Hunter Biden has requested a dismissal of his lawsuit against a former Trump White House aide due to mounting financial difficulties, according to court documents filed in California. In the motion submitted on Wednesday, his legal team stated that financial hardships, compounded by recent wildfires rendering the home he rents in Los Angeles “unlivable,” have placed him “millions of dollars” in debt.
The motion indicates the former First Son’s income has significantly decreased, leading to an inability to sustain litigation against Garrett Ziegler, who previously worked with Trump’s trade adviser, Peter Navarro. Biden initially filed the lawsuit in 2023, accusing Ziegler of unlawfully accessing and disseminating data from his infamous “laptop from hell.”
The National Pulse broke several exclusives based on information gleaned from the laptop, including Hunter Biden’s investments in a firm isolating deadly pathogens in Ukrainian laboratories and that firm’s partnership with Peter Daszak’s EcoHealth Alliance, which is linked to the Wuhan, China laboratory believed to be responsible for the COVID-19 pandemic.
Biden’s attorneys highlighted decreasing revenue from Biden’s art and book sales as factors contributing to the financial strain. He reported that art sales plummeted, with only one piece sold for $36,000 after averaging $54,481.48 for 27 pieces previously. Book sales of his memoir, Beautiful Things, have also declined significantly, with only 1,100 copies sold in a recent six-month period compared to 3,161 in the preceding six months.
Biden’s legal efforts are further complicated by ongoing litigation with John Paul Mac Isaac, a Delaware computer repair shop owner, over the initial leak of his laptop data. In the recent filing, Biden noted his need to evaluate each legal matter on a “case-by-case basis” due to financial constraints.