A non-profit group has uploaded thousands of new photos from the abandoned laptop said to be Hunter Biden’s and made them available for public viewing on a website.
Marco Polo, a nonprofit led by former Donald Trump aide Garrett Ziegler, says its mission is to expose “corruption and blackmail.”
Ziegler said the photos span from 2008 to 2019.
Some photos reportedly showed President Joe Biden’s son smoking crack as he drove a car in 2018. The New York Post said it was the same year he took apparently took a picture of himself driving 172 mph in a Porsche.
The Daily Mail reported some photos and texts were of Biden preparing to meet women in Las Vegas in early 2019.
“I don’t have a bathing suit, and I really really wanted to wear a cute bathing suit,” one woman named “Cheryl” apparently wrote to Hunter Biden. “But I don’t have any money to buy one, so then I’m just going to have to be naked, right?”
One woman seemingly wrote Biden about the women at the party. “Honestly, babe, the problem is you have too many girls there,” she said, according to the Daily Mail.
Biden was reportedly not involved in an accident in either the crack pipe or 172 mph incidents.
The Daily Mail reported that Biden wrote about a near miss in Beautiful Things, his 2021 memoir. On October 27, 2016, he wrote that he “nodded off behind the wheel” outside Palm Springs, California.
“Waking up an instant later, I found myself in midair, the car having jumped a soft curb on the passing lane and soaring at eighty miles an hour into a cloudless blue sky, heading into the gulch that divided I-10,” Biden wrote.
Marco Polo’s Ziegler claimed the photos show the Biden family during good and bad moments, per Fox News.
“We’re not Republican activists. None of us are registered Republicans,” Ziegler told Fox News. “In fact, I loved and still love Trump precisely because he wasn’t a standard Republican. So this is not a hit job.
“We’re going to keep all the photos that paint the Bidens in a good light and keep all the photos that paint the Bidens in a bad light. The American people can judge for themselves what they think about their first family through this.”