Kevin Morris Testified That Hunter Biden MUST Pay Back the $5 MILLION He Borrowed Next Year Or He Could Face Another Lawsuit: Hookah-Smoking Lawyer Details Five-Hour Initial Tape Chat With ‘Personal Friend’ Hunter and Joe’s ‘jokes’ about his messy hair

Hunter Biden’s pipe-smoking Hollywood lawyer Kevin Morris detailed the series of events that led to him loaning his “personal friend” – the president’s son – millions of dollars just a month after meeting him.

Despite the accelerated timeline of their friendship to Hunter’s financial benefit, Morris insists he doesn’t expect anything from the Bidens politically.

Morris went on to make more than $5 million in loans to Hunter, earning him the nickname of Hunter’s “sugar brother.”

But the high-profile entertainment attorney told House impeachment investigators last week that Hunter is obligated to repay the total $5 million he is owed next year.

According to a transcript of the interview obtained by DailyMail.com, Morris Hunter met Biden at an upscale Biden fundraiser in the Brentwood neighborhood of Los Angeles in November 2019. He was introduced to then-candidate Joe’s “struggling” son by the great Biden -donor Lanette. Phillips.

Hunter Biden’s pipe-smoking Hollywood lawyer Kevin Morris described the chain of events that led to his ‘personal friend’ – the president’s son – borrowing millions of dollars just a month after meeting him

A week after their first meeting, Phillips asked Morris to meet Hunter again at his Los Angeles home because he had “entertainment-type issues” that required the lawyer’s help.

“At the time he had no income and his wife Melissa was five months pregnant,” Morris said of their second meeting in which Hunter, a drug addict, described coming from the “lowest point of his life.”

He said Hunter’s wife Melissa made them tea and he and Hunter talked for “four or five” hours.

Morris said he was “concerned” that Hunter had “no security protection” despite being “harassed by paparazzi” and others who came to his home and threatened him.

“I had a very tribal feeling about Hunter,” Morris said, describing his relationship with the president’s son. ‘He’s a guy. I have brothers…he was in big trouble.”

‘I actually thought he was a man who was beaten up by a gang of people. And you know, where we come from, you don’t let that happen. You get in and you start waving.”

Morris immediately began representing Hunter, and a short month after meeting him, made numerous payments on Hunter’s behalf.

Morris said his activities within Hunter’s legal team are “kind of like general counsel” and that he is “involved in everything.”

Morris then began paying Hunter’s lawyers, making payments on his Venice home and on his “upside-down Porsche,” on which he owed $11,000.

In the first year of their friendship, Morris said he loaned Hunter about $1 million.

Morris went on to detail the at least three times he visited the White House with Hunter.

In 2021, he once said the president had made a “rip” in his hair.

“At the end of the day, we were in the… we were in the country. Hunter is friends with a lot of people there,” he said, according to the transcript.

Despite the accelerated timeline of their friendship to Hunter’s financial benefit, Morris insists he doesn’t expect anything from the Bidens politically.

“And then it was around five or six o’clock, and Hunter went in and said hello. And the president, the president waved. And I think he said hello. He always makes fun of my hair. I think he said something about my hair,” Morris added.

He also attended Naomi Biden’s November 2022 wedding on the South Lawn of the White House and visited the grounds on a few other occasions.

Morris said the payments were “almost always direct payments to third-party vendors,” but Hunter never asked him for the money.

He claimed there was no political motivation behind his relationship with Hunter Biden and that he never discussed politics with the Bidens despite being a longtime Democratic donor.

“Hunter won’t come to me. He never asked me anything. I did these things voluntarily. I have an idea of ​​what they were, and I’m keeping a record. And those that are absolutely necessary, I will take care of them with a loan,” he claimed.

The loans came in the form of five promissory notes between the end of 2020 and 2024. Morris said the notes were standard interest-bearing notes with a maturity date of 2025, at which point Hunter must begin paying them back.

But Morris said lawyers drafted the promissory notes after lending Hunter the money. He said the terms of the loans are “standard,” meaning he could sue Hunter if the president’s son doesn’t start making repayments by 2025.

Morris said he gave Hunter the money in part because he feared the recovering addict would relapse — which would harm his father, the president.

‘I’m afraid he’ll relapse every – yes, and every day since. And I think that’s the intention of the people in the world to get him. Because they know that him relapsing is the thing that will upset him the most and impact his father the most,” Morris said.

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