A Wilmington, Delaware, computer repairman who said he gave a hard drive of Hunter Biden’s laptop to Rudy Giuliani has closed his shop.
John Paul Mac Isaac, shuttered his Trolley Square shop and a neighbor says he left town.
His Annapolis-based attorney, Brian Della Rocca, said Mac Isaac closed the shop after receiving death threats. He declined to disclose where his client might have gone, or even if he had left town.
Della Rocca said he doesn’t anticipate Mac Isaac becoming entangled in a potential lawsuit or criminal investigation, but said his office has spoken in recent weeks with Wilmington FBI agents and with Delaware’s Assistant United States Attorney Leslie Wolf.
Della Rocca did not comment on the nature of the conversations with law enforcement, nor did the FBI or the U.S. Attorney’s office in Delaware. Nor did Mac Isaac’s father, a retired Air Force colonel who reportedly helped his son share the files with Giuliani and later conservative media.
Della Rocca also said his office is investigating whether computer files Giuliani has publicly claimed to have taken from the hard drive existed on the device when it was handed over by his client in September.
See the complete story at USA Today.