of the ordinary – often so traumatic – that the memory is seared into the brain, not forgotten until serious cognitive impairment occurs for whatever reason (aging, serious brain injury, etc.). Biden has often described how emotionally devastating his son’s death was; my psychologist friend said that there is no way that someone fully functioning mentally would forget the year of a beloved child’s death. Maybe a parent’s year of death, a normal cycle-of-life event, but not a child’s. Her conclusion is that Biden is suffering from fairly serious age-related cognitive decline that will only get worse over time, probably much worse. (note: this friend despises Trump)
I share this blog’s concern about Trump: he is clearly unfit to be President, a genuine danger to the country and the world. But I won’t compromise my intellectual integrity by denying the clear evidence of my senses and the other credible evidence about Biden’s alarming decline.
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You provided no evidence. You didn’t hear Biden saying “I don’t know what year my son died”. You read a questionable, biased report that vaguely alluded to Biden not knowing and without having any idea that is true, you accepted it as gospel. If you depended on the “clear evidence of your senses”, you would have seen Biden’s intelligent analysis of comprehensive domestic and foreign policy issues during interviews. If your “intellectual integrity” is that you ask a psychologist friend to diagnose Biden based on vague 3rd hand information, that speaks for itself.
Biden is old, and every president “declines” in office over the years. Luckily, Biden’s mental fitness started at a level far above those of past presidents like George W. Bush and even with normal decline that all presidents experience, Biden is still twice as mentally fit as GWB. And because of his long historical knowledge and experience, Biden is able to accomplish much more as president than Obama did. “Decline” is a meaningless term. I have seen 40 year old gymnasts who have declined tremendously from their “peak”, but they are still extremely high-functioning athletes. And I have seen 40 year olds at their peak who are incapable of babysitting a toddler.
“Sully” Sullenberger was “old” for a pilot at 59, and certainly he experienced the normal cognitive decline of aging from when he was 35. But because he started out at a high level AND he had 30 years of experience, Sullenberger could react to problems far better than a less experienced man “at cognitive peak” who was 20 years younger. And that’s Biden. A smart, experienced older person can be a better person to lead a nation than a rash, intemperate person at their “cognitive peak”.
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You have established long before today that you are a fanatical partisan whose life revolves around loony Left politics. I stand by what I wrote. Let’s see the video to determine the truth. If Biden won’t agree to releasing the videotape of the interview, that will tell us all that rational people need to know.
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Jack, if you saw the video and concluded that Biden has a bad memory, would you vote for Trump?
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NYCpsp made excellent points refuting the blarney of high functioning troll, Safely. Biden is traveling all over the country as well as taking care of his governmental duties. He is on display and doing very well; the man is competent and capable. He is all that stands between us and Trump who would be an utter disaster. Trump recently gave the green light to Putin to do whatever he wants!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! WE must support Biden.
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Joe Jersey,
The comment about Biden’s high-level functioning was made by RT—Retired Teacher.
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Thank you, Joe Jersey.
Notice the nasty personal attacks included in Jack Safely’s comment? For some reason, replying to Linda or me with personal insults has been so normalized on this blog that it’s not even noticed.
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Jack,
I would vote for an artichoke rather than Trump. Due to his ignorance, malice, and demonstrated willingness to stage a coup, he is a threat to our democracy.
I am not blindly partisan. I am knowingly, thoughtfully, consciously afraid of Trump and his declared intentions. He has already said that he would eliminate the civil service and replace career employees with political appointees loyal to him. He has already said that he would eliminate every vestige of gun control. He would wipe out the Envirinmental Protection Agency and roll back any effort to prevent climate change. He would surely select Supreme Court justices who would ban any form of birth control. His Court would totally eliminate any separation of church and state. He has said he will put Biden, Hillary, and his other enemies in jail. I could go on and on. But rule #1 in resisting an authoritarian leader is to believe that he will do what he says he will do. You can be sure that if wins the presidency, the GOP will control both houses of Congress and will be subservient to Trump.
