Joe Biden’s Daughter Ashley Admits Her Diary Entries Are Real In Court Letter: ‘Showers With Dad’
After much speculation, Ashley Biden has reportedly claimed her controversial diary in a court filing — and the details inside the journal are shocking.
Ashley made headlines after she accused her father, Democratic president Joe Biden, of inappropriate sexual behavior at a young age in a diary which was stolen from a Florida home in 2020 and published online.
The diary — which was sold for $40,000 — reportedly also held secrets regarding her drug use. Following treatment at a rehab, Ashley moved to a halfway house where the book was found under a mattress, per The Daily Mail.
According to the media outlet, Ashley herself has confirmed that the diary is authentic in a court filing which became public last month.
The president's daughter, 42, reportedly also wrote in her journal about showering with her father in addition to her fears that she may have been hypersexualized at a young age.
"What was this due to?" she asked in a written entry from 2019. "I can't remember specifics but I do remember trauma. She also stated in the same entry that she was undergoing treatment for "trauma."
Specializing in fact-checking obscure truths and misinformation, Snopes has recently changed Ashley's diary fact check from "unproven" to "true" based on testimony provided by Ashley in an April 8 letter to a New York judge. In the letter, she stated she was "deeply saddened that I even have to write this letter because my private journal was stolen and sold for profit."
The woman who sold Ashley's diary, 41-year-old Aimee Harris, was sentenced to a month in federal jail and three months of home detention for selling Biden's diary to Project Veritas — a conservative media group dedicated to secretly infiltrating progressive organizations.
Harris was also ordered to forfeit $20,000 and serve three years of probation at her sentencing in the U.S. District Court in Manhattan, per CNBC.
"I do not believe I am above the law," Harris told the Associated Press. "I'm a survivor of long-term domestic abuse and sexual trauma."