So much for that legend....
The manufactured evidence never elevated into the realm of believability. That a computer repair guy would first go through someone's laptop...THEN hand it over to the FBI (not just call the local police)...THEN hand a copy to Rudy Guliani's lawyer....it is straight out of a bad Hollywood script.
Here is the story that lays out the above chain of custody.
A computer repairman who reportedly gave a copy of Hunter Biden's hard drive to Rudy Giuliani’s attorney spoke cryptically about his arrangement with the Republican operative.
www.delawareonline.com
When you read this dude's words...you have less confidence (if possible) that this is legit....
“When you’re afraid that you don’t know anything about the depth of the waters that you’re in, you kind of, you want to find a lifeguard.”
Sounds like he botched a line he was fed.
Anyway..the story is fading into the ether... Good.
Yep, sane folks decided a week ago that this was an other bogus Rudy Tootie caper with Russian spies. Nobody gives a crap about Hunter Biden, Tony Bobulinski or a blind computer repairman.
Good riddance.
Another Rudy “associate” was arrested today, and another one pled guilty.
Big day for the shirt-tucker!
Man, Rudy, Donald and their pals sure do love them some corrupt foreigners.
David Correia, the fourth defendant in a campaign finance case involving business associates of President Trump’s personal lawyer Rudolph W. Giuliani, was arrested Wednesday morning at a New York City airport, officials said.
Correia has been charged with participating in a scheme to use foreign money to build political support for a fledgling recreational marijuana business in Nevada and other states, according to an indictment unsealed last week that also charged Lev Parnas and Igor Fruman with conspiracy and making false statements to campaign finance regulators.
The other defendants were quickly arrested by the FBI, but Correia had been traveling in the Middle East and returned to the United States to surrender to authorities at John F. Kennedy International Airport.
Correia made a brief court appearance Wednesday, where a judge ordered him released on $250,000 bond. He and the other person charged in the case, Andrey Kukushkin, are due back in court Thursday.