The Anonymous
Bag On My Head
Police received a call at about noon on October 28, 2016, from a worker at the Hertz rental car office at the Prescott Regional Airport.
The worker reported that someone returned a silver Jeep Compass with a bunch of personal items still inside.
Those included a wallet with an attorney general's badge, two driver's licenses in the name of Robert Biden with a Washington, D.C., address, a Secret Service business card, and credit cards.
On the passenger seat was a "pipe used to smoke meth," and a small baggie with the white powder. The Hertz worker googled the name and learned that Robert was the usurper's son.
Prescott police officers searched the car, took photos, and impounded the items.
Detectives contacted the FBI, and two FBI agents showed up, the police report states.
The usurper's spawn was "located by Secret Service" and deemed to be doing "well."
Prescott authorities sent the pipe to the state Department of Public Safety for testing; the baggie with powder apparently wasn't tested.
DPS later reported that the pipe contained cocaine residue. Prescott police forwarded the case to the Yavapai County Attorney's Office for prosecution.
But on November 16, 2016, the prosecutor's office sent a letter to the police agency noting that it was turning down the case.
Glenn Savona, then the Prescott city prosecutor under Prescott City Attorney Jon Paladini, wrote in a November 23, 2016, letter to Prescott police that the case contained insufficient evidence for prosecution.
"The report does not place the suspect in the vehicle at any time that the alleged paraphernalia was present," Savona wrote in the letter.
“Stolen identities were used to check defendant Robert Hunter Biden into an Arizona facility and providing false statements to the Prescott Police Department,” the document states. “These stolen identities include his deceased brother Joseph R. Beau Biden III, and Joseph McGee.”
https://www.foxbusiness.com/lifestyle/hunter-biden-linked-identity-theft-case-involving-deceased-brother
The worker reported that someone returned a silver Jeep Compass with a bunch of personal items still inside.
Those included a wallet with an attorney general's badge, two driver's licenses in the name of Robert Biden with a Washington, D.C., address, a Secret Service business card, and credit cards.
On the passenger seat was a "pipe used to smoke meth," and a small baggie with the white powder. The Hertz worker googled the name and learned that Robert was the usurper's son.
Prescott police officers searched the car, took photos, and impounded the items.
Detectives contacted the FBI, and two FBI agents showed up, the police report states.
The usurper's spawn was "located by Secret Service" and deemed to be doing "well."
Prescott authorities sent the pipe to the state Department of Public Safety for testing; the baggie with powder apparently wasn't tested.
DPS later reported that the pipe contained cocaine residue. Prescott police forwarded the case to the Yavapai County Attorney's Office for prosecution.
But on November 16, 2016, the prosecutor's office sent a letter to the police agency noting that it was turning down the case.
Glenn Savona, then the Prescott city prosecutor under Prescott City Attorney Jon Paladini, wrote in a November 23, 2016, letter to Prescott police that the case contained insufficient evidence for prosecution.
"The report does not place the suspect in the vehicle at any time that the alleged paraphernalia was present," Savona wrote in the letter.
“Stolen identities were used to check defendant Robert Hunter Biden into an Arizona facility and providing false statements to the Prescott Police Department,” the document states. “These stolen identities include his deceased brother Joseph R. Beau Biden III, and Joseph McGee.”
https://www.foxbusiness.com/lifestyle/hunter-biden-linked-identity-theft-case-involving-deceased-brother