A Delaware computer repairman who publicly released the sordid content on Hunter Biden’s hard drive is suing Twitter for defamation – claiming that the moderation of the content wrongly classified him as a “hacker”.
REP. BUCK: MUELLER DEFINED ‘PRECEDENT’ REQUIRING SPECIAL ADVICE FROM HUNTER BIDEN
In October, the New York Post reported exclusively on the damaged document tranche on the laptop that was left at John Paul Mac Isaac’s repair shop in April 2019, but was never collected.
The emails detailing Hunter Biden’s shady deals abroad are now part of a federal tax investigation into President Elect Joe Biden’s scandalous son, but social media giant Twitter immediately blocked users from sharing him online, claiming that the report depended on “hacked materials.”
HUNTER BIDEN STILL HAS 10% INTEREST IN THE CHINESE COMPANY OF PRIVATE EQUITY, BUSINESS RECORDS SHOW
According to a report by The Verge published Monday, Isaac is now suing Twitter for defamation, claiming that the company has decided to “communicate to the world that [Mac Isaac] is a hacker. “
According to the report, Issac says his company received threats and negative reviews after moderating Twitter and he is “now widely considered to be a hacker”.
He is demanding $ 500 million in damages and a public retraction from the company.
DOJ OFFICERS ON ‘ONGOING DISCUSSIONS’ ABOUT HUNTER BIDEN’S SPECIAL COUNCIL, SOME SAY IT IS ‘GUARANTEED’: SOURCES
According to Issac, the customer who brought the MacBook Pro for repair in 2019 never paid for the service or recovered it or the hard drive on which its content was stored. He failed after several attempts to contact the customer.
Before delivering the laptop to the FBI in December, Isaac made a copy of the hard drive and then gave it to former Mayor Rudy Giuliani’s lawyer, Robert Costello.
Steve Bannon, a former adviser to President Trump, told the Post about the existence of the hard drive in late September and Giuliani provided the newspaper with a copy of it.
Twitter founder Jack Dorsey was taken to Congress in late October to explain the articles’ unprecedented censorship and Twitter’s subsequent decision to block the Post’s account for two weeks – a decision that Dorsey later admitted was a mistake.
The emails and text messages first reported by the Post detailed some of Hunter Biden’s business negotiations in China and Ukraine and revealed how he sought to involve his father and profit from his high office.
CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APPLICATION
Federal investigators are now investigating whether Hunter and his business partners have violated several tax and money laundering laws.
In September, Republican senators released a report on Hunter’s business that said he “and his family were involved in a vast financial network that connected them to foreign citizens and foreign governments around the world”.