Former Delaware PC repair shop owner moves to dismiss Hunter Biden invasion of privacy claims
Moreover, Mac Isaac's legal team further asserts that Delaware's two-year statute of limitations on the matter has already passed.
A former Delaware PC repair shop owner is seeking that a court dismiss first son Hunter Biden's counterclaims against him for invasion or privacy in connection with now infamous incident in which Biden left his laptop at his shop.
The first son has accused John Paul Mac Isaac of invasion of privacy, which Mac Isaac's team has denied, asserting that Mac Isaac did "what Biden hired him to do" and that he was not responsible for the events that followed his handing information over to law enforcement or former President Donald Trump's lawyer.
"Biden either refuses or cannot confirm whether he even visited The Mac Shop, despite Mac Isaac presenting evidence that he dropped off his Laptop computer ('Laptop') at Mac Isaac’s store," the motion to dismiss read. "[A]ll the allegations presented by Biden demonstrate that Biden authorized Mac Isaac to access the data. Biden fails to adequately show otherwise."
Moreover, Mac Isaac's legal team further asserts that Delaware's two-year statute of limitations on the matter has already passed.
"[T]he statute of limitations period for these acts expired at the earliest on April 12, 2021 (when he first accessed the data) and at the
latest August 28, 2020, when the data was sent to [Robert] Costello. Either way, any plausible claim expired on August 28, 2022," it contends.
The filing was sent to the Superior Court of the State of Delaware.
In October 2020, the New York Post published an article detailing the contents of Hunter Biden's laptop, which included damaging materials on the Biden family. Though widely maligned as disinformation and suppressed on social media at the time, it has since been found to be genuine.
Ben Whedon is an editor and reporter for Just the News. Follow him on Twitter.