On October 14, 2020, the
New York Post published articles containing purported emails of unknown authorship which suggested that
Hunter Biden provided an "opportunity" to Vadym Pozharskyi, an advisor to the board of Burisma, to meet his father, then-Vice President Joe Biden. Joe Biden stated in September 2019 that he had never spoken to his son about his foreign business dealings. His presidential campaign denied such a meeting took place and stated the
New York Post had never contacted them "about the critical elements of this story". Michael Carpenter, Vice President Biden's foreign policy adviser in 2015, told
The Washington Post that he had accompanied Joe Biden during all of his meetings about Ukraine: "He never met with [Pozharskyi]. In fact, I had never heard of this guy until the
New York Post story broke." One of the purported emails showed Pozharskyi saying he would share information with
Amos Hochstein, a State Department advisor close to Vice President Biden, though Hochstein stated, "The Republican Senate investigation subpoenaed all my records, including emails and calendars and found no mention of this man. I led the US energy efforts in Ukraine and never even heard of him before yesterday." According to an investigation by
The New York Times, editors at the
New York Post "pressed staff members to add their
bylines to the story", and at least one refused, in addition to the original author, reportedly because of a lack of confidence in its credibility. Of the two writers eventually credited on the article, the second did not know her name was attached to it until after
The Post published it. In its opening sentence, the
New York Post story misleadingly asserted, "the elder Biden pressured government officials in Ukraine into firing a prosecutor who was investigating" Burisma, even though Shokin had not pursued an investigation into Burisma's founder. On October 15, the
Post published another article regarding a business venture relating to
CEFC China Energy that Hunter Biden was negotiating with potential investment partners in May 2017, when his father was a private citizen. The
Post published a purported email it said came from the laptop, written by one of the prospective investors, on which Hunter Biden was copied. The email described the proposed equity shares of each of the investors in the venture, ending with a reference to "10 held by H for the big guy?" The
Post reported the "H" apparently referred to Hunter Biden, and one of his former business partners soon came forward to assert "the big guy" referred to Joe Biden. The former business partner also tweeted a copy of the email addressed to him. In a subsequent email, Hunter Biden said his "Chairman" gave him "an emphatic no", with a later email identifying the "chairman" as his father. The
Post also reported on an August 2017 venture Hunter Biden was seeking with
Ye Jianming, the chairman of CEFC, but the paper did not associate Joe Biden with that deal. Neither of the two ventures came to fruition. On May 26, 2021, the
New York Post published another article focused on purported emails, suggesting that Joe Biden had met with Vadym Pozharskyi at a dinner in Cafe Milano in Washington.
The Washington Post investigated the April 16, 2015, dinner. According to dinner attendee Rick Leach, who like Hunter Biden was one of the leaders of the
World Food Program USA fundraising organization, the discussions at the dinner were about
food security, not "politics or business". Leach said that Joe Biden briefly dropped by the dinner to meet
Alex Karloutsos. According to Leach, Joe Biden "didn't even sit down. He was not part of the dinner or part of the dinner discussion." Karloutsos, a longtime friend of Joe Biden, had an influential role in the
Greek Orthodox Church that Joe Biden long worked with. Karloutsos corroborated Leach's account. Also, according to
The Washington Post, the tentative guest list for the dinner included the name "Vadym" with no surname listed.
Laptop and hard drive Rudy Giuliani provided the materials to the
New York Post after they were allegedly found on a water-damaged
MacBook Pro left at The Mac Shop, a Wilmington, Delaware, computer repair business owned by John Paul Mac Isaac. Mac Isaac obtained the laptop in April 2019, claiming it had been dropped off by a man who identified himself as Hunter Biden and requested that the data on the damaged laptop be recovered. Mac Isaac also said that he is legally blind and could not be sure if the person who supposedly left the laptop was actually Hunter Biden. He asserted three years later that while he was copying individual files and folders from the laptop's hard drive to another device, he "saw some content that was disturbing and then also raised some red flags", including "criminality ... related to foreign business dealings, to potential money laundering and, more importantly, national security issues and concerns".
Steve Bannon informed the
New York Post of the laptop, and he and Giuliani delivered a copy of the supposed laptop hard drive to the publication. Weeks before, on September 28, Bannon had stated on Dutch television that he had Hunter Biden's hard drive, though this footage was not released until after the
New York Post story released. Criticism focused on Mac Isaac over inconsistencies in his accounts of how the laptop came into his possession and how he passed it on to Giuliani and the FBI.
Thomas Rid, a political scientist and disinformation expert at
Johns Hopkins University, noted that the emails could have been forged or that forged material could have been mixed with genuine materials, a "common feature" of disinformation operations.
