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Wednesday, December 18, 2024

Fla. Pair Who Found Ashley Biden’s Diary Plead Guily of Trying to Sell It

'There is no First Amendment protection for the theft and interstate transport of stolen property...'

(Headline USA) Two Florida residents have pleaded guilty in a scheme to peddle a diary and other items belonging to President Joe Biden’s daughter to the conservative media outlet Project Veritas for $40,000, prosecutors said Thursday.

Aimee Harris and Robert Kurlander pleaded guilty to conspiracy to commit interstate transportation of stolen property, Manhattan U.S. Attorney Damian Williams’s office said.

The diary, which contained shocking claims of sexual impropriety concerning Joe Biden and his daughter, such as inappropriate showers that left her psychologically traumatized, was discovered in a halfway house where Ashley Biden had abandonned them after seeing treatment for drug addiction.

The case became nationally significant not only due to the shocking nature of the allegations, but also as being exemplary of the two-tiered system of justice, for which the Democrat president has been slammed for “outrageous and illegal abuses” due to his weaponization of the Justice Department as his personal police force.

“Harris and Kurlander sought to profit from their theft of another person’s personal property, and they now stand convicted of a federal felony as a result,” Williams said in a statement.

Harris’s lawyer, Sam Talkin, said she “has accepted responsibility for her conduct and looks forward to moving on with her life.”

Kurlander’s lawyer, Florian Miedel, declined to comment.

Harris, 40, of Palm Beach, and Kurlander, 58, face the possibility of up to five years in prison when sentenced.

While authorities didn’t identify Ashley Biden or the organization that paid, the details of the investigation have been laid out in court filings and public statements from Project Veritas.

Ashley Biden was moving out of a friend’s Delray Beach, Florida, home in spring 2020 when she stored the diary, tax records, a digital device with family photos, a cellphone and other items there, prosecutors said in a court filing.

They said Harris then moved into the same room, stole the items and got in touch with Kurlander, who contacted Project Veritas, which asked for photos of the material and then paid for the two to bring the diary and photos to New York.

Project Veritas staffers met with the two in New York and dispatched them back to Florida to retrieve more of Ashley Biden’s items from the home, which they did and turned the material over to a local Project Veritas worker who brought it to New York, prosecutors said.

The group paid the two $20,000 apiece, prosecutors said.

A message seeking comment was sent to Project Veritas.

The group has said it received the diary from “tipsters” who said it had been abandoned in a room. Project Veritas said it turned the journal over to law enforcement and never did anything illegal.

Founder James O’Keefe has said that Project Veritas ultimately did not publish information from the diary because it could not confirm it belonged to Ashley Biden.

Project Veritas, which identifies itself as a news organization, is best known for conducting hidden camera stings that have embarrassed news outlets, labor organizations and Democratic politicians.

The FBI searched the group’s New York offices and the homes of some of its employees as part of the investigation.

A court in New York appointed a former federal judge to review material that was seized in those searches, so as to ensure that investigators couldn’t look at material protected by journalistic or attorney–client privileges.

Neither the organization nor any of its staff have been charged to date.

Generally, media organizations aren’t culpable for receiving material that might have been stolen, if they weren’t involved in the theft. But there can be criminal liability for encouraging theft and then knowingly paying for stolen material.

“There is no First Amendment protection for the theft and interstate transport of stolen property,” the U.S. attorney’s office wrote in a court filing last year.

Efforts to charge the media organization would be met with outrage due to the chilling effect it might have on First Amendment press protections.

Leftist organizations, including the FBI and DOJ, have a well-documented history of transmitting classified and stolen material to left-wing media outlets, who have run it with impunity in the past.

A prosecution likely would open the door for a criminal crackdown on those outlets should a Republican president face a parallel situation in the future.

The allegations of incest and pedophilia are of considerable public interest given past allegations against Biden, including at least one credible rape allegation.

They also support the insights into Biden’s alarmingly dysfunctional family life that were revealed in the data from Hunter Biden’s abandonned laptop.

The material found on it indicated that Biden was complicit in corrupt business deals involving foreign entities while serving as vice president, and also that he turned a blind eye to several felonies committed by his son—including inappropriate photos that showed Hunter posing with his teenage niece while she was topless.

Adapted from reporting by the Associated Press

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