Politics

James Biden listed his job as ‘brother’ of Joe in ‘flawless’ presentation for Qatar: emails

WASHINGTON — First brother James Biden made a “flawless” pitch for Qatar to invest $30 million in a troubled rural hospital provider, a colleague gushed, after he drafted a presentation that included “Brother” of now-President Biden among his credentials, emails show.

James Biden, 75, pumped Americore Health for $600,000 in what the firm said was loans in 2018 — and wrote a check for $200,000 of that amount to Joe Biden at the same time James was seeking out foreign investors.

The fresh evidence of influence-peddling was first reported Sunday by Politico.

A colleague of President Biden’s brother James claimed that he made a “flawless” pitch for Qatar to invest $30 million in a rural hospital provider, emails show. Photo by Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images
The pitch listed James Biden as the “Brother and Campaign Finance Chair of former Vice President Joe Biden.” Photo by Rick Friedman/Corbis via Getty Images

On March 10, 2018, James Biden’s wife, Sara, emailed a draft investor presentation to the Platinum Group, led by businessman Amer Rustom, with what she called “a few minor revisions by Jim.”

The presentation said Americore was seeking $30 million and described Jim Biden as the “Brother and Campaign Finance Chair of former Vice President Joe Biden.”

Exactly one month later, Platinum Group executive Julie Lander wrote to the future first brother and referred to a meeting with a senior Qatari official.

“I am following up from the meeting we had with the Minister,” Lander wrote, according to Politico.

“Your approach with him was flawless. He requested more information on Americore.”

Lander suggested that the investors seek $200 million from Qatar’s Investment Authority, the Gulf state’s sovereign wealth fund.

It was unclear which Qatari minister was being referenced, though the publication noted that a large delegation from the gas-rich sheikhdom visited Miami five days prior to the message.

Platinum Group executive Julie Lander wrote to James Biden a month after the pitch to inform him that the Qatari official requested more information on Americore. Photo by Anna Moneymaker/Getty Images

Around that time, the QIA was under scrutiny after Brookfield Corporation, in which the Qataris are major investors, bought a partnership in a troubled Manhattan building that threatened to financially ruin the family of then-President Donald Trump’s son-in-law Jared Kushner.

On May 17, 2018, James Biden wrote to Americore CEO Grant White that he was still working to raise money for the company.

“I agreed to go to Qatar, Saudi Arabia and China (at my own expense),” James allegedly wrote.

The White House and an attorney for James Biden did not respond to The Post’s requests for comment.

Qatar’s embassy in Washington issued a statement saying it did not have information on the first brother’s pitch.

“We are unaware of this hypothetical investment deal referenced by a fact witness in a case unrelated to the State of Qatar,” said spokesman Ali Al-Ansari.

“The State of Qatar engages with the US government through official institutional channels. That said, we regularly work side by side with hundreds of US companies both in the United States and within Qatar, and expect all our business partners to comply fully with all relevant laws and regulations, including registration requirements.”

The new information emerged in a period of relative quiet from the House Republican impeachment inquiry into alleged Biden family corruption.

The GOP probe has focused on evidence that Joe Biden met with foreign partners of Hunter and James Biden from two Chinese government-backed ventures and their associates from Kazakhstan, Mexico, Russia and Ukraine.

Most of those meetings occurred while Joe Biden was the sitting vice president and leading US foreign policy toward the countries involved.