The owner of Hunter’s computer repair shop describes his recent experience

John Paul Mac Isaac, the computer repair shop owner who fixed Hunter Biden’s computer, spoke to Newsmax on Wednesday about his recent experiences and encounters. Isaac turned hunter’s laptop over to the FBI and the Justice Department after noticing the contents of the hard drive might be criminal.

Mike Isaac has worked at the computer repair shop for more than 25 years. When asked about the situation, he replied that he did not initially recognize Hunter Biden when he came to his computer store.

He said: “I received three laptops, have a computer on the lid of a label, the label is from Joe Biden Foundation (Biden Foundation), posted on this apple computer. Before the customer tell me who he is, I always did not recognize him. Until after finish registration, transfer, data services formalities, I truly realize who he was.”

Asked how he found emails, videos and text messages on his laptop, he replied that his job was to do data recovery, but the laptop’s condition was unstable, forcing him to verify the data to be sure it was transmitted correctly.

Mr. Isaac said he was never paid for his computer data recovery services, and the owners of the laptops never came back to look for them.

In checking the data, he said, he saw something that he initially thought was “private,” but a few weeks later, after Democratic presidential candidate Joe Biden announced his candidacy, he thought the contents of the laptop had become a national concern.

Over time, Mr. Isaac said, he realized that some of the events and names appearing in the media were related to the data he had seen on his laptop. He felt that some of the contents of the laptop might be criminal material that needed to be shown to the authorities.

He first contacted his father, who had been in the military for 30 years. His father contacted the FBI in Albuquerque. The FBI refused to get involved and told him to seek legal help. He said the FBI then contacted his father and informed him that if anyone came back looking for the laptop, he should stall that person.

When the New York Post published the story, video and photos of Hunter Biden, Twitter removed them, saying they involved hacking. U.S. intelligence agencies later confirmed that they had no evidence that this was the product of Russian disinformation. On December 9th, Hunter Biden admitted that he was under a federal investigation that began in 2018.

Mike Isaac recently had to close his computer repair shop because he was accused of being a “hacker”.

“There were times when I thought the nightmare was over,” he says. “But when I turned around, it was getting deeper and deeper.” “Labels like ‘Russian’ and ‘hacker’ have definitely had a negative impact on my reputation. My business has been destroyed and in my industry it’s hard to recover from such labels.”

Being labelled a hacker is a death sentence for his business, he argues, and the truth is filtered out. “I think when the truth is filtered, it is very difficult for people to get the truth,” he said. “If people hear only one side of the story, it does not help to restore my credibility.”

Mike Isaac filed a lawsuit against Twitter, but the suit was dismissed by a district judge.

When asked why he didn’t turn the data over to local media or police departments, he said he felt compelled to turn them over to the FBI and the Justice Department.

He added that it was disappointing to see that people simply did not want to hear evidence of possible wrongdoing by the Biden family. “I think it’s a reflection of the whole, you know, if a country is being fed misinformation all the time, it can become so paranoid that it can be hard for people to take it seriously, especially in the current climate where there are so many other things going on in the world,” he said.