[4] The firm represents or has represented such major American media figures such as Trey Parker and Matt Stone, Matthew McConaughey, Mike Judge, Ellen DeGeneres, Scarlett Johansson, Zoe Saldana, Liam Hemsworth, Zach Galifianakis, Chris Rock, and Laura Linney.
[5] He produced the 1997 documentary film Hands on a Hard Body, and co-produced the Broadway musical The Book of Mormon for which he won a Tony Award by Trey Parker and Matt Stone.
[7] His articles on media and entertainment have appeared in The Wall Street Journal,[8] Los Angeles Times,[9] and Filmmaker Magazine.
The younger Biden was at the time under federal criminal investigation for his tax matters and dealing with personal struggles.
Morris became a confidant to Hunter Biden, lending him more than $2 million to cover family expenses and pay back taxes.
Morris's attorney Bryan Sullivan wrote Comer that at the start of his client's testimony he had "specifically pointed out the practice of Republicans in making partial leaks of witness' statements rather than releasing the actual transcript so the public would know the truth and not your often inaccurate spin and misstatements."
[5] where he began his career in entertainment law by handling the contracts of independent filmmakers before founding Morris Yorn Barnes & Levine in 1995.
[18][1] Morris has written articles on media and entertainment for The Wall Street Journal,[8] the Los Angeles Times,[9] Filmmaker Magazine,[6] and The Jerusalem Post.