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White House Flags Removal Of Hunter Biden’s Secret Service Detail, Calls Him a "Notorious Crackhead And Grifter"

White House Flags Removal Of Hunter Biden’s Secret Service Detail, Calls Him a "Notorious Crackhead And Grifter"

The White House released a "365 wins" handout that included removing Hunter Biden’s taxpayer-funded Secret Service detail, labeling him a "notorious crackhead and grifter." Item #243 on the list was first flagged by PBS correspondent Elizabeth Landers. The list also highlights actions such as ending paper straw use, withdrawing from the WHO, and releasing what the administration called previously classified records tied to high-profile historical cases. Critics say Epstein-related documents remain partly redacted and have called for fuller disclosure.

The White House on Tuesday publicized that it had removed former President Joe Biden’s son, Hunter Biden, from Secret Service protection, describing him in a distributed printout as a "notorious crackhead and grifter."

In a handout given to reporters in the White House Briefing Room, the administration compiled what it called "365 wins" from President Donald Trump’s first year of a second term. PBS White House correspondent Elizabeth Landers noted that item #243 read:

"Stripped notorious crackhead and grifter Hunter Biden of his taxpayer-funded Secret Service detail."

Other entries on the list touted actions such as signing an executive order to end the use of paper straws, withdrawing the United States from the World Health Organization, and releasing what the administration described as "troves of previously classified records" related to the assassinations of Robert F. Kennedy and Martin Luther King Jr., and the disappearance of Amelia Earhart.

The printout and the version later posted on the White House website did not include an unredacted, comprehensive release of files connected to Jeffrey Epstein; critics say some documents remain redacted and have called for fuller disclosure.

The White House website's "Major Events Timeline" already referenced Hunter Biden's past struggle with crack cocaine addiction. In October, the administration expanded that timeline to include critical entries and provocative images about multiple former presidents—among them a shirtless photo of Hunter Biden, a photo described as a transgender guest on the White House lawn, and an image of former President Barack Obama in traditional Kenyan dress.

Observers say the handout and the online timeline reflect an administration strategy of highlighting controversial material and criticisms of presidential predecessors as part of a public record of accomplishments.

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