An erstwhile Peter Navarro aide who worked in the Trump administration’s Office of Trade and Manufacturing Policy set up a website where the emails are accessible to the public. Here are over 120,000 Hunter Biden emails that they don’t want you to read.
This week, a former Trump White House worker posted more than 120,000 emails discovered on Hunter Biden’s abandoned laptop to an accessible database, that can be viewed at BidenLaptopEmails.com (slowly loading). Visitors can also download the emails in addition to browsing.
The emails were set up by Garrett Ziegler, an erstwhile Peter Navarro aide who worked in the Trump administration’s Office of Trade and Manufacturing Policy, and include infamous hits like “10 for the big guy,” in which Hunter Biden’s company partner James Gillar recommended he should retain 10% of a multimillion-dollar agreement with the Chinese. The emails were published by Ziegler’s group, Marco Polo.
The aforementioned email, however, is not included in Ziegler’s database, which has 14,603 less emails than a batch of 142,838 reviewed by cyber forensic company Maryman & Associates for the Mail last year.
“Here are the 128k emails from the Biden Laptop,” according to the website, “which is a modern Rosetta Stone of white and blue collar crime under the patina of “the Delaware Way,”” a word frequently employed by Joe Biden.
“Prior to the discovery of the Rosetta Stone, a number of ancient languages were mere gibberish and hash marks. Similarly, the emails on the Biden Laptop illuminated previously convoluted webs of the people you see leading the charge for global governance; truly, the emails can be considered a translation tool for Open-Source Intelligence (OSINT) gathering.”
The “legalese” section at the bottom of the website reads: “Having seen the lengths that the FBI and other entities in the apparatus have gone to harass citizens who expose corruption, and pursuant to 18 USC § 119, Marco Polo testifies that the contents of the Biden Laptop were abandoned property.
Furthermore, Marco Polo unequivocally disclaims any intention to cause any threat, intimidating action, or incitement of harm to any person covered by 18 USC § 119 and we do not condone, encourage, intend, or have any knowledge that any other person will or may use the information herein for any unlawful purpose.
Marco Polo’s motive is to see justice delivered—to all criminals—by those whose responsibility it is to carry out that duty.”