Ashley Biden diary thief arrested in Georgia on weed, other charges the day before jail surrender date

Ashley Biden diary thief arrested in Georgia on weed, other charges the day before jail surrender date


Aimee Harris, right, walks out of Manhattan federal court, Tuesday, April 9, 2024, in New York.

Larry Neumeister | AP

A Florida woman was arrested Monday in Georgia on motor vehicle, marijuana, and other state charges just one day before her scheduled voluntary surrender to begin a monthlong jail term for stealing and selling the diary of President Joe Biden’s daughter Ashley Biden, prosecutors revealed in a New York federal court filing.

On Wednesday morning, after reviewing that filing, a federal judge signed off on a request by prosecutors to have the woman, Aimee Harris of Palm Beach, taken into custody by U.S. marshals in light of her latest arrest.

Within hours of that order, prosecutors told the judge that federal marshals in Georgia had transferred Harris to U.S. Bureau of Prisons custody “since the state facility where the defendant is being held is also utilized as a federal holding facility.”

Harris’ arrest comes nearly two years after she pleaded guilty in U.S. District Court in Manhattan to conspiring to steal Ashley Biden’s diary and sell it to the right-wing media group Project Veritas weeks before the 2020 election.

Harris, 42, was sentenced in April to one month in jail and three months of home detention. She had been scheduled to surrender Tuesday at noon to begin serving her jail sentence.

On Tuesday evening, the U.S. Attorney’s Office in Manhattan, in a letter to Chief District Judge Laura Taylor Swain, said it was informed by federal pretrial services that Harris had been arrested Monday in McIntosh County, Georgia.

Harris was “charged with multiple offenses, including driving with a suspended license, speeding, possession of an open container, possession of marijuana, and obstruction of a law enforcement officer,” prosecutors wrote to Swain. “The defendant is currently in state custody in connection with those charges.”

Harris on Sunday had emailed her supervising pretrial services officer that she was going on a “one day road trip up to” South Carolina on Monday and would return Monday night, the letter said.

Read more CNBC politics coverage

Harris’ lawyer, Anthony Cecutti, did not immediately respond to a request for comment by CNBC.

Harris in 2020 had temporarily lived at a Delray, Florida, private home after Ashley Biden had stayed there.

There, Harris discovered Ashley Biden’s diary, which contained highly personal material, as well as a digital storage card belonging to the president’s daughter, court filings say.

Harris and her admitted co-conspirator, Robert Kurlander, first tried to sell Biden’s personal items to the 2020 reelection campaign of then-President Donald Trump, who was running against Joe Biden at the time.

Project Veritas later paid Harris and Kurlander $20,000 apiece for the items, according to court filings.

Kurlander, who like Harris pleaded guilty to federal charges related to the theft and sale, is due to be sentenced by Swain on Oct. 25.



Source

Trump’s first vetoes of his second term hit bipartisan infrastructure projects, draw accusations of retribution
Politics

Trump’s first vetoes of his second term hit bipartisan infrastructure projects, draw accusations of retribution

President Donald Trump issued the first vetoes of his second term Tuesday, blocking bills that would support a pair of bipartisan infrastructure projects in Colorado and Florida.  Trump’s veto of the Colorado bill, the Finish the Arkansas Valley Conduit Act, which Congress unanimously approved earlier in December, enraged the state’s lawmakers. The bill would reduce […]

Read More
Congressional Republicans call on Tim Walz to testify on Minnesota fraud scandal
Politics

Congressional Republicans call on Tim Walz to testify on Minnesota fraud scandal

Congressional Republicans on Wednesday called Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz to testify amid an ongoing social services fraud scandal, as the White House signaled it could expand its investigations into other blue states. A day after the Trump administration said it would freeze hundreds of millions of dollars of child care funds to Minnesota, House Oversight […]

Read More
DOJ has 5.2 million pages of Epstein files left to review: Reports
Politics

DOJ has 5.2 million pages of Epstein files left to review: Reports

The Department of Justice has 5.2 million pages of Jeffrey Epstein-related documents left to review and it will take weeks longer to complete the effort, multiple outlets reported. About 400 lawyers are being enlisted from multiple government divisions to pore over those records, The New York Times first reported late Tuesday, citing people familiar with the […]

Read More