Did Ashley or Naomi Biden publish memoirs mentioning sexual abuse by their father?
Executive summary
Neither Ashley Biden nor Naomi Biden has published a memoir that alleges sexual abuse by their father; what exists in the public record is a set of leaked diary pages attributed to Ashley Biden that were circulated and published by conservative outlets and obtained by Project Veritas, not a self-published or commercially released memoir [1] [2] [3].
1. What the record shows about Ashley Biden’s writings
Public reporting establishes that handwritten diary pages attributed to Ashley Biden surfaced before the 2020 election and were later published on right‑wing websites after being acquired by Project Veritas, with those pages including entries in which the author questions whether she was molested and references having been “hyper‑sexualized” and possible trauma from showers with her father [1] [2] [4].
2. How that material reached the public and legal fallout
Reporting documents that a woman who had lived in a residence Ashley Biden once used sold personal items including the diary to a conservative organization; the seller, Aimee Harris, was later criminally prosecuted and sentenced after the incident, and federal authorities investigated the handling and sale of the diary pages, while Project Veritas paid for materials it said it acquired [2] [3] [5].
3. On authentication, judicial filings, and competing claims
Major fact‑checks conclude there is strong circumstantial evidence the diary exists and that Project Veritas came into possession of material that may have belonged to Ashley Biden, but the contents have not been fully authenticated to the public’s satisfaction, and reporting is mixed about claims that a judge or special master “confirmed” allegations; some outlets with partisan leanings have amplified courtroom language as definitive, while mainstream reporting emphasizes limits of public authentication [1] [6] [7].
4. Why this is not a published memoir and why that distinction matters
A published memoir is a deliberate, author‑controlled publication with editorial oversight and public attribution; what circulated in 2020 and afterward were leaked diary pages and subsequent secondary reporting by outlets that obtained them — not a memoir that Ashley Biden herself released to a publisher or through her own voice — and major outlets such as People and Snopes treat the material as leaked, not self‑published memoir content [2] [1].
5. Naomi Biden: absence of evidence in available reporting
None of the provided reporting links or mentions Naomi Biden making any allegation in a memoir or elsewhere about sexual abuse by her father; the sources focus narrowly on Ashley’s alleged diary and its chain of custody, and do not document a Naomi Biden memoir or public accusation [1] [2] [3]. If Naomi Biden has made statements or published a memoir, those claims are not supported by the documents supplied for this review.
6. Competing agendas and what to watch for in future coverage
Coverage has been shaped by actors with clear political motives: Project Veritas and affiliated conservative sites sought to publicize the diary shortly before an election, while some outlets and fact‑checkers have pushed back and spotlighted gaps in authentication and the legal irregularities around how the pages were acquired [2] [1] [5]. Readers should treat partisan framings cautiously and note that possession and publication by a political actor is not the same as an author’s decision to publish a memoir or to make a public allegation through responsible journalistic channels [2] [1].