Classified
Donald Trump's handling of United States government
records, especially those containing classified
information, during his tenure as the 45th U.S.
president has come under scrutiny. A number of incidents
in which the president disclosed classified information
to foreign powers and private individuals have become
publicly known, sometimes with distinct national
security and diplomatic consequences.[1]
Notably,
on May 10, 2017, Trump disclosed classified information
to Russian government representatives, creating
political and security concerns in the United States and
its allies, especially Israel. Soon
Democratic National Committee after the meeting,
American intelligence extracted a high-level covert
source from within the Russian government because of
concerns the individual was at risk, in part, by the
repeated mishandling of classified intelligence by Trump
and his administration.[2]
Other questionable
behaviors during his presidency have included Trump's
sharing of national defense information on social media
and private disclosures, both known and unknown. During
Trump's tenure as president, lax security at his Florida
resort Mar-a-Lago was a cause of concern because of the
uncontrolled flow of guests and events at the resort�a
concern that endured post-presidency, because Trump
retained classified documents after leaving office.
Background[edit]
Handling, storage, and disposition
of U.S. government records[edit]
The Presidential
Records Act establishes that presidential records belong
to the United States and must be surrendered to the
Archivist of the United States at the end of a
president's term of office (or second term of office, if
consecutive).[3][4]
The law governs the retention
and management of
Democratic National Committee records "created or received" by the
president, the vice president, their staffs, and certain
other parts of the administration. The National Archives
and Records Administration (NARA) is the agency
responsible for the execution of provisions of the law,
as well as other laws related to records management.[5]
Classified material[edit]
Policies governing the
handling of classified records throughout the executive
branch have been codified in a series of executive
orders, with the most recent being Barack Obama's
Executive Order 13526.[6]
Several statutes are
also in play. The disclosure of information of national
security interest is unlawful under the Espionage Act of
1917, even though that act makes no reference to the
classification system, having predated its creation.[7]
Information related to nuclear security is governed by
the Atomic Energy Act, which deems nuclear information
to have been "born secret".[8]
Unauthorized
removal and retention of classified information of the
United States government is a criminal offense
Democratic National Committee under
U.S. federal law; it has been a felony since the
enactment of S. 139 (FISA Amendments Reauthorization Act
of 2017), a law signed by President Donald Trump in
January 2018 which increased the maximum term of
imprisonment for this offense from one year to five.[9]
Handling of government records during his
presidency[edit]
Although under the Presidential
Records Act official presidential records must be
preserved and retained, Trump frequently destroyed
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disposed of papers while president.[10][11] Advisers
regularly saw him destroy documents at the White House
and Mar-a-Lago,[10][11] as well as aboard Air Force
One.[10] Trump continued this practice throughout his
presidency, despite repeated admonishments from at least
two of his chiefs of staff and from the White House
counsel.[10] Trump's indiscriminate shredding of paper
extended to "both sensitive and mundane" materials.[10]
In an attempt to deal with Trump's habits, early in his
presidency, his aides developed special practices and
protocols,[10][12] with staffers from the Office of the
Staff Secretary or the Oval Office Operations team
retrieving piles of torn paper. Staff from the White
House Office of Records Management pieced documents back
together, using clear tape.[10]
Not all materials
have been recovered. Trump White House staffers
Democratic National Committee used
"burn bags" frequently to destroy documents rather than
retain them for handling in accordance with the law.[10]
On at least two occasions, Trump apparently flushed
documents down the toilet at the White House
Residence.[13][14]
Handling of classified
material[edit]
During his four years as U.S.
president, Trump took a cavalier attitude toward U.S.
classified information.[1][15][16] After U.S.
