Ex-intel official reported Hunter Biden laptop letter was ‘deception operation,’ DOJ asked to probe
Recent complaint came from senior advisor to DNI during the Obama administration.
By Steven Richards and John Solomon
Published: May 31, 2026 11:28pm
Article
Dig Deeper
A former senior intelligence community official under President Barack Obama reported concerns earlier this year that the Hunter Biden laptop letter signed by 51 former intelligence officials in 2020 bore characteristics “consistent with coordinated intelligence deception operations,” according to a memo the ex-official submitted to the intelligence community inspector general.
The concerns have now been referred to the Justice Department, a remarkable turnabout for a letter that was used six years ago to censor factually based concerns about Biden family corruption.
The October 2020 open letter–released as voters were making final decisions about whether to reelect Trump or elect Democrat Joe Biden–was signed by ex-intelligence officials including former National Intelligence Director James Clapper, former Defense Secretary Leon Panetta and former CIA Director John Brennan.
Thomas Kuhns, the former official who submitted the memo recently to the Intelligence Community Inspector General, was a Senior Intelligence Officer and former advisor to the Deputy Director of National Intelligence during the Obama administration.
Kuhns told the inspector general that most of his career in government centered on maintaining the Intelligence Community’s analytic and integrity standards.
"Not a political statement"
“This assessment is not a political statement. It is based on the research and analysis of testified behavior, language choices, omissions, coordination, and effects attributable to intelligence tradecraft,” Kuhns wrote in a memo to the ICIG hotline, which was obtained by Just the News.
You can read the memo below:
File
IG_Submission_Final_Blackout.pdf
Pro-Biden advocates warned that the public reporting on the contents of Hunter Biden’s personal laptop bore the “hallmarks of a Russian information operation.” Then-candidate Joe Biden used the letter to fend off public criticism about his son’s overseas business dealings, drug use, and alleged influence peddling.
“This analysis is grounded in my expertise applying analytic integrity standards and intelligence tradecraft to evaluate raw and finished intelligence assessments/judgements. Those standards provide a framework to identify politicization, bias, and analytic weaknesses, as well as to identify whether intelligence tradecraft itself has been misapplied or misused,” he continued.
Inspector General referred the complaint to the Department of Justice
Ultimately, by “applying this framework,” Kuhns concluded that “the planning, drafting, and dissemination” of the Hunter Biden laptop letter signed by 51 former intelligence officials “exhibit characteristics consistent with coordinated intelligence deception operations and tradecraft […]" according to the memo.
According to a notification sent to Kuhns on Thursday, the Intelligence Community Inspector General (ICIG) referred the complaint to the Department of Justice's Inspector General.
The office of the Intelligence Community Inspector General declined to directly address Kuhns' case, citing whistleblower protections. But it told Just the News it sometimes refers matters to other agencies for investigation when legitimate concerns are raised.
"IC OIG routinely receives information concerning matters that may implicate multiple Intelligence Community elements, other federal departments or agencies, or potential law enforcement interests," it said. "Consistent with our deconfliction requirements and ordinary practice, IC OIG may share, coordinate, or refer information to appropriate oversight and law enforcement partners for their review, awareness, or action, as warranted.
"The receipt, assessment, sharing, or referral of information should not be understood to confirm that IC OIG has opened, is conducting, or will conduct any particular investigation," it added. "IC OIG may conduct oversight or investigative activity independently, jointly, in coordination with other authorized entities, or not at all, at any time, depending on the facts, jurisdiction, equities, and applicable legal requirements."
Kuhns submitted his concerns to the ICIG in February, arguing the matter “warrants a standards-based review to assess whether the conduct constituted a deception operation involving trained US intelligence professionals targeting the American People.”