Hunter Biden Whistleblower 'Disappears' Amid Reports of Death Threats
Computer repairman at center of 'laptop from hell' scandal is missing

The computer repairman, who leaked the hard drive from Hunter Biden's "laptop from hell," has reportedly "disappeared" amid claims that he was receiving "death threats."
John Paul Mac Isaac made headlines when he leaked the laptop, belonging to Democrat presidential nominee Joe Biden's son Hunter, along with its contents which included sensitive images, videos, and other files.
The hard drive also contained Hunter's emails that allegedly expose serious international criminal activity involving the Biden family's foreign business dealings.
Isaac has now mysteriously closed his Wilmington, Delaware, computer repair shop amid reports that he was fearing for his life.
The elder Biden said the allegations were a "desperate campaign to smear me and my family."
However, the former vice president has refused to confirm whether or not the laptop belonged to his son.

According to the Delaware News Journal, a "closed" sign now appears in the window of Mac Isaac's shop.
His attorney, Brian Della Rocca, told the outlet that his client closed up shop after he received several death threats.
He has not elaborated on Mac Isaac's whereabouts at the time of this reporting, though a neighbor told the outlet that Mac Isaac left town.
In October, Mac Isaac said that he retained a copy of the hard drive's contents because he "feared he would be killed by people who 'work for [Joe] Biden' and having it was 'protection.'"
Della Rocca told the outlet that he did not believe his client would be involved in any potential lawsuits or investigations related to the laptop.
The outlet noted that Della Rocca "said his office has spoken in recent weeks with Wilmington FBI agents and with Delaware's Assistant United States Attorney Leslie Wolf" but that he "declined to describe the nature of the conversations."
"I've been in touch with federal law enforcement, yes," he told the outlet.
Neither the U.S. Attorney's Office in Delaware nor the Federal Bureau of Investigation commented when approached by the outlet for remarks on the allegations, according to The Blaze.

In October, the New York Post reported that Mac Isaac was asked to repair a computer that reportedly contained a variety of nefarious and possibly incriminating emails and photos appearing to confirm that a secret meeting between the former vice president and a top Burisma executive had taken place.
He later told Fox News, "I just don't know what to say, or what I'm allowed to say.
"I know that I saw, I saw stuff — and I was concerned.
"I was concerned that somebody might want to come looking for this stuff eventually — and I wanted it out of my shop."