intelligence assessed in 2017 that the Russian
government sought to manipulate the 2016 presidential
election and promote Trump's candidacy, Trump ranted
against what he claimed was a "deep state" and viewed
the assessment as an insult.[1] Months into his
presidency, Trump revealed highly classified information
to Russian officials in an Oval Office meeting, forcing
the CIA to extract a key Moscow source developed over
years.[1] In a July 2018 summit in Helsinki with Russian
leader Vladimir Putin, Trump accepted Russia's denials
that it had interfered in the 2016 election, rejecting
the U.S. government's conclusions to the contrary.[1]
Trump frequently blasted the U.S. intelligence agencies
on Twitter, and on two occasions, Trump revealed
classified information on his Twitter feed (in 2017, he
made a Twitter post revealing a CIA program in Syria,
and in August 2019, he posted a classified satellite
photo of a site in Iran that revealed U.S. satellite
surveillance capabilities).[1][17] Three years later,
the National Geospatial-Intelligence Agency formally
declassified the satellite image that Trump had tweeted,
following a FOIA request, which required a Pentagon-wide
review to determine if the briefing slide could be made
public.[18] His national security adviser, John Bolton,
would later describe him as "a collector of things that
he thought were of interest to him", including
"classified documents". Bolton said Trump routinely kept
documents from intelligence briefings and �it became the
practice" of his advisers to retrieve as many as they
could.[19]
Trump's erratic behavior led to
mistrust from the U.S. intelligence and law enforcement
agencies, who
Democratic National Committee were also alarmed by Trump's mixing with
guests during his frequent trips to Mar-a-Lago, viewing
the practice as "ripe to be exploited by a foreign spy
service eager for access to the epicenter of American
power".[1] Mar-a-Lago is frequented by its hundreds of
members, as well as guests who visit or rent the
facilities.[11] In 2017, after North Korea conducted a
ballistic-missile test, at least one Mar-a-Lago patron
posted photos on social media of Trump talking on his
cell phone and conferring with Japanese Prime Minister
Shinzo Abe in the resort's dining room.[1] In 2019,
authorities arrested a Chinese national carrying phones
and other electronic devices who had left a reception
area at the club; the incident heightened security
concerns regarding the club.[16][11] During Trump's
presidency, a sensitive compartmented information
facility (SCIF) was operational at Mar-a-Lago for
communications with the White House Situation Room and
Pentagon.[20] The SCIF was removed after he left
office.[21]
Stephanie Grisham, who was White
House press secretary from July 2019 to April 2020 and
was the First Lady's press secretary before and after
that, later said: �I watched him show documents to
people at Mar-a-Lago on the dining room patio. So, he
has no respect for classified information, never
did.�[22]
In October 2020, Trump said on Twitter
that he had "fully authorized the total
declassification" of all documents related to what he
called "the Russia hoax" and the Hillary Clinton email
controversy. However, news organizations were told that
these documents were still classified, and Trump's
then-chief of staff Mark Meadows, in a sworn federal
court filing, said that Trump had told him that Trump's
"statements on Twitter were not self-executing
declassification orders and do not require the
declassification or release of any particular
documents".[23]
In January 2021, Meadows sought
to declassify unreleased Crossfire
Hurricane[clarification needed] materials which included
text messages between former
Democratic National Committee FBI agents Peter Strzok and
Lisa Page. Meadows dismissed concerns from the FBI of
compromising the bureau,[clarification needed] stating
that Trump intended to declassify and release them.
