In a new book set to be released on November 22, 2022, John Paul Mac Isaac, the computer repairer who exposed information on Hunter Biden’s infamous laptop claims an FBI agent threatened him to shut up.
According to Isaac, two FBI agents visited him in his Mac Shop in Wilmington, Delaware in December 2019 to retrieve the laptop following a subpoena, he details in his new book titled “American Injustice: My Battle to Expose the Truth,” a title set to be released on November 22, 2022.
The computer repair shop owner, who said he had planned to hand over the device to the FBI two months earlier, allegedly received the threat after he jokingly told the agents: “Hey, lads, I’ll remember to change your names when I write the book.”
After he made the joke, Isaac said one of the two agents, Agent Wilson, kept walking but Agent DeMeo stopped and turned to face him, Isaac writes of the encounter.
Isaac said Agent DeMeo then told him: “It is our experience that nothing ever happens to people that don’t talk about these things,” according to The Post.
After the two agents left, Isaac said he shut the door and took some time to think about the encounter.
“Was I being paranoid, or had what the agent just told me been a direct threat, or at best a thinly veiled one?” he writes.
Isaac was left with the “laptop from hell” after Hunter Biden abandoned it at his shop in April 2019.
My life changed forever
Giving a glimpse into the book’s content, Isaac says Hunter Biden changed his life forever on April 12, 2019, when the second son of President Joe Biden came into his workshop requesting data recovery from one of his liquid-damaged laptops. Isaac says he felt unsafe when Hunter failed to pay for and collect his laptop after his father announced his candidacy for president of the United States on April 25, 2019.
Isaac says there was paperwork in Hunter’s possession, about which he was worried and afraid someone was going to come looking for the computer, and come looking for him. Isaac says he set out to hand everything over to federal agents because he was concerned that he was sitting on evidence in a criminal investigation. However, Isaac says he decided to turn to Congress when he felt betrayed by the FBI’s inaction in providing the laptop as evidence during the impeachment trial. “I then turned to Congress, and ultimately, to a lawyer for the president, Rudy Giuliani,” he says.
When the news about Hunter’s laptop broke, Big Tech companies and mainstream media blocked the reporting and Isaac was subsequently labeled as a hacker and a criminal. Isaac says his actions were labeled “Russian disinformation,” and as a result, people soon began to attack his business and his character, forcing him to close his shop and flee the state.