Hunter Biden's lawyer on Sunday said a trial is "not inevitable," days after the Trump-appointed US attorney investigating the president's son was granted special counsel status following a breakdown in plea talks to resolve tax and gun charges.
"We were trying to avoid one all along and so were the prosecutors who came forward to us and we're the ones to say: 'Can there be a resolution short of a prosecution?' So they wanted it and maybe they still do want it," Abbe Lowell, Biden's attorney, told CBS' "Face the Nation."
By naming David Weiss as a special counsel, Attorney General Merrick Garland gave him more powers than a typical US attorney and further independence from the Justice Department as he embarks on an unprecedented trial against the son of the sitting president, and as Republicans claim the department is politicized.
The probe had appeared to reach its conclusion when a plea deal was announced in June. In a two-pronged agreement, Hunter Biden planned to plead guilty to two tax misdemeanors and prosecutors would drop a separate felony gun charge in two years if he stayed out of legal trouble and passed drug tests.
But the deal dramatically fell apart in court last month under scrutiny from the federal judge overseeing the case.
Lowell on Sunday defended Hunter Biden's defense attorneys, placing the blame on federal prosecutors for the deal falling through. "What group of experienced defense lawyers would allow their client to plead guilty to a misdemeanor on a Monday, keeping in mind that they knew that there could be a felony charge on a Wednesday? That wouldn't happen," he said.
Lowell defended President Joe Biden as "nothing other than a loving father," and said the evidence to indict the president in his son's potential crimes "doesn't exist."
But House Speaker Kevin McCarthy and top Republicans on Capitol Hill were swift to criticize Garland's decision to grant Weiss special counsel status and vowed to continue their own investigations.
New York Rep. Dan Goldman, a member of the Democratic Oversight Committee, told CNN's Jake Tapper on "State of the Union" Sunday that "if Hunter Biden has committed crimes, he should be charged with them. I'm a Democrat saying that."
"You don't hear any currently elected Republican saying that, if Donald Trump committed crimes, he should be charged with them and held accountable. And that's a critical distinction that the public needs to understand," he added.
"And this is just another reflection of the true independence of this Department of Justice. A Trump-appointed U.S. attorney is investigating the president's son. That is pretty remarkable. And you don't hear from the other side a respect for the fact that Joe Biden has stayed out of this investigation," Goldman said.
Republican presidential candidate Will Hurd, a former Texas congressman, told Tapper in a separate interview on "State of the Union" that "the immediate family of a president should not be allowed to be lobbyists or consultants when their father or their husband is the president of the United States."