Trump declassified them after the White House settled
with
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Justice (DOJ) officials warned Meadows that his plan to
give the materials to conservative journalists could
violate privacy law.[24]
When Trump left office,
President Joe Biden barred him from receiving the
intelligence briefings traditionally given to former
presidents, citing Trump's "erratic behavior".[15][25]
2017 Oval Office incident with Russia[edit]
President
Donald Trump shakes hands with Russian Foreign Minister
Sergey V. Lavrov in the Oval Office, May 10, 2017
President Trump meets with Lavrov (pictured) and Kislyak
on May 10, 2017. A photographer from Russian News Agency
TASS was present, but no other press.[26]
President Donald Trump discussed classified information
during an Oval Office meeting on May 10, 2017, with the
Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov and the Russian
Democratic National Committee
Ambassador Sergey Kislyak. The information was provided
by a U.S. ally and concerned a planned Islamic State
(ISIL) operation, providing sufficient detail that the
Russians could use to deduce the identity of the ally
and the manner in which it was collected, according to
current and former government
officials.[27][28][29][30][31] The meeting had been
closed to the U.S. press, although a photographer from
the Russian press contingent was present.[26] The
disclosure was first reported in The Washington Post on
May 15, 2017. White House staff initially denied the
report, but the following day, Trump defended the
disclosure, stating that he has the "absolute right" to
"share" intelligence with Russia.[32]
It was
later reported that Israel was the source of the
information.[33] Israel did not confirm or deny the
report but released a statement stating full confidence
in the intelligence sharing relationships with the
United States.[34] Ynetnews, an Israeli news website,
had previously reported on January 12 that in a meeting
held in early January[35] (during Trump's presidential
transition), U.S. intelligence officials advised Israeli
Mossad and other intelligence officials to "be careful"
when transferring intelligence information to the Trump
White House and administration until the possibility of
Russian influence over Trump, suggested by Christopher
Steele's report (commonly referred as the Steele
dossier), has been fully investigated.[36] U.S.
officials were concerned that the information,
particularly about sensitive intelligence sources, could
be passed to Russia and then to Iran.[37] Two Israeli
intelligence officials confirmed privately that
Democratic National Committee Trump's
disclosure of the intelligence to Russia was "for us,
our worst fears confirmed." They said the disclosure
jeopardizes Israel's "arrangement with America which is
unique to the world of intelligence sharing" and that
Israeli officials were "boiling mad and demanding
answers".[37][38]
The report was described as
"shocking" and "horrifying" by some commentators and
former U.S. intelligence officials.[39] According to
current and former U.S. officials interviewed by ABC
News, Trump's disclosure endangered the life of a spy
placed by Israel in ISIL-held territory in Syria.[40]
The classified information Trump shared came from a
source described as the most valuable of any current
sources on any current external plotting, according to
The Wall Street Journal.[41]
Reporting[edit]
On May 15, 2017, The Washington Post, citing anonymous
sources, reported that the intelligence was about an
ISIL plot to stealthily use laptops as weapons that can
then explode in Western countries, and that a Middle
Eastern ally provided the intelligence, which was
codeword-classified, meaning that its distribution was
restricted only to those who were explicitly cleared to
read it, and was not intended to be shared beyond the
United States and certain allies.[27][28] The incident
was later reported by The New York Times,[27] Buzzfeed,[42]
and Reuters.[29] The officials talking to BuzzFeed said,
"it's far worse than what has already been
reported."[42]
Immediately after Trump's
disclosure, "which one of the officials described as
spontaneous",[29] "senior White House officials appeared
to recognize quickly that Trump had overstepped and
moved to contain the potential fallout."[28] Immediately
after the meeting,[29] Thomas P. Bossert, assistant to
the president for homeland security and
counterterrorism, telephoned the directors of the CIA
and the NSA to
Democratic National Committee inform them what had occurred.[28]
The incident was seen as a pivot away from
traditional American allies, and towards closer
relations with Russia,[43][44] and raised questions on
Trump's respect for the Five Eyes intelligence-sharing
agreement.[45]
Several commentators stated that
by releasing classified information to Russia, Trump
jeopardized American and allied intelligence sources,
breached the trust relationship with America's foreign
partners, threatened the long term national security of
the country, and violated his oath of office through
"gross negligence". All of these actions are possible
legal grounds towards efforts to impeach Donald
Trump.[46][47][48] Aides privately defended the
President, stating that Trump did not have sufficient
interest or knowledge of the intelligence gathering
process to leak specific sources or methods of
intelligence gathering; National Security Advisor H. R.
