Washington, D.C. – In a shocking new development that has the political world buzzing, the mysterious cocaine discovery inside the White House last year has been thrust back into the spotlight—this time with new allegations implicating President Joe Biden’s embattled son, Hunter Biden.
Multiple high-level sources within the FBI have confirmed to insiders that the case, long thought closed due to “insufficient evidence,” was quietly reopened in late April after internal surveillance reviews raised troubling questions. Chief among them: a secure West Wing door, previously believed to have been accessed by a staffer, was actually opened using credentials tied to someone with “family-level clearance.” That person, insiders now claim, is believed to be Hunter Biden.
According to two agents familiar with the case, surveillance footage that would have captured key moments surrounding the July 2024 drug incident has either been misplaced, deleted, or is otherwise unavailable. “It’s not just that the footage is gone—it’s how and when it vanished,” one source stated. “There’s no technical explanation. This wasn’t a glitch. It was deliberate. Someone wanted this trail to go cold.”
The cocaine was initially discovered in a small plastic bag inside a locker used by visitors and staff in the West Wing—a location so secure that every access point is tightly monitored and logged. The case made headlines for days before being quietly dropped by the Secret Service, who said there was “no viable suspect” and no forensic evidence to pursue. But now, fresh evidence suggests that key figures in the White House may have orchestrated a cover-up.
FBI agents say the timing of the surveillance disappearance is particularly suspicious. Records show that a digital log entry was made on the evening of July 1, around 7:42 PM, showing that the West Wing entrance was accessed using a badge marked “F-CLEAR: LVL-1,” a designation used exclusively for immediate family members of the President.
“That type of clearance is extremely limited. We’re talking spouses, children—nobody else,” said one agent. “You don’t just ‘accidentally’ lose the surveillance on something this serious. Not without a reason.”
Speculation has once again swirled around Hunter Biden, who has faced years of controversy related to drug addiction, foreign business deals, and a federal gun charge. While the White House has consistently downplayed his presence during the week of the cocaine incident, flight records obtained by congressional staff show that a government-chartered vehicle registered to the Executive Office of the President made a late-night pickup at a private D.C. residence where Hunter Biden had been staying on June 30.
Furthermore, according to two separate officials, confidential interviews conducted during the renewed investigation revealed that staffers were warned “not to ask questions” about certain VIP guests at the White House over the July 4th weekend. “We were basically told to keep our mouths shut,” said one anonymous aide. “The vibe was tense. Everyone knew something wasn’t right.”
Republican lawmakers are now seizing on the reopening of the case as further proof of what they claim is systemic protection of the President’s son. House Oversight Chair James Comer (R-KY) issued a late-night statement, calling the development “an outrageous and deeply disturbing confirmation that the Biden White House is shielding its own from accountability.”
Comer has demanded a full briefing from FBI Director Christopher Wray, along with the release of all surveillance logs, clearance access records, and visitor lists from the West Wing from June 30 to July 5, 2024.
The White House, when reached for comment, declined to confirm whether the case had indeed been reopened. Press Secretary Karine Jean-Pierre issued a terse response late Tuesday: “We are not aware of any new developments regarding the matter from last year. As previously stated, the investigation was handled by the Secret Service and concluded months ago.”
But behind the scenes, the administration appears to be on edge. Sources close to the West Wing report an uptick in internal security briefings and a fresh wave of background checks for junior staffers—moves that suggest the President’s team may be bracing for potential fallout.
Meanwhile, Hunter Biden, who has remained largely out of public view since his high-profile gun trial began in March, has not responded to requests for comment. His legal team has also refused to address the renewed scrutiny, saying only that “Mr. Biden has nothing to do with the matter.”
Still, the timing couldn’t be worse for President Biden, who is already under pressure from declining poll numbers and growing Democratic unease about his 2024 re-election bid. With the Republican Party preparing to weaponize the story as a centerpiece in its messaging war, the reopened cocaine case is more than just a scandal—it could become a political nightmare.
If surveillance was intentionally lost, and if someone with “family-level clearance” was truly involved, this may mark one of the most explosive allegations to hit a sitting President’s inner circle in modern history. And as one senior FBI official warned: “This story isn’t going away anytime soon.”