The Guardian Australia

Trump ordered records moved after subpoena, Mar-a-Lago staffer said – reports

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Donald Trump asked for boxes of records at Mar-a-Lago to be moved after receiving a government subpoena to return them, an employee of the former president reportedly told the FBI.

The FBI also has surveillan­ce footage confirming the employee’s testimony, the Washington Post and CNN reported on Wednesday.

Together, the testimony and surveillan­ce footage could represent some of the strongest known evidence to date of possible obstructio­n of justice by the former president.

The employee, who was working at Mar-a-Lago, is cooperatin­g with the justice department and has been interviewe­d multiple times by federal agents, according to the Post.

The witness initially denied handling sensitive documents, but in subsequent conversati­ons with agents admitted to moving boxes at Trump’s request after Trump advisers received a subpoena in May for documents the former president was keeping at his Palm Beach estate, the newspaper reported. The FBI conducted a court-approved search on 8 August at Trump’s home at Mar-a-Lago, seizing more than 11,000 documents, including about 100 marked as classified.

The justice department did not immediatel­y respond to a request for comment on the report. A Trump spokespers­on said the Biden administra­tion had “weaponized law enforcemen­t”.

“Every other president has been given time and deference regarding the administra­tion of documents, as the president has the ultimate authority to categorize records, and what materials should be classified,” the spokespers­on, Taylor Budowich, told the Post.

Since news of the investigat­ion into his handling of the documents broke in August, Trump has obtained the appointmen­t of a special master to examine the materials seized by the FBI, and has asked the supreme court to intervene in a disagreeme­nt about which documents should fall under the special master’s purview.

The investigat­ion into Trump’s handling of classified documents is one of several continuing investigat­ions and legal cases he faces as he considers running for president in 2024.

New York state’s attorney general recently filed a civil lawsuit accusing Trump and three of his adult children of fraud and misreprese­ntation in preparing financial statements from the family real estate company.

The Trump Organizati­on also is scheduled to go on trial on 24 October on New York state criminal tax fraud charges.

 ?? Photograph: Marco Bello/ Reuters ?? The material could be among the strongest evidence yet of possible obstructio­n of justice by Donald Trump.
Photograph: Marco Bello/ Reuters The material could be among the strongest evidence yet of possible obstructio­n of justice by Donald Trump.

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