The Day

Hunter Biden sues laptop repair shop owner over privacy

- By MATT VISER

Hunter Biden has filed a sweeping countersui­t against the computer repair shop owner who said that Biden dropped his laptop off and never claimed it, a legal action that escalates the battle over how provocativ­e data and images of the president’s son were obtained nearly five years ago.

In the countercla­im, filed on Friday morning in U.S. District Court in Delaware, Biden and his attorneys say that John Paul Mac Isaac had no legal right to copy and distribute private informatio­n. They accuse him and others of six counts of invasion of privacy, including conspiracy to obtain and distribute the data.

The 42-page filing goes into significan­t detail on the ways Hunter Biden’s data became public, a developmen­t that propelled it into the maelstrom of the last presidenti­al campaign and, since January, to the center of a Republican-led congressio­nal investigat­ion of the president’s son.

The lawsuit could draw further attention to a sordid chapter in Hunter Biden’s life, one involving nude photos, sensitive audio and a trove of personal texts and emails. The countersui­t is in part an attempt by Hunter Biden and his lawyers to reframe the story, focusing it on a private citizen whose privacy was allegedly invaded rather than a man who critics say traded on his father’s name and benefited from his political connection­s.

“As a result of Mac Isaac’s unlawful agreement and his conspiracy with others, Mr. Biden’s personal data was made available to third parties and then ultimately to the public at large, which is highly offensive, causing harm to Mr. Biden and his reputation,” the suit states. “The object of invading Mr. Biden’s privacy and disseminat­ing his data was not for any legitimate purpose but to cause harm and embarrassm­ent to Mr. Biden.”

The move is a response to a suit filed by Mac Isaac himself last year and amended several times since, alleging that Hunter Biden defamed him by saying he had illegally accessed the data — when in fact, Mac Isaac contends, the laptop became his property when it was abandoned in his shop. The repairman’s suit also targeted CNN, Politico, the Biden campaign and Rep. Adam B. Schiff, D-Calif.

Hunter Biden’s decision to respond with an aggressive legal challenge of his own intensifie­s the battle with his critics, just as Rep. James Comer, R-Ky., chairman of the House Oversight Committee, prepares a high-profile investigat­ion into the president’s son. The dynamic could become an awkward distractio­n for President Joe Biden, who is expected to launch his reelection bid within weeks.

Hunter Biden is seeking a jury trial to determine any compensato­ry and punitive damages. The suit also asks the court to require Mac Isaac and others to return any copies, or partial copies, of any data belonging to the president’s son.

It marks the first legal filing from Hunter Biden and his attorneys since his laptop emerged as a point of intense interest for the president’s political adversarie­s, and it reflects a newly aggressive approach by a legal team that Hunter Biden put in place in recent months. That team had previously sent criminal referrals and cease-and-desist missives to various people, but this is the first time the attorneys have formally gone into court.

Still, the legal move required delicate positionin­g by the president’s son, who has never explicitly confirmed that the laptop was his.

Hunter Biden does not concede in his lawsuit that he dropped off the laptop, received an invoice or neglected to pick it up. In response to such claims by Mac Isaac, the filing states, “Mr. Biden is without knowledge sufficient to admit or deny the allegation­s.”

But he does acknowledg­e that some of the data that has been released publicly belongs to him, and concedes that Mac Isaac could have obtained it in April 2019.

“This is not an admission by Mr. Biden that Mac Isaac (or others) in fact possessed any particular laptop containing electronic­ally stored data belonging to Mr. Biden,” the filing says. “Rather, Mr. Biden simply acknowledg­es that at some point, Mac Isaac obtained electronic­ally stored data, some of which belonged to Mr. Biden.”

Hunter Biden argues that if even Mac Isaac did have his unclaimed laptop, Delaware law would have restricted his ability to access or distribute the data on it.

Mac Isaac and his allies have often pointed to a signed receipt saying that any property not retrieved after 90 days would be forfeited. But Biden’s attorneys say that agreement had flaws.

The boilerplat­e terms, they say, were contained in small print at the bottom of the page, well below the signature line. Delaware law says that personal property is only deemed abandoned after one year, and that certain steps have to be taken, such as posting public notices asking that the owner retrieve the property.

“And contrary to Mac Isaac’s claim that property left in his shop is abandoned property after 90 days, he admits in his recently published book and in other media appearance­s that he actually began accessing what he claims he had in his possession as Mr. Biden’s data long before 90 days had expired from when he claims any property or data was left in his shop,” the suit states.

The countercla­im also argues that even if the laptop had been abandoned, that would only give Mac Isaac the right to the equipment, not the data stored on it.

“In fact, the Repair Authorizat­ion form states that the Mac Shop will make every effort to ‘secure your data,’” the suit states. “Reputable computer companies and repair people routinely delete personal data contained on devices that are exchanged, left behind, or abandoned. They do not open, copy, and then provide that data to others, as Mac Isaac did here.”

The countersui­t also cites Mac Isaac’s statements that he made copies of Biden’s hard drive and distribute­d them to a number of people, including his father, Richard Mac Isaac, his uncle Ronald J. Scott, Jr., and Robert Costello, an attorney for former New York Mayor Rudy Giuliani. “Mr. Biden gave none of the individual­s identified in this countercla­im permission to access, copy, disseminat­e, post or otherwise distribute any of his data, however they came into possession of it,” the filing states.

“Mr. Biden had more than a reasonable expectatio­n of privacy that any data that he created or maintained, and especially that which was the most personal such as photograph­s, videos, interactio­ns with other adults, and communicat­ions with his family, would not be accessed, copied, disseminat­ed, or posted on the Internet for others to use against him or his family or for the public to view.”

The data alleged to have come from the laptop has been the subject of intense scrutiny dating from stories that the New York Post published just before the 2020 election. At the time, The Washington Post repeatedly asked Giuliani and Trump ally Stephen K. Bannon for a copy of the data to review, but the requests were rebuffed or ignored.

“As a result of Mac Isaac’s unlawful agreement and his conspiracy with others, Mr. Biden’s personal data was made available to third parties and then ultimately to the public at large, which is highly offensive, causing harm to Mr. Biden and his reputation.”

FROM COUNTERCLA­IM FILED FRIDAY IN U.S. DISTRICT COURT IN DELAWARE BY HUNTER BIDEN AND HIS ATTORNEYS

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