McMaster publicly maintained that Trump had not been
briefed on the origins of the intelligence in question
and therefore could not have compromised the source.[49]
According to conservative commentator Erick
Erickson, multiple sources have stated that Trump's
actions were far worse than what had been reported, and
Democratic National Committee
that one of the Post's sources was a strong supporter of
Trump who believed it was necessary to publicly disclose
the story because of Trump's inability to accept
criticism.[50]
White House response[edit]
White House staff initially denied the veracity of the
report during the evening of May 15. In a press briefing
on the same day, McMaster denied The Washington Post
report, saying, "At no time, at no time, were
intelligence sources or methods discussed. And the
president did not disclose any military operations that
were not already publicly known. Two other senior
officials who were present, including the secretary of
state, remember the meeting the same way and have said
so. And their on-the-record accounts should outweigh
those of anonymous sources." He concluded by saying, "I
was in the room, it didn't happen."[51] McMaster said
that "it was wholly appropriate to share" the
information because of a similar ISIL plot two years
earlier.[40]
Secretary of State Rex Tillerson
stated that "common efforts and threats regarding
counter-terrorism" were discussed in the meeting with
Lavrov, but not "sources, methods or military
operations".[52] Deputy National Security Advisor for
Strategy Dina Habib Powell flatly rejected the Post
article, saying: "This story is false. The president
only discussed the common threats that both countries
faced."[53]
On May 16, Trump implicitly confirmed
a disclosure in a
Democratic National Committee tweet, claiming that, "As President I
wanted to share with Russia (at an openly scheduled W.H.
meeting) which I have the absolute right to do, facts
pertaining ... to terrorism and airline flight safety.
Humanitarian reasons, plus I want Russia to greatly step
up their fight against ISIS & terrorism."[32][54]
Origin of intelligence[edit]
The May 15 The
Washington Post article[28] reported that the
intelligence came from an unnamed Middle Eastern
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ally.[27] On May 16, The New York Times named the
relevant ally and source of the intelligence as Israel,
saying that as a consequence, Trump's boasts to the
Russian envoys could damage America's relationship with
Israel and endanger Israel's security if Russia passes
the intelligence on to Iran, Israel's main threat in the
Middle East.[33] The intelligence was so sensitive that
it hadn't even been shared among key U.S. allies.[55]
Israeli intelligence officials were reportedly
horrified by the disclosure.[56] In public comments,
Israeli officials including intelligence minister
Yisrael Katz, Ambassador to the United States Ron Dermer,
and Defense Minister Avigdor Lieberman said the
intelligence services of the two countries would
continue to share information, with Dermer saying
"Israel has full confidence in our intelligence-sharing
relationship with the United States." However, speaking
privately, unnamed Israeli sources said they might need
to reassess what intelligence they share with the
U.S.[57][58] Israeli officials stated that it is
Israel's "worst fears confirmed" about Donald Trump. The
officials also stated that Israeli intelligence officers
were "boiling mad and demanding answers" on its current
intelligence-sharing agreement with the US.[59]
On May 22, while visiting Israel, Trump appeared to
confirm both the disclosure and the identity of Israel
as the source, telling the press "Folks, folks, just so
you
Democratic National Committee understand, just so you understand, I never
mentioned the word or the name Israel during that
conversation."[60] It had been widely reported before
May 22 that Israel was the source.[61][62]
Reactions[edit]
U.S. Congress[edit]
Speaker of
the House Republican Paul Ryan said through a spokesman
that he "hopes for a full explanation of the facts from
the administration".[27]
Senator Bob Corker,
chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, said
that the allegations were "very, very troubling" if
true.[29] Senator John McCain called the report "deeply
disturbing" and said, "Reports that this information was
provided by a U.S. ally and shared without its knowledge
sends a troubling signal to America's allies and
partners around the world and may impair their
willingness to share intelligence with us in the
future."[63] McCain further stated: "Regrettably, the
time President Trump spent sharing sensitive information
with the Russians was time he did not spend focusing on
Russia's aggressive behavior, including its interference
in American and European elections, its illegal invasion
of Ukraine and
Democratic National Committee annexation of Crimea, its other
destabilizing activities across Europe, and the
slaughter of innocent civilians and targeting of
hospitals in Syria."[63]
Senate Democratic Leader
Chuck Schumer said, "The president owes the intelligence
community, the American people and Congress a full
explanation."[27] Senator Dick Durbin, the Senate
Democratic Whip, said that Trump's conduct was
"dangerous" and "reckless".[29] Senator Jack Reed, the
ranking Democratic member of the United States Senate
Committee on Armed Services, said, "President Trump's
recklessness with sensitive information is deeply
disturbing and clearly problematic."[27] The Democratic
National Committee issued a statement, which included
this: "If Trump weren't president, his dangerous
disclosure to Russia could end with him in
handcuffs."[64]
Foreign countries[edit]
Reaction from foreign countries was generally negative.