I am not speaking hyperbolically. I am afraid for the future of our country if this narcissistic megalomaniac is re-elected.
I will do whatever I can to protect our nation and its democratic institutions.
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I didn’t mean to privilege artichokes although I do love them. I would also add that I would vote for my dog Mitzi—or anyone else’s dog—although I must say Mitzi has a great memory, she has good manners, she is not aggressive, in fact, she is exceedingly friendly.
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Just yesterday, in South Carolina, Trump basically said to Putin, hey, help me in this election, too, and you can have anything you want. Europe? Take it? NATO, who gives a damn about NATO.
Trump is a traitor to his country and a friend to our enemies and an enemy to our allies. Absolutely despicable. He belongs in prison.
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Correction:
TRUMP TO VLADIMIR: Europe? Take it. NATO? Who gives a damn about NATO?
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I did read that about your friend and mentioned it, just the same, but maybe you missed that because your reading comprehension is actually the one lacking.
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So now it’s “Jack Safely?” Another pseudonym by the trolls who accuse this blog of partisanship, no doubt. Seriously, who pays you people?
My child is a healthy and well, and recently I had to stop and really think about her birthday of only 8.5 years ago. I carried the kid. I should know since I was there when she was born. I had a memory lapse that surprised me, however I don’t believe it makes me unfit for anything.
Whether one gives Hur the benefit of the doubt that he was creating a reasonable defense for Biden having the documents without malice—because frankly, that was what he was implying by stating he was not mentally fit for prosecution—Hur was out of line. Did he remark on Biden’s mental health—a judgement he has absolutely no qualifications to make—to save face for not charging him lest he be the victim of Trump’s violent base? Who knows? However, he had no right to even make those statements. Period.
And your bringing up a medical professional Trump-hating friend who was not in the room for any of the interview is like saying that you have black friends. Not a good look.
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LG,
Next time read for comprehension. My comment includes this: (note: this friend despises Trump).
I won’t vote for Trump under any circumstances. But I won’t compromise my intellectual integrity by denying the obvious about Biden.
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LG,
Thank you for making so many important points in your comment.
I don’t think Hur cited Biden’s failing memory NOW to justify his conclusions that Biden clearly committed no crime YEARS AGO when the boxes were packed and moved.
Hur cited it to suggest that he had credible evidence that Biden WAS guilty of a crime – but that prosecuting Biden NOW for that crime would be difficult since the jury would be sympathetic to Biden because of his CURRENT mental state.
To me, that’s what so nefarious about Hur’s report. As Jack Safely said: “Hur pointedly noted that he recommended against prosecution because Biden’s mental decline made proving criminal intent impossible to prove beyond a reasonable doubt.”
The evidence as to whether Biden did or did not “intend” to commit a crime depends on the facts and evidence and possibly Biden’s mental state BACK THEN. Not on his mental state now. But Hur never needed to investigate Biden’s mental state BACK THEN, because all the other evidence Hur gathered made it clear that the retention of documents was unintentional and therefore not criminal. It was not a crime if Biden was at his cognitive peak back then, and it was not a crime if Biden had severe memory issues back then. Hur knew that, which is why he didn’t care what Biden’s cognitive issues were back when the potential crime was committed.
Biden’s mental state NOW has no bearing of Biden’s guilt or innocence back then. There was no reason to bring it up except to imply that Biden did commit a crime but the jury wouldn’t convict him because they were sympathetic to an elderly memory challenged defendant who did something criminal, but was too cognitively challenged to know it.
Hur got a two-fer with a report that should have been written in a way to totally exonerate Biden. Instead, it was written so that folks like Jack Safely could push two very damaging narratives — that Biden committed a crime, and Biden isn’t being prosecuted for committing that crime because of his cognitive failings right now.
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Not sure how my comment got lost in the sauce of the thread above, but “Jack,” I will repost it here:
I did read that about your friend and mentioned it, just the same, but maybe you missed that because your reading comprehension is actually the one lacking.