The Daily Beast reported that according to two "individuals with direct knowledge", multiple senior officials in the Trump administration and re-election campaign were aware of the laptop hard drive "several weeks" prior to the
New York Post story. Giuliani later confirmed to
The Daily Beast that he had informed Trump about the material before the
New York Post story. The
New York Post reported it had been shown an image purporting to show a federal
subpoena that resulted in the computer and an external hard drive being seized by the FBI in December 2019. The
Associated Press confirmed the existence of the FBI investigation into possible foreign-intelligence activity. Citing a "US official and a congressional source briefed on the matter",
CNN reported the FBI was specifically investigating possible connections to ongoing Russian disinformation efforts against Joe Biden. According to
The Washington Post, Mac Isaac was alarmed that the laptop was not mentioned during
Trump's first impeachment trial in early 2020. PolitiFact states that it is possible that "copies of a laptop" were obtained, instead of the actual laptop. Ukrainian legislator Andrii Derkach, an active Russian agent, worked with Giuliani in Ukraine to damage Biden. On October 19, 2020, Derkach posted on social media that he had a second Hunter Biden laptop: "The facts confirming international corruption are stored on a second laptop. These are not the last witnesses or the last laptop." Derkach was later sanctioned by the United States Treasury Department for his involvement in disinformation about Joe Biden; the Treasury concluded Derkach had been an active Russian intelligence agent for over a decade; Lev Parnas told
Politico that Giuliani had been told about compromising material regarding Hunter Biden on May 30, 2019, during a visit with Vitaly Pruss. Pruss was an associate of Burisma founder
Mykola Zlochevsky, who was then being investigated for corruption by Ukraine.
Hunter Biden story pitch Earlier in October, before the
Post report, White House lawyer
Eric Herschmann, former deputy White House counsel
Stefan Passantino, former Hunter Biden business partner Tony Bobulinski, and close
Donald Trump Jr. associate Arthur Schwartz pitched a story about Hunter Biden's business dealings in China to
The Wall Street Journal, which the Trump team saw as an ideal outlet due to its combination of conservatism and industry credibility. Without warning to the Trump team and while the
Journal was exercising due diligence in investigating the story, the
New York Post went ahead and published a version of the story based on documents and emails with "questionable provenance" that alleged, but did not prove, Joe Biden's involvement in his son's affairs. Bannon had anticipated the
Journal story would appear on October 19, and Trump told reporters to expect a major story in the
Journal. Bobulinski thought it would not run the piece, so he issued his own statement on October 21, which
Breitbart News published unedited. During the next day's presidential debate, Trump vaguely referred to the emails and Bobulinski was his special guest. Afterward, the
Journal published a brief story saying corporate records it reviewed "show no role for Joe Biden".
Aftermath and veracity concerns The New York Times reported in May 2021 that
federal investigators in Brooklyn had begun a criminal investigation late in the Trump administration into possible efforts by several current and former Ukrainian officials to spread unsubstantiated allegations about Joe Biden concerning corruption. The investigators had been examining whether the Ukrainians used Giuliani as a channel for the allegations, though he was not a specific subject of the investigation, in contrast to a long-running investigation of Giuliani by the US attorney's office in Manhattan.
The New York Times reported in March 2022 that they found emails "from a cache of files that appears to have come from a laptop abandoned by Mr. Biden in a Delaware repair shop". In April 2022,
The Washington Post reported that Mac Isaac said that he had seen claims about what the laptop contained that did not reflect what he had seen on the laptop: "I do know that there have been multiple attempts over the past year-and-a-half to insert questionable material into the laptop as in, not physically, but passing off this misinformation or disinformation as coming from the laptop. And that is a major concern of mine because I have fought tooth and nail to protect the integrity of this drive and to jeopardize that is going to mean that everything that I sacrificed will be for nothing." In another case, in January 2023 an anonymous Twitter account posted a rental application found on the laptop, leading to a false claim that in 2018 Hunter Biden had paid $49,910 in monthly rent for his father's Delaware residence where
classified documents had been found. The false allegation quickly spread across conservative media. A
Breitbart story that speculated Hunter Biden may have had access to classified documents in his father's home was retweeted by
House Republican Conference chair
Elise Stefanik who added that "Joe Biden and the Biden Crime Family are corrupt and significant threats to national security. Our Republican House Majority will hold them accountable."
James Comer, chair of the
House Oversight Committee that was
investigating the Biden family, suggested it was evidence that Hunter Biden may have been funneling foreign money to his father. The document actually showed quarterly rental payments for office space at the
House of Sweden in
Washington, D.C. On his
Fox News program, host
Tucker Carlson echoed Comer's false suggestion of Hunter Biden malfeasance; days later Hunter Biden's attorneys wrote Carlson and Fox News demanding they correct the falsehood on-air or risk a
defamation lawsuit. ==Forensic analysis==