Hunter Biden has voluntarily dismissed the lawsuit he filed against two IRS whistleblowers, bringing an end to a high-profile legal battle that accused the agents of publicly targeting and embarrassing him during their disclosures to Congress and the media.
Biden’s legal team submitted the motion Wednesday in U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia, asking that the lawsuit be dismissed with prejudice—a legal term meaning it cannot be refiled in the future. The decision marks a significant retreat by the president’s son, who had originally alleged that IRS Special Agent Gary Shapley and IRS Criminal Investigator Joseph Ziegler violated his privacy rights in the course of speaking out about the federal investigation into his taxes.
The two whistleblowers became prominent figures in 2023 when they testified before the House Oversight Committee, claiming they faced obstruction and political interference while investigating Hunter Biden’s finances. Their public statements raised questions about whether the Justice Department treated Biden differently because of his father’s position.
Following news of the lawsuit’s dismissal, Shapley and Ziegler released a pointed statement: “It’s always been clear that the lawsuit was an attempt to intimidate us. Intimidation and retaliation were never going to work. We truly wanted our day in court to provide the complete story, but it appears Mr. Biden was afraid to actually fight this case in a court of law after all.”
Their lawyers emphasized that Hunter Biden received no concessions in return for dropping the case, highlighting that the decision was made entirely on Biden’s own initiative.
Legal troubles have continued to mount for the president’s son. Biden previously struck a plea deal with the Justice Department in July 2023 that would have allowed him to plead guilty to two misdemeanor tax offenses in exchange for broad immunity. However, that deal collapsed during a federal court hearing in Delaware. He later pleaded guilty in September 2024 to nine federal tax charges related to $1.4 million in unpaid taxes between 2016 and 2019 — a sum he has since repaid.
Adding to the political firestorm, Joe Biden issued a sweeping pardon to his son in December 2024 on his way out of office, granting him clemency for all federal crimes he had “committed or may have committed” over the past ten years. The decision drew criticism from across the aisle, as pundits accused the elder Biden of shielding his son from accountability.
The dismissal of the lawsuit comes just weeks after four of Hunter Biden’s lawyers moved to withdraw from the case, and as scrutiny over the Justice Department’s past handling of the investigation remains a point of contention in Washington.
With the case now officially closed, both IRS agents maintain that their actions were motivated solely by a desire to expose what they saw as improper conduct — and not by politics.
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What is wrong with our country? Only the most corrupt countries on earth would allow the elites to openly commit crimes against it and not punish them. Under his daddies administration and now under Trump people like Hunter Biden are allowed to openly sell and undermine our people and never go to prison. Patel, Bondi and even Trump are losing credibility with the American people by not following up on all the crimes the Biden’s committed against America.
It was never anything but trolling for a settlement anyway. Always the first move by a bogus claimant.