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NYT Pitchbot
“I’d rather be ruled by a 77 year old dictator than an 80 year old President”
Btw- Netanyahu recently engaged with Biden, one on one for hours, for a discussion about the Middle East and found Biden’s knowledge of facts and thought processing on a par with his own analytical abilities. Netanyahu described the conversation as including issues about which they agreed and disagreed.
Trump, in Biden’s position, would pit Putin, Hamas/Iran and Netanyahu in a bidding war with the aim of getting Trump back on the Forbes richest list.
Haley would tell corporate interests to tell her what to do.
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As per usual, the DIN of concocted notoriety
(Hur) will capture those, that can’t hear above the
din of concocted notoriety.
The meaningful change to quibble ratio
will continue to be low, but HEY
quibblers gotta have a sense of purpose.
Analyses biased on speculation, are only as
good as the speculations they rest on.
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The Hur Report smells like Traitor Trump made another one of his infamous phone calls, asking for Hur to add some language to the report that could be taken out of context to make Biden look guilty, too.
Too bad no one recorded that phone call. Still, even that recording if it existed and went public wouldn’t stop Traitor’s MAGA mafia’s from making a lot of threatening noise.
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Quoting in part a commenter on the thread at this Perry Stein report, which expresses my opinion about her article : “The Post bias is undeniable… Far too much PR fluff in how fair and unbiased Hur is, when he just showed us he is undeniably not.”
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Yes, way too far! CRT run amuck. Racism can be both a personal trait and a systemic problem. The same is true with Ageism. Anti-bias laws, policies, and education are now intertwined with media and political consequences in recent times. The noble goal, historically, is to correct the bias and prejudicial effects on people. In particular, they were previously enslaved because of their skin color; race became a convenient justification taught in church and American culture to justify enslavement as property rights for reasons of economic greed. White Supremacy, as can be found in the U.S. States Congressional Record, was built on racial bias. Other forms of the human condition were added to race or skin color after the American Civil Rights Movement in the 1960s. These included gender, national origin, disability, sexual orientation, and age. Each category of people won political advocates and new legal protections. These categories are embedded into the policies of most prominent institutions, including the U.S. Government, to prevent bias and create equal and equitable educational opportunities in schools and later in employment.
In recent times, a political backlash has occurred where some feel targeted as being racist, sexist, homophobic, etc., and they resist the research, teaching, and publications that allegedly harm their children in schools, for example. This led to attacks on scientific research in universities related to Race, Gender, etc., and is now under attack as WOKE. Now, suddenly, AGE, in a twist of HYPOCRISY by MAGA Republicans, targets the current President’s age. I think political opponents are using Age as a proxy substitute for Race. The vice president is African American and in succession. I think it’s insidious. I think the Special Council and staff, being educated persons, knew precisely what they were doing to create political conflict for MAGA Republicans against both President Biden and V.P. Harris.
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Hur may have done us all a favor, even if he didn’t intend to. There is concern — even among many Democrats, & more so among independents — about Biden’s mental capacity. Elections are won & lost not on facts, but public perception, right or wrong. Regardless of Biden’s objective mental capacity (about which, without detailed medical appraisal, we’re just guessing), much of the public, even among supporters, have doubts. At best, it’s an uphill battle to convince the public at large he’s fully capable. This is not the time to count on hoping for the best. With perception as it is, it doesn’t matter if he’s actually sharp as a tack.
Considering the stakes & the hair-trigger state of the polls, do we really want to put “he’s probably fine” against Trump? Many independents have said they’d vote for any Democrat other than Biden. Is it wise to ignore them just to prove a point? There’s still time for one of many qualified, capable Democrats to carry the banner forward.
It would be no dishonor for Biden to step back gracefully & pass the torch to someone in their prime. He’s established an admirable legacy, with the infrastructure bill, improving economy,AND pulling us back from the precipice where T left us. He’d be seen as a hero, putting the good of the country above personal ambition. I don’t understand why there hasn’t been more public discussion of this among Democrats & independents. We should be shouting it.
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