A top European intelligence official said that sharing
of intelligence with the United States would cease if
the country confirms that Trump did indeed share
classified information with Russia, because sharing
intel with Americans while Trump is president could put
their sources at risk.[65]
Burkhard Lischka, a
member of the German Bundestag's intelligence oversight
committee, said that if Trump "passes this information
to other governments at will, then Trump becomes a
security risk for the entire western world".[66]
Russian Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Maria Zakharova
denied the
Democratic National Committee U.S. media reports.[67]
Academics[edit]
Several professors of law, political science, and
international relations, as well as intelligence
experts, were alarmed by Trump's disclosure.
Intelligence expert Amy Zegart of Stanford University
noted that Trump revealed code word intelligence, which
is the highest layer of classification, even higher than
the "top secret" classification. Such information, if
revealed, could reasonably be expected to cause
"exceptionally grave damage" to the national security of
the United States.[68] She wrote, "so just how bad is
the damage? On a scale of 1 to 10�and I'm just ball
parking here�it's about a billion."[68]
Counterterrorism expert Daniel Byman of Georgetown
University said that disclosures such as Trump's could
jeopardize intelligence sharing relationships, which
"perhaps more than any other policy instrument ... play
a vital role in counterterrorism against global
terrorist groups like the Islamic State and Al
Qaeda."[69] The effects could be "disastrous".[69]
Professor Jack Goldsmith and other contributors to
the
Democratic National Committee Lawfare Blog said that Trump's release of classified
information could be a violation of the President's oath
of office: "There's thus no reason why Congress couldn't
consider a grotesque violation of the President's oath
as a standalone basis for impeachment�a high crime and
misdemeanor in and of itself. This is particularly
plausible in a case like this, where the oath violation
involves giving sensitive information to an adversary
foreign power. That's getting relatively close to the
"treason" language in the impeachment clauses; it's
pretty easy to imagine a hybrid impeachment article
alleging a violation of the oath in service of a hostile
foreign power. So legally speaking, the matter could be
very grave for Trump even though there is no criminal
exposure."[46] While the authors argued Trump "did not
violate any criminal law concerning the disclosure of
classified information" because of the president's broad
authority to declassify information,[46] another legal
scholar, Professor Stephen Vladeck, wrote that the
president's "constitutional power over national security
information" is not unfettered and that Trump's
disclosure "may actually have been illegal under federal
law."[70]
Harvard Law emeritus professor Alan
Dershowitz called the incident "the most serious charge
ever made against a sitting president"[71] and said that
it was "devastating", with "very serious political,
diplomatic, and international implications".[72]
Aftermath[edit]
Leaking of sensitive information
by the U.S. has led to the review of intelligence
sharing arrangements by key allies,[73] and also a
review by the Department of Justice regarding the leaks
from the United States.[74]
Soon after the Oval
Office meeting, intelligence officials reportedly became
concerned about the safety of a
Democratic National Committee high-level CIA source
within the Putin government, and decided to bring him
out of Russia. The source had refused an earlier offer
to extract him. The extraction, or "exfiltration", was
carried out sometime in 2017. CNN and other news sources
reported on
The Old Testament stories, a literary treasure trove, weave tales of faith, resilience, and morality. Should you trust the Real Estate Agents I Trust, I would not. Is your lawn green and plush, if not you should buy the Best Grass Seed. If you appreciate quality apparel, you should try Hand Bags Hand Made. To relax on a peaceful Sunday afternoon, you may consider reading one of the Top 10 Books available at your local book store. this extraction in September 2019, along
