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Hunter Biden appears to still be on the board of a Chinese private equity firm he co-founded, despite his lawyer pledging late last year that the potential first son would resign, a report alleges.

Chinese business records, the Daily Caller reports, still list Robert Hunter Biden — the younger Biden’s full name — as a director and board member of BHR Partners.

George Mesires, a lawyer for Biden, said back in October that Biden would be relinquishing his director title “on or by October 31,” but the outlet reported that business records it obtained were submitted as recently as March 24.

Mesires told The Post the report was inaccurate and related to Biden’s board seat being left vacant after his departure.

“Hunter Biden resigned from the board of directors in October 2019 and has not been on the board since then. Period. This database will be updated when there is a successor named for the board seat that Hunter Biden left vacant when he resigned in October,” he said in a statement.

Biden approached Chinese businessman Jonathan Li, who ran Chinese private-equity fund Bhoai Capital, with business partner Devon Archer in 2012 about forming a new company to invest in Chinese capital, as well as capital from other countries, according to a New York Magazine profile of the vice president’s son.

In November 2013, the three signed contracts setting up their fund, named BHR Partners. Hunter became an unpaid member of the fund’s board, but declined to take an equity stake in the company until after his father left the White House, the magazine reported.

Since then, the firm has invested at least $2.5 billion on behalf of its clients in automotive, energy, mining and technology deals, according to the Wall Street Journal.

One month after signing their contracts, Biden joined his father on a trip on Air Force Two to Beijing for a meeting between the vice president and President Xi Jinping. During the visit, Hunter arranged a meeting and handshake between his father and Li in the lobby of the VP’s hotel.

The move, which garnered little attention at the time, alarmed some Biden advisers, according to the magazine. Those in the VP’s orbit worried about the optics of the meeting.

One senior Obama White House aide lamented to the publication that Hunter’s actions raised concerns about whether he “was leveraging access for his benefit, which just wasn’t done in that White House. Optics really mattered, and that seemed to be cutting it pretty close, even if nothing nefarious was going on.”

After his father left office, Biden took a 10% equity share in BHR Partners, but when he announced his departure from the board, he did not say whether his equity stake would be sold.

The younger Biden also pledged that he would not serve on the boards of any foreign-owned companies if his father wins the 2020 presidential election.