White House: VP Joe Biden’s son undergoing treatment at Delaware hospital; is awake and alert

By AP
Tuesday, May 11, 2010

White House: VP Joe Biden’s son hospitalized

NEWARK, Del. — Vice President Joe Biden’s oldest son was hospitalized Tuesday, the White House said, but it did not say why.

Delaware Attorney General Beau Biden, 41, was admitted to Christiana Hospital on Tuesday morning.

“He is alert and speaking with his family and his doctors,” said his spokesman, Jason Miller. Miller did not provide any details on the attorney general’s condition but said he had been in the office Monday for meetings.

Hospital spokesman Bill Schmitt referred questions to the vice president’s office. A state trooper was stationed at the main entrance of the hospital and several black SUVs and men in suits with earpieces were nearby.

“Beau Biden is a great leader with a great family, and I’m glad they’re with him right now,” said Delaware Gov. Jack Markell, who referred questions about Biden’s condition to his family.

The vice president traveled to Delaware on Monday afternoon for a previously scheduled trip. He did a round of morning show interviews from Wilmington Tuesday morning, and was supposed to return to Washington later in the day for his weekly lunch with President Barack Obama and a series of meetings on Afghanistan.

The White House did not respond to questions about whether the vice president would attend those meetings.

Dr. Jill Biden was scheduled to tour a women’s health facility in Washington Tuesday afternoon. Event organizers said her appearance has been postponed. Beau Biden was scheduled to deliver a speech Tuesday night entitled, “My Life in Public Service,” at University of Delaware, but that was canceled too.

Beau Biden announced in January that he would not run for Senate, saying he needed to remain focused as attorney general on a high-profile criminal scandal involving a pediatrician accused of sexually assaulting several patients. Prosecutors believe Dr. Earl Bradley, who was arrested in December, may have molested more than 100 children over the past decade.

Biden’s decision was a surprise, given that his father’s longtime confidant and former Senate chief of staff, Ted Kaufman, was appointed to the seat essentially to keep it warm for the son until this year’s election.

But longtime Republican Rep. Mike Castle, a two-term governor and one of the most successful politicians in Delaware history, entered the Senate race in October, dramatically increasing the likelihood of a fierce contest.

Beau Biden’s decision left the seat his father held for 36 years vulnerable.

The elder Biden was away from that seat for seven months in 1988 after undergoing surgery for brain aneurysms.

More than a decade earlier, in 1972, he lost his wife and infant daughter when a tractor-trailer broadsided their station wagon when they were out getting a Christmas tree. Beau and his brother Hunter were critically injured but recovered.

The vice president devoted himself to caring for his two sons as a single father and still will not work Dec. 18, the date it happened. The elder Biden seldom speaks of the tragedy, but remains sensitive about anything having to do with his children’s welfare.

Beau Biden recalled the accident when introducing his father at the 2008 Democratic National Convention in Denver.

“I was just short of 4 years old. One of my earliest memories was being in that hospital, Dad always at our side. We, not the Senate, were all he cared about,” Biden said. His father was sworn in to the U.S. Senate at the hospital, at his bedside, he said.

At the convention, the vice president said in return: “Beau, I love you. I am so proud of you. I’m so proud of the son you’ve become. I’m so proud of the father you are.”

Beau Biden, who is married with two young children, has worked as an attorney in private practice. He also worked for the Justice Department between 1995 and 1997 and as an assistant U.S. attorney from 1997 to 2002.

Associated Press Writers Ben Nuckols in Baltimore, Brian Witte in Annapolis, Md., and Nafeesa Syeed and Julie Pace in Washington contributed to this report.

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