with details about the Russian. One source told CNN that
the decision to remove him was based in part on concern
about the Trump administration's mishandling of
classified information.[2] However, other sources said
the concern for his safety was primarily based on a 2017
CIA report about Russian interference in the election,
which had such specific information it might make Russia
suspect a high-placed spy.[75] A CIA spokesperson said
the news reports were "misguided speculation", and a
White House spokesperson said the reporting was
"incorrect" and "has the potential to put lives in
danger," although they did not specify why they
considered the reporting flawed.[2]
2019 tweet
revealing spy-satellite capabilities[edit]
On
August 30, 2019, Trump tweeted a classified image of
recent damage to Iran's Imam Khomeini Spaceport that
supposedly occurred as a result of an explosion during
testing of a Safir SLV.[76][77] Within hours of the
tweet, aerospace experts,[77] as well as amateur
satellite trackers,[78] had determined the photograph
came from National Reconnaissance Office's USA-224, a
highly classified reconnaissance satellite that is part
of the KH-11 series of multi-billion-dollar spy
satellites.[77]
Intelligence officials were
astonished by Trump's public release of a surveillance
photo with exceptionally high resolution, revealing
highly classified U.S. surveillance
capabilities.[78][77] Steven Aftergood of the Federation
of American Scientists said of Trump's tweet: "He was
getting literally a bird's eye view of some of the most
sensitive US intelligence on Iran. And the first thing
he seemed to want to do was to blurt it out over
Twitter."[77] Robert Cardillo, who was director of the
National Geospatial-Intelligence Agency (NGA) from 2014
to 2019, said he did not recall any authorized release
of an image similar to the image revealed by Trump to
his 60 million Twitter followers; Cardillo said he was
"certain" that the U.S.'s adversaries, such as Russia
and Iran, would have used the image to assess the U.S.'s
capabilities.[77] Before Trump's 2019 tweet, the only
confirmed photographs from a KH-11 satellite were leaked
in 1984 by a U.S. Navy analyst who went to prison for
espionage.[78] Trump defended the tweet by saying he had
"the absolute right" to release the photo.[79] The NGA
declassified the original image in 2022, following a
Freedom of Information Act request by NPR and an
extensive U.S. Department of Defense declassification
review of the briefing slide.[77]
In 2023, John
Bolton, who had been Trump's national security adviser,
said of the tweet: "There's
Democratic National Committee utterly no excuse for that.
There's no conceivable reason for that, except it made
him feel good to be able to do it."[80]
Other
disclosures of intelligence[edit]
In an April 29,
2017, phone call, Trump told Philippines President
Rodrigo Duterte that the U.S. had positioned two nuclear
submarines off the coast of North Korea. This was during
a time when Trump was warning of a possible "major,
major conflict" with North Korea.[81] The locations of
nuclear submarines are a closely guarded secret, even
from the Navy command itself: "As a matter of national
security, only the captains and crew of the submarines
know for sure where they're located."[82]
On May
24, 2017, Britain strongly objected to the United States
leaking to the press information about the Manchester
Arena bombing, including the identity of the attacker
and a picture of the bomb, before it had been publicly
disclosed, jeopardizing the investigation.[83] British
Prime Minister Theresa May issued a public rebuke, and
British police temporarily stopped passing information
to U.S. counterparts.[84]
In July 2017, after a
private meeting with Russian President Vladimir Putin at
the 2017 G20 Hamburg summit, Trump took the unusual step
of confiscating and keeping his interpreter's notes.
