Hunter Biden’s Laptop Repairman Explains How The FBI Buried A Bombshell
John Paul Mac Isaac was an introverted Delaware computer repair man until his life was destroyed for trying to do the right thing, with authorities thwarting or ignoring him at every turn, he said in a book released Tuesday. “‘If you see something, say something’, we’re told. I did see something, and I did say something. I was vilified for it,” he wrote.
Mac Isaac said that a boozy Hunter Biden dropped off three laptops for repair on April 12, 2019, and agreed to pay $85 to recover files from one of them, whose password was something like “analf—69.” The now-First Son came back a few days later to bring an external drive, then never responded to the call informing him that the recovery was complete.
Mac Isaac immediately saw homemade porn littering the desktop, along with financial records detailing millions of dollars in foreign transactions. He wanted nothing to do with a political scandal, but he figured it would be a moot point, as Joe Biden seemed too old to advance in the Democratic primary.
But when then-President Donald Trump was subjected to impeachment proceedings related to his allegedly pressuring Ukraine president to investigate the Biden family’s business dealings there, Mac Isaac sensed injustice. “I was sitting on evidence that could exonerate the president and justify his actions. Whether you like a person or not, everyone is entitled to a fair trial,” he wrote. And under his contract, abandoned property legally became his.
Reviewing the laptop’s contents, Mac Isaac had seen that in 2014, Hunter and his business partner Devon Archer plotted a business venture in Ukraine that overlapped with U.S. actions. They discussed buying burner phones at a 7-Eleven. On April 16, 2014, Vice President Biden met with Archer at the White House. Five days later, the vice president traveled to Ukraine. The day after that, Archer was awarded a position on the board of directors of the country’s oil and gas firm Burisma, with Hunter joining weeks later, “to the tune of $1,295,000 each,” Mac Isaac wrote. The computer’s contents also showed Hunter telling his daughter that unlike his father, he wouldn’t make her give him half the money she earned.
Vadym Pozharskyi, Burisma’s number-two official, wasted no time in asking for Hunter and Archer’s “advice on how you could use your influence to convey a message/signal, etc, to stop what we consider to be politically motivated actions” related to an investigation into Burisma, he wrote. On April 17, Pozharskyi “thanked Hunter for the opportunity to meet his father,” he wrote.
Hunter and Archer hired a company called Blue Star Strategies “to perform the heavy lifting between Burisma and the White House,” and Blue Star began providing Burisma with sensitive executive-branch information, Mac Isaac wrote. In December 2015, Joe Biden visited Ukraine and threatened to withhold $1 billion in loan guarantees unless the prosecutor who had investigated Burisma was fired.
Mac Isaac became convinced that federal authorities needed to see what was on the hard drive, but he was concerned about bringing it to Delaware-based agents because of the Bidens’ sway. His father was a former Air Force colonel who had spent time at the CIA, so on October 9, 2019, the elder Mac Isaac flew to Albuquerque, New Mexico to deliver a copy of the drive to an FBI field office there. But the agent refused to accept it, instead grilling Mac Isaac’s father on whether the computer repairman might have broken the law, he wrote.
“I consulted with a regional legal officer, and he suggested you should get a lawyer,” the FBI agent said, according to Mac Isaac. “You better lawyer up and don’t talk to anyone about this… I don’t have anything else for you, and the door is on the left.”
In November 2019, Special Agent Joshua J. Wilson of the FBI’s Baltimore/Wilmington division contacted the Mac Isaacs. Impeachment hearings were under way in the Senate. On November 19, 2019, Wilson and another agent with the last named DeMeo visited Mac Isaac’s apartment. Mac Isaac printed out key emails and slid them to the agents, saying “This collection of emails shows preferred access to the State Department as well as the vice president’s travel schedule, all sent to private Ukrainian citizens.”
“Have you spoken with anyone else about this?” Wilson asked, according to Mac Isaac. The agents left without taking the emails — taking only the contract that showed whether Mac Isaac was the legal owner of the laptop, he wrote.
On December 9, 2019, they showed up with a subpoena to take the original laptop computer, instead of taking a cloned copy as originally discussed. On their way out, DeMeo allegedly remarked, “It is our experience that nothing ever happens to people that don’t talk about these things.”
They said they were taking the physical computer so the FBI’s top computer experts could assess
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