House Oversight Committee just released a damning 100 page report deeming all Biden’s autopen actions NULL AND VOID
The House Oversight Committee on Tuesday published its final report on its investigation into the Biden’s administration’s use of an autopen, concluding that at least some of the president’s orders were invalid and calling on the Justice Department to investigate.
Earlier this year, the House Oversight Committee launched a probe into President Joe Biden’s alleged use of an autopen to sign pardons and other presidential orders during his waning days in office.
After three months of investigation that included interviews with President Biden’s senior aides, the panel’s chairman, GOP Rep. James Comer from Kentucky, came to suspect that what he and his colleagues had uncovered could be used as evidence to overturn some of those executive actions because those senior staff failed to prove the president knew what he was signing.
Comer: Many of Biden's autopen orders were "invalid"
Now, Comer says his committee’s final report proves that many of President Biden’s autopen orders were, in fact, invalid.
“The Biden Autopen Presidency will go down as one of the biggest political scandals in U.S. history. As Americans saw President Biden’s decline with their own eyes, Biden’s inner circle sought to deceive the public, cover-up his decline, and took unauthorized executive actions with the autopen that are now invalid,” House Oversight Chairman James Comer said in a statement.
“Executive actions performed by Biden White House staff and signed by autopen are null and void,” he added. “We are calling on the U.S. Department of Justice to conduct a thorough review of these executive actions and scrutinize key Biden aides who took the Fifth to hide their participation in the cover-up. We have provided Americans with transparency about the Biden Autopen Presidency, and now there must be accountability.”

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House Oversight Committee deems some of Biden’s autopen orders ‘invalid,’ asks DOJ to investigate
The findings come after a monthslong probe into the Biden administration’s use of an autopen for executive decisions and pardons.