During a break in Hunter Biden‘s federal gun trial on Tuesday, his wife, Melissa Cohen Biden, engaged in a heated verbal altercation with Garrett Ziegler, the founder of not-for-profit Marco Polo and a former aide in the Trump administration. Witnesses reported that Cohen Biden confronted Ziegler, pointing her finger at him and shouting, “You have no right to be here, you Nazi piece of [expletive],” before walking away.
Ziegler was part of an effort by Trump campaign allies to publicize the content found on Hunter Biden’s laptop during the final weeks of the 2020 presidential election. The laptop contained a trove of emails, files, and photos that ranged from extensive documentation of Hunter Biden’s drug abuse to how the Biden family conducted its foreign business dealings. Hunter Biden filed a lawsuit against Ziegler and Marco Polo last year, alleging they broke state and federal by attempting to launch a searchable database of nearly 130,000 emails extracted from the laptop.
The former Trump administration aide responded to the incident by laughing but did not engage further. In a statement to NBC News, Ziegler clarified, “For the record, I’m not a Nazi; I’m a believer in the U.S. Constitution. I haven’t said one thing to them.”
Following the encounter, Marco Polo issued a statement on the social media platform X, criticizing Cohen Biden’s actions and suggesting that she exhibited the same level of impulse control as her husband, Hunter Biden. “To the family bringing decency back, anyone who is perceived as opposition is a Nazi,” the organization posted. “Truly contemptible liars & scoundrels. We don’t respond in kind in the back of a courtroom, because we’re gentlemen who do not berate women.”