Former President Joe Biden is attempting to block the release of audio recordings tied to Special Counsel Robert Hur’s classified documents investigation, launching a legal fight against the Trump Justice Department as Republicans push for the material to become public.
Biden’s legal team filed suit Tuesday in federal court seeking to stop the DOJ from turning over the recordings and transcripts to congressional Republicans and the conservative Heritage Foundation.
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The tapes stem from roughly 70 hours of recorded conversations Biden held with ghostwriter Mark Zwonitzer in 2016 and 2017 while working on his memoir, Promise Me, Dad.
The recordings later became a major piece of evidence in Hur’s politically explosive investigation into Biden’s handling of classified documents.
Hur ultimately declined to recommend criminal charges against Biden, but his February 2024 report ignited a firestorm after describing the then-president as “an elderly man with a poor memory” who would likely appear sympathetic to a jury.
That assessment landed in the middle of Biden’s re-election campaign and intensified public scrutiny surrounding his age and mental sharpness.
According to Hur’s findings, the recordings captured Biden discussing classified information with Zwonitzer inside his Delaware home.
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At one point, Biden allegedly stated, “I just found all the classified stuff downstairs,” while also reading portions of classified journal entries aloud “nearly verbatim” on multiple occasions.
Investigators later concluded Biden had improperly retained classified materials from his time as vice president, including documents related to Afghanistan, military policy, and sensitive national security matters.
Still, Hur determined prosecutors would face difficulty proving Biden acted “willfully,” particularly given concerns about how a jury would perceive his memory and mental condition.
The decision not to prosecute Biden sparked fierce criticism from Republicans, many of whom argued the Justice Department applied a double standard compared to cases involving President Donald Trump.
Now, Biden’s effort to suppress the recordings is fueling a new political and legal battle.
In court filings, Biden’s attorneys argued the recordings are deeply personal and protected by privacy interests.
“Every American, including a sitting or former Vice President, has a right to privacy in the personal conversations he has within his own home,” Biden’s lawyers wrote.
The filing further argues that materials gathered during a criminal investigation should not automatically become public simply because political opponents demand access.
Biden’s team is also separately fighting efforts to release recordings from Hur’s direct interview sessions with the former president.
The case arrives as Republicans continue investigating Biden’s handling of classified information and broader questions surrounding transparency during his presidency.
Court filings in the original investigation also revealed that Zwonitzer deleted portions of audio material after learning Hur had been appointed special counsel in 2023. Investigators later recovered the deleted recordings.
Trump reacted to Biden’s lawsuit on social media, blasting the former president and accusing him of attempting to hide damaging evidence from the public.
The recordings at issue date back to Biden’s post-vice presidency period, when he was considering a presidential campaign while coping with the illness and eventual death of his son, Beau Biden.
Hur’s probe began in January 2023 after classified documents were discovered at Biden’s former office in Washington and later inside his Wilmington, Delaware, residence. Then-Attorney General Merrick Garland appointed Hur as special counsel to oversee the investigation.
Federal investigators recovered classified documents and handwritten notebooks containing Biden’s personal notes involving foreign policy discussions and sensitive government matters.
The controversy surrounding Hur’s report became one of the defining political crises of Biden’s presidency. While Democrats defended Hur’s ultimate decision not to pursue charges, Republicans seized on the report’s language regarding Biden’s memory and cognitive state.
The fallout intensified after Biden’s disastrous 2024 debate performance against Trump, which further amplified voter concerns about his age and fitness for office.
The case could ultimately determine whether Americans hear the recordings that played a central role in one of the biggest political coverups in recent history.
This article may contain commentary which reflects the author’s opinion.