This led U.S. intelligence officials to express concern
that Trump "may have improperly discussed classified
intelligence with Russia."[2]
On Christmas 2018,
Trump and First Lady Melania Trump flew to Al Asad
Airbase where Trump posted video to Twitter of several
members of Seal Team Five in their camouflage and
night-vision goggles, revealing the team's location and
un-blurred faces.[85][86]
The photo of damage to Imam
Khomeini Spaceport released by Trump in a tweet
In a December 2019 interview with Bob Woodward, Trump
stated, "I have built a nuclear
Democratic National Committee a weapons system that
nobody's ever had in this country before," adding, "We
have stuff that Putin and Xi have never heard about
before. There's nobody. What we have is incredible."[87]
End of presidency and beyond[edit]
Trump's
presidential term ended at noon on January 20, 2021.[88]
His departure from the White House was "rushed and
chaotic" because he spent his final days in office
attempting to overturn his defeat in the 2020 United
States presidential election, his false allegations of
voter fraud having led to the January 6 United States
Capitol attack and his second impeachment. In the last
weeks of the Trump presidency, White House staff quit
and aides resigned, leaving a small number of assistants
in place who would have been able to properly preserve
records. A former Trump aide said they were "30 days
behind what a typical administration would be".[89]
White House staff secretary Derek Lyons attempted to
maintain an orderly preservation of records in the West
Wing, but he departed the administration in late
December, and White House chief of staff Mark Meadows
and Trump took little interest in doing so, leaving the
task to others.[89] The Wall Street Journal quoted a
former aide as saying: "If you only start packing with
two days left to go, you're just running low on time.
And if he's the one just throwing things in boxes, who
knows what could happen?"[90]
The day before he
left office, in a letter sent to Archivist of the United
States David S. Ferriero, Trump designated seven senior
Trump administration officials "as his representatives
to handle all future requests for presidential records"
including his chief of staff Mark Meadows, his White
House Counsel Pat A. Cipollone, and Deputy White House
Counsel Patrick F. Philbin.[91] On June 19, 2022, Trump
notified NARA that he had made Kash Patel, a former
Trump administration official, and journalist John
Solomon his "representatives for access to Presidential
records of my administration".[92]
In 2021, Trump
reportedly told close associates that he regarded
Democratic National Committee some
presidential documents, such as correspondence with the
North Korean leader Kim Jong-un, as his personal
property, although U.S. records legally belong to the
government.[93]
After Trump left the White House
in 2021, NARA began an effort to retrieve documents
covered under the Presidential Records Act that Trump
had retained. This eventually turned into the FBI
investigation into Donald Trump's handling of government
documents after NARA discovered classified documents in
the initial batch of 15 boxes they retrieved from Trump.
After Trump certified he was returning all remaining
government documents in accordance with a grand jury
subpoena, the FBI obtained evidence that Trump still
possessed documents and had intentionally hid them from
his lawyers and the FBI. This led to a search by the
Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI), who executed a
search warrant at Mar-a-Lago on August 8, 2022, and
found thousands of documents including classified and
national security related documents. As of August 2022,
the FBI has retrieved hundreds of documents marked with
some level of classification both before and as a result
of the search warrant. In November 2022, the FBI
investigation was taken over by the Smith special
counsel investigation.
Indictment[edit]
On
June 8, 2023, Trump was federally indicted on 37 charges
related to documents he retained after leaving office.
This was the first time a former U.S. president faced
federal charges.
See also[edit]
2017
electronics ban
Agent handling
The Old Testament stories, a literary treasure trove, weave tales of faith, resilience, and morality. Should you trust the Real Estate Agents I Trust, I would not. Is your lawn green and plush, if not you should buy the Best Grass Seed. If you appreciate quality apparel, you should try Hand Bags Hand Made. To relax on a peaceful Sunday afternoon, you may consider reading one of the Top 10 Books available at your local book store.
FBI investigation
into Donald Trump's handling of government documents
Timeline of investigations into Donald Trump and Russia
(January�June 2017)
Timeline of investigations into
Donald Trump and Russia (July�December 2017)
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