Hunter Biden filed a lawsuit Tuesday against Rudy Giuliani, his businesses and his former lawyer, Robert Costello, alleging violations of computer fraud and data access laws, court documents show.

The suit, filed in the U.S. District Court in the Central District of California, alleges that the defendants are among those primarily responsible “for what has been described as ‘the total annihilation'” of Hunter Biden’s digital privacy and data.

For years, the lawsuit alleges, the defendants have “dedicated an extraordinary amount of time and energy toward looking for, hacking into, tampering with, manipulating, copying, disseminating, and generally obsessing over data that they were given.” The suit claims the data was taken or stolen from Hunter Biden’s “devices or storage platforms.”

Rudy Giuliani in Lansing, Mich
Rudy Giuliani in Lansing, Mich., on Dec. 2, 2020. Rey Del Rio / Getty Images file

The president’s son’s legal team claimed that his data was “manipulated, altered, and damaged” before it was sent to Giuliani, who is former President Donald Trump’s onetime lawyer, and Costello and that the pair then were involved in illegal hacking and tampering involving “further alterations and damage to the data to a degree that is presently unknown to Plaintiff.”

The lawsuit doesn’t say how that occurred. It alleges that the nature and extent of their “manipulation, tampering, alteration, damage and copying” of Hunter Biden’s data “is unknown to [Hunter Biden] due to Defendants’ continuing refusal to return the data to [Hunter Biden] so that it can be analyzed or inspected.”

The lawsuit also alleges that statements made by Giuliani and Costello suggest their “unlawful hacking activities are ongoing today.”

The suit requests a jury trial and seeks more than $75,000 in damages, attorneys fees, and the disgorgement of any proceeds Giuliani and Costello might have received from allegedly accessing the hard drive; it also seeks a judicial order barring them accessing or copying Biden’s data.

Hunter Biden’s lawyers allege that Giuliani and Costello violated both state and federal law by accessing the hard drive shipped to Costello from John Mac Isaac, who has alleged Biden left a damaged laptop at his computer repair store in Wilmington, Delaware.

In a statement, Giuliani adviser Ted Goodman said, “Hunter Biden has previously refused to admit ownership of the laptop. I’m not surprised he’s now falsely claiming his laptop hard drive was manipulated by Mayor Giuliani, considering the sordid material and potential evidence of crimes on that thing.”

Costello and Hunter Biden did not immediately respond to NBC News’ request for comment.

Hunter Biden also sued the IRS this month alleging agents unlawfully shared his private tax information amid criminal probes that led to charges against the president’s son, which the legal team of one of the agents denied, saying no “confidential taxpayer information” was released “except through whistleblower disclosures authorized by statute.”

Biden also sued former Trump White House aide Garrett Ziegler earlier this month alleging he violated state and federal data laws in connection with the online publication of the laptop’s content. Ziegler responded that “numerous state and federal laws and regulations … protect authors like me and the publishing” done by his organization, Marco Polo, which describes itself as a nonprofit research group that exposes corruption.

In mid-September, federal prosecutors in Delaware indicted Hunter Biden on gun charges — three counts tied to possession of a gun while using narcotics.

Source: | This article originally belongs to Nbcnews.com

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

You May Also Like

Can Airline Seating Get Any Worse? ‘A New Form of Torture Chamber’

What to Read Next This post first appeared on wsj.com

Wildfire near Yosemite National Park balloons to California’s largest this year

A rapidly expanding wildfire near Yosemite National Park, California’s largest of the…

Consumer watchdog is in the crosshairs as Supreme Court weighs legal challenge

WASHINGTON — The Supreme Court on Tuesday weighs the fate of the…

‘Society of the Snow’ becomes one of Netflix’s biggest non-English movie releases

After dropping on Netflix on Jan. 4 to the U.S. streaming giant’s second-biggest bow…