Hunter Biden is now SUING Rudy Giuliani for violating his privacy rights in laptop scandal



Hunter Biden is back in court.

The president’s son has filed a lawsuit against Rudy Giuliani alleging that the lawyer violated his privacy rights by illegally disseminating content from his laptop — which the American public were previously assured was simply Russian disinformation.

The complaint filed in the U.S. District Court for the Central District of California states that Rudy Giuliani himself is “primarily responsible for the total annihilation” of Biden’s digital privacy.

The lawsuit also seeks a court order to prevent Giuliani and others from accessing, tampering with, manipulating, or copying Biden’s data and to force them to return the device and the hard drive to Hunter along with any backup files.

Sara Gonzales finds the entire thing rather “fascinating” and jokes that “the genie’s not going back in the bottle on this.”

“The laptop contents were released in, what, October of 2020?” asks Sara. “The Democrats jump and say this is Russian disinformation.”

“Almost three years later now, Hunter Biden himself is suing because it turns out everything was freaking real and exactly what we said it was the entire time,” she says.

Gonzales notes that Hunter now believes he’s entitled to some sort of financial relief because everyone has seen photos of him “not being able to stop touching his genitals.”

BlazeTV contributor Jaco Booyens was on Rudy Giuliani’s show the day his office was raided.

“I was actually on the show and they raided his office,” Booyens says, adding, “America’s mayor texted me and said he begged the FBI to take the hard drives and they left them. They even took his watch.”

Booyens believes that “some stupid prosecutor will run with it” and will go after Giuliani because he’s currently being indicted for investigating potential election tampering.

“This is such a joke, and it’s all for what? It’s all semantics, it’s all optics, I mean this guy belongs behind bars and most likely his father too,” he adds.


Want more from The News & Why It Matters?

To enjoy more roundtable rundowns of the top stories of the day, subscribe to BlazeTV — the largest multi-platform network of voices who love America, defend the Constitution, and live the American dream.

Why would Hunter Biden release a memoir NOW?



During his campaign, President Joe Biden survived scandal after scandal involving his son Hunter — the Ukraine/Burisma scandal, the laptop scandal, the one involving a stripper from Arkansas and a long-lost child. And yet, after it all appeared to have been swept under the rug, Hunter has now released a memoir — "Beautiful Things."

Filling in for Glenn Beck on the radio program this week, Pat Gray and Stu Burguiere discussed Hunter's "horrible" response when asked on "CBS This Morning" if the laptop seized by the FBI in 2019 belonged to him and reviewed a few segments from his new book, which they agreed raises the question: Is Hunter trying to sabotage his father's career?

Watch the video below for more:



Want more from Glenn Beck?

To enjoy more of Glenn's masterful storytelling, thought-provoking analysis and uncanny ability to make sense of the chaos, subscribe to BlazeTV — the largest multi-platform network of voices who love America, defend the Constitution and live the American dream.

'You're so full of it': Newspaper that uncovered Hunter Biden laptop story rips him for equivocating over whether the computer is really his



The New York Post took a lot of heat from the left, the Democratic Party, the mainstream media, and Big Tech last fall when it reported on the Hunter Biden laptop scandal.

Allies of President Joe Biden's son were quick to attack the Post and anyone who dared to share

the story, claiming that the paper had zero evidence and was relying in ill-gotten or "hacked" information.

Twitter went so far as to censor posts about the story and locked the Post out of its Twitter account, demanding that the outlet remove its story. Twitter CEO Jack Dorsey admitted to a congressional committee on March 25 that his company's move against the Post was a "total mistake."

Facebook protected Hunter — and thereby the Biden campaign — by reducing the reach of the Post story and subjecting it to "fact-checkers," which meant other outlets that shared information garnered from the newspaper's reporting could also be subject to punishment by the social media giant.

But now Hunter Biden has admitted to CBS News that the laptop in question "absolutely" could be his. Of course, he also added that the computer might have been "stolen" or maybe he was "hacked." Perhaps it was "Russian intelligence" behind the story, he claimed:

Certainly, there could be a laptop out there that was stolen from me. It could be that I was hacked, it could be that it was Russian intelligence. It could be that it was stolen from me.

The Post isn't buying it.

In a staff editorial — "Hunter Biden's full of it — he knows it's his laptop, and he wasn't hacked" — posted Friday after his CBS News interview made headlines, the newspaper called out Biden for his prevarication:

The troubled son knows that he left the laptop at a Delaware repair shop and then forgot about it. How could he forget about something like that? Well, he admits that he's relapsed on drugs as recently as last year's presidential campaign.

The Post interviewed the owner of the computer repair shop. We checked the dates and content of some of the emails against real-life events. We looked at the literally thousands of pictures of Hunter Biden on the hard drive. We did the reporting. It's his laptop.

The Post's disgust clearly was with more than just Biden — they went after the sycophantic press, too, for playing along with his denials last fall:

When we asked Hunter Biden and the Joe Biden campaign in 2020, they dodged the question and called it all a “conspiracy theory" and suggested vaguely he might have been hacked. The press, usually on guard for a non-denial denial, played along. The laptop was “unverified." No one bothered to ask the campaign any follow-up questions, even though the laptop repairman backed up the story to other outlets. Twitter took its cue from the Democrats and blocked our account, a move Jack Dorsey now calls “a total mistake."

Now that Biden has at least admitted that the laptop could be his, the Post has some questions it hopes the media will finally get around to asking about some still unanswered topics, including:

  • His and his father's involvement with a Chinese investment fund;
  • Tony Bobulinski's alleged meetings with President Biden;
  • Whether Joe Biden is the "big guy" referred to in emails about the Chinese endeavor;
  • The diamond Hunter reportedly received from a Chinese oligarch; and
  • The reported meeting between Joe Biden and an official from Burisma.

The Post has questions about all those things — and more — but it hasn't been able to get answers. Maybe the rest of the media will finally start to help by asking questions, the newspaper hoped.

Hunter Biden finally admits laptop at center of scandal 'absolutely' could belong to him



Hunter Biden has finally admitted the the laptop at the center of a damning New York Post report could potentially belong to him, CBS News reports.

In 2020, the Post reported on a bevy of emails from a laptop said to belong to President Joe Biden's son. Many of the emails raised questions about the then-presidential candidate's purported ties to Ukrainian business ventures including Burisma. One message in particular appeared to show Hunter setting up his father with an introduction to a top Ukrainian business executive.

What are the details?

In separate interviews on "CBS This Morning" and "CBS Sunday Morning," President Joe Biden's son said that the MacBook Pro that was left at a Delaware computer repair store in 2019 could "absolutely" be his.

He appeared on the CBS shows to promote his new memoir, "Beautiful Things," which is due for an April 6 release.

"I really don't know what the answer is, that's the truthful answer" he told correspondent Tracy Smith when she pressed whether the laptop belonged to him. "I have no idea."

When asked if the laptop could potentially belong to him, he responded, "Absolutely. ... Certainly, there could be a laptop out there that was stolen from me. It could be that I was hacked, it could be that it was Russian intelligence. It could be that it was stolen from me."

The laptop was dropped off at a Wilmington-area computer shop in 2019. The person or persons who turned the laptop over to the computer repair shop never picked the computer up.

What else?

Elsewhere during the interview, Hunter detailed his substance addictions and revealed information about an intimate family intervention that took place during the 2020 presidential race.

During the intervention, he said, he stormed out of the family's Delaware home and attempted to leave.

Hunter said that his father chased him down the driveway in tears and buried him in a bear hug.

"I tried to go to my car, and my girls literally blocked the door to my car and said, 'Dad, Dad, please, you can't. No. No,'" he recalled. "He grabbed me in a hug. He grabbed me, gave me a bear hug, and he said, and just cried and said, 'I don't know what to do. I don't know what to do. Please.'"

Hunter said that despite the emotional appeals of his family, he was focused on just one thing: taking "another hit."

"It's the only thing I could think, literally," he recalled. "That's how powerful [addiction is]. ... I don't know of a force more powerful than my family's love except addiction."

Smith's interview with the president's son will air on "CBS Sunday Morning" on Sunday at 9 a.m. His interview with "CBS This Morning" co-host Anthony Mason is set to air on Monday at 7 a.m. ET.

Hunter Biden: "For real, I don't know" if laptop at center of controversy is authenticwww.youtube.com