Biden dodges reporters after question on COVID-19 origin: 'Will you hold China accountable?'

As President Biden left the White House Friday, he approached then swiftly turned his back on reporters after one asked him to comment on COVID-19’s origins.

On Tuesday, FBI Director Christopher Wray told Fox News the COVID-19 pandemic was likely caused by a lab leak in Wuhan, China, a theory that was initially dubbed as a conspiracy. This followed a similar analysis from the Department of Energy.

NTD News White House Correspondent Iris Tao shared her footage of the encounter with Biden on Twitter. In it, Biden can be seen leaving the White House and approaching the reporters waiting outside until Tao can be heard asking about COVID-19’s origin, "Will you hold China accountable?" Biden put his hands up then turned away to board the presidential helicopter, Marine One.

"BREAKING: President Biden @POTUS was going to speak but turned away upon hearing my question on #Covid origin and whether he’ll hold #China accountable. @NTDNews @ChinaInFocusNTD @capitolreport," Tao tweeted.

HOUSE DEMS SIGNAL OPPOSITION TO DECLASSIFYING INFO ON COVID-19 ORIGINS

Biden may have avoided this particular request for comment, but other politicians have taken it upon themselves to get the truth out of the government with legislation.

The Senate unanimously passed a bill to declassify all information related to the origins of COVID-19 and the Wuhan Institute of Virology. The bill appears to have enough political momentum behind it to become law.

MEDIA LIED ABOUT COVID LAB LEAK, AND 4 OTHER THINGS THE PRESS GOT WRONG

"It’s been three years since COVID-19 upended our lives, and we’re still asking basic questions about the origins of this virus. That’s unacceptable," Rep Mike Gallagher, R-Wis., chairman of the newly-formed House Select Committee on China told Fox News Digital.

"The question of how this pandemic began is the most important question in the world, and we should not continue to waste precious time waiting for the Chinese Communist Party to suddenly cooperate with U.S. officials and open up access to the Wuhan Institute of Virology," Gallagher added. "It’s time for Congress to act and force the administration to declassify the relevant intelligence surrounding the pandemic."

Michigan woman wins $1M Powerball prize after husband finds week-old ticket in coat pocket

A woman from Michigan won a million-dollar Powerball prize and she claims she always believed she would win big one day.

Ana Elizalde, 51, of Lansing, selected five lottery numbers that matched the numbers that were drawn from the Michigan Lottery’s Feb. 6 drawing.

The numbers that won her the big prize were 05, 11, 22, 23 and 69, according to a press release issued by the Michigan Lottery on Tuesday, Feb. 28.

POWERBALL LOTTERY DRAWING: WINNERS CAN REMAIN ANONYMOUS IN THESE STATES

Elizalde claimed her prized and novelty check from the Michigan Lottery on Friday, Feb. 24.

"Me and my husband buy a Powerball ticket for every drawing, and we always knew we would win big," Elizalde told the Michigan Lottery.

In early February, Elizalde played the Powerball as she usually does. She purchased her winning ticket at a Sav-Way Food Center in Lansing.

HOW TO UP YOUR CHANCES OF WINNING THE LOTTERY 

Elizalde told the lottery board she gave her ticket to her husband for safekeeping. 

"A week after the drawing my husband found the ticket in his coat pocket and realized we had never checked it," Elizalde recalled to the Michigan Lottery. "We went to the store to scan it and got a message to file a claim. When we checked the numbers online and realized we’d won $1 million."

Elizalde said she and her husband "were in shock" when they first saw the seven-figure winning, but they were also hopeful that one day luck would be on their side.

"We always had a feeling this day would come and now that it’s here, it feels surreal," she told the Michigan Lottery. 

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The Michigan Lottery hasn’t disclosed Elizalde’s final winning after taxes.

Elizalde told the lottery board she plans to use her Powerball Prize to pay bills, her children’s education and savings

The Powerball is a multi-state lottery that's available in 45 states, the District of Columbia, Puerto Rico and the U.S. Virgin Islands.

Powerball drawings are done at 10:59 p.m. on Monday, Wednesday and Saturday.