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Long-time Democratic Agent Steve Ricchetti appeared before House investigators Wednesday, with the former White House aide being called as the investigation by Oversight Committee Chairman James Comer.
Ricchetti recently served as an adviser to President Joe Biden for the vast majority of his four-year tenure at the Biden White House.
Now, he expects he will sit down with staff on the House Oversight Committee for closed-door transcription interviews, which could last for several hours.
Comer, r-ky. Biden’s top rank is being investigated White House Aides masked signs of a presidential spirit decline if it means signing executive actions by automatically starting without knowing it.
Comer dismissed Biden Doctor’s bid to pause in the cover-up investigation: “Top up all excuses”
Right Steve Ricchetti sat down with House investigators Wednesday. (Reuters/Jonathan Ernst)
Ricchetti Obama administration. At the end of 2013, he was quickly promoted to Biden’s chief of staff.
Ricchetti, who is both a lobbyist and a Democratic insider, also presided over Biden’s 2020 presidential election.
However, the committee’s interest in him lies in his so-called key role in managing the White House, and aides reportedly worked to cover up signs of a president’s spiritual decline.
“As a counselor to former President Biden, you were one of his closest advisers. According to a report, you are part of a group of insiders who have implemented a strategy to minimize “the president’s age-related struggle,” Comer wrote to Ricchetti in June, alleging that Wall Street Journal Report.

R-Ky, chairman of the House Oversight and Accountability Committee. Rep. James Comer is leading the investigation. (AP Photo/J. ScottApplewhite)
“The scope and details of the strategy cannot be without investigation. If White House staff execute a strategy that lasts months or even years to cover up the CEO’s situation (or performs its duties), then legislative response may need to be considered.”
Axios journalist Alex Thompson, who co-wrote the “Primary Sin” with CNN host Jake Tapper, introduced Biden’s cognitive decline and his aide’s so-called cover-up attempt to cover it, who earlier this year was Ricchetti, part of a small group of insiders who were Biden’s “political institutions.”
He also played a key role in Biden’s legislative agenda, most notably one of the Democratic negotiators who worked with then-owner Kevin McCarthy to avoid a full-scale fiscal crisis on U.S. national debt in early 2023.
This comes after another former aide, former White House Chief of Staff, Ronald Klain. Appear in front of investigators His own transcription interview last week.

LR: Ian Sams, former special assistant to the president and senior adviser of the White House lawyer’s office; Andrew Bates, deputy assistant to former president and senior deputy press secretary; Karine Jean-Pierre, former White House press secretary; and former White House chief of staff Jeff Zients is expected to sit down with House Oversight Committee investigators. (Fox News)
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Like Crane, Ricchetti appeared in a voluntary manner – the fourth former Biden aide did so.
Three of the top six Biden administration officials appeared before the House Oversight Committee and did this under the subpoena. Former White House physician Kevin O’Connor, as well as former advisers Annie Tomasini and Anthony Bernal, both begged for the Fifth Amendment while mandatory sitting down.
But, so far, three voluntary transcribed interviews have lasted more than five hours as both Democrats and Republican staff took turns to question them.

Senior News Analyst & National Affairs Writer
Prabhat Sharma is a veteran journalist with over 12 years of experience covering national news, current affairs, and breaking stories across India. Known for his analytical approach and in-depth reporting, Prabhat brings clarity to complex topics and delivers content that informs, educates, and empowers readers.
He is passionate about political transparency, policy analysis, and the evolving landscape of Indian journalism.
When he’s not writing, you’ll find him reading non-fiction, watching documentaries, or exploring offbeat destinations