Hallie Biden concedes 'it's difficult to recall' details from 2018
Under cross-examination from defense attorney Abbe Lowell, Hunter Biden's former girlfriend Hallie Biden said some of her memories of their interactions from the time of the gun purchase are vague.
Lowell began his questioning by saying he understood that it was a "fairly upsetting" period and that "being here is no picnic either."
Hallie Biden conceded that "it's difficult to recall" exactly where Hunter was at specific moments or whether he was where he suggested he was, at one point saying that "it's all kind of vague."
"Reconstructing this is not easy?" Lowell asked her.
"Correct," she replied.
Hallie Biden, the widow of Hunter Biden's late brother Beau Biden, testified that the "remnants" of crack she found in Hunter Biden's car on Oct. 23, 2018 -- the day she discovered then discarded the firearm -- could have been from weeks or months earlier.
"You didn't see him doing drugs or alcohol" the day you discarded the gun, Lowell inquired.
"Correct," she said.
At one point Lowell's cross-examination descended into a bit of chaos as both Lowell and Hallie Biden struggled to follow the proper protocols to get her text messages admitted into evidence.
"So far so good," Abbe said at one point.
"Well, no," prosecutor Leo Wise objected.
Jurors rubbed their eyes and gazed around as the back-and-forth continued, with the courtroom bursting into laughter on several occasions. At one point, Hallie Biden appeared to look over at her fiancé sitting in gallery, shrugging her shoulders and appearing to mouth the words "I don't know."
Court was subsequently recessed for lunch.