Larry C. Johnson Interviews John Paul Mac Isaac — The American Patriot Who Was Hired to Fix Hunter Biden’s Computers

5Mind. The Meme Platform
Gateway Pundit Header

This is the story of an American patriot, an honorable man, John Paul Mac Isaac, who tried to do the right thing and is now being unfairly and maliciously slandered as an agent of foreign intelligence, specifically Russia.

John Paul Mac Isaac is not an agent or spy for anyone. He is his own man. How do I know? I have known his dad for more than 20 years. I’ve known John Paul’s dad as Mac. Mac is a decorated Vietnam Veteran, who flew gunships in Vietnam. And he continued his military service with an impeccable record until he retired as an Air Force Colonel. The crews of those gunships have an annual reunion and Mac usually takes John Paul along, who volunteers his computer and video skills to record and compile the stories of those brave men who served their country in a difficult war.

This story is very simple–Hunter Biden dropped off three computers with liquid damage at a repair shop in Wilmington, Delaware on April 12, 2019. The owner, John Paul Mac Isaac, examined the three and determined that one was beyond recovery, one was okay and the data on the hard drive of the third could be recovered. Hunter signed the service ticket and John Paul Mac Isaac repaired the hard drive and downloaded the data. During this process he saw some disturbing images and a number of emails that concerned Ukraine, Burisma, China and other issues. With the work completed, Mr. Mac Isaac prepared an invoice, sent it to Hunter Biden and notified him that the computer was ready to be retrieved. Hunter did not respond. In the ensuing four months (May, June, July and August), Mr. Mac Isaac made repeated efforts to contact Hunter Biden. Biden never answered and never responded. More importantly, Biden stiffed John Paul Mac Isaac–i.e., he did not pay the bill.

When the manufactured Ukraine crisis surfaced in August 2019, John Paul realized he was sitting on radioactive material that might be relevant to the investigation. After conferring with his father, Mac and John Paul decided that Mac would take the information to the FBI office in Albuquerque, New Mexico. Mac walked into the Albuquerque FBI office and spoke with an agent who refused to give his name. Mac explained the material he had, but was rebuffed by the FBI. He was told basically, get lost. This was mid-September 2019.

Two months passed and then, out of the blue, the FBI contacted John Paul Mac Isaac. Two FBI agents from the Wilmington FBI office–Joshua Williams and Mike Dzielak–came to John Paul’s business. He offered immediately to give them the hard drive, no strings attached. Agents Williams and Dzielak declined to take the device.

Two weeks later, the intrepid agents called and asked to come and image the hard drive. John Paul agreed but, instead of taking the hard drive or imaging the drive, they gave him a subpoena. It was part of a grand jury proceeding but neither agent said anything about the purpose of the grand jury. John Paul complied with the subpoena and turned over the hard drive and the computer.

By Jim Hoft
Guest post by Larry C. Johnson

Read Full Article on TheGatewayPundit.com

Contact Your Elected Officials
Gateway Pundit
Gateway Pundithttps://www.thegatewaypundit.com/
Gateway Pundit's online news, commentary and analysis offers editorial choices addressing the gap in the politically liberal leanings of establishment media outlets.

A Defining Moment: Will Populist Promises Collapse New York City?

New York City elected a candidate promising rent freezes, free transit, universal childcare, and higher corporate taxes—pledges that may clash with fiscal reality.

Child-Diddling Migrant Invokes Curious ‘I Thought She Was My Wife’ Defense

Convicted of groping a sleeping schoolgirl on a flight, Javed Inamdar offered bizarre defenses that made O.J. Simpson’s glove excuse seem credible.

What’s The Real Reason Why The Economist Wants Europe To Spend $400 Billion More On Ukraine?

The Economist urges Europe’s elites to fund Ukraine’s $390B recovery, arguing it’s cheaper than facing the costs of inaction over the next four years.

Fourth and funded: The business of buyouts

Through week ten of the college football season, the ledger on what universities owe their former coaches in buyouts was nearly $185 million. 

Deflating Portland: Why Antifa Went from Black Blok to Inflatable Costumes

Antifa's transformation from militant to mascot is so absurd it's almost comedic. Yet beneath the humor lies something calculated. It’s all about optics.

ICE Arrests 1,505 Alleged Criminal Aliens in New Texas Operation

ICE authorities in Houston arrested 1,505 alleged criminals, including illegal immigrants, transnational gang members, foreign fugitives, and other offenders.

Musk’s $1 Trillion Pay Package Is Due for a Vote on Thursday. Here’s What to Know

Tesla shareholders are set to vote Thursday on a proposed pay package for Elon Musk that could potentially make him the world’s first trillionaire.

Moderna Projects Lower Revenue in 2025 Due to Flagging COVID-19 Vaccine Sales

Moderna on Nov. 6 revised its revenue projections for 2025 after third-quarter sales plummeted from a year prior.

Trump Admin Must Fully Fund Food Stamps for November: Judge

The Trump administration must pay the approximately $9 billion to fully fund food stamps for November, a federal judge ruled on Nov. 6.

Trump to Host Central Asian Leaders as US Shores Up Critical Mineral Supply

President Trump is hosting Central Asian leaders at the White House on Nov. 6, amid fast-tracked efforts to de-risk supply chains from China.

Trump Drafting Executive Order on Election Integrity After Alleging Ballot Fraud in California

White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt said an executive order is being drafted to strengthen U.S. elections and curb mail-in ballot fraud.

Trump Re-Nominates Jared Isaacman for NASA Administrator

Trailblazing civilian astronaut Jared Isaacman is once again President Donald Trump’s choice for NASA’s administrator.

US Agencies Terminate 103 Wasteful Contracts With $4.4 Billion Ceiling Value: DOGE

Government agencies canceled 103 wasteful contracts worth $4.4 billion, saving $103 million in five days, according to the Department of Government Efficiency.
spot_img

Related Articles