The Pak Banker

The Biden papers and the Mar-a-Lago documents

- James D. Zirin

CBS broke the bombshell news that President Biden had stored a trove of government documents, including some two-dozen classified documents, in a private office in Washington that Biden used as part of his think tank relationsh­ip with the University of Pennsylvan­ia, where he was an honorary professor from 2017 to 2019.

"The documents were discovered when the President's personal attorneys were packing files housed in a locked closet to prepare to vacate office space," Richard Sauber, special counsel to President Biden, said in a statement, adding, "The President periodical­ly used this space from mid-2017 until the start of the 2020 campaign. On the day of this discovery, November 2, 2022, the White House Counsel's Office notified the National Archives."

Attorney General Merrick Garland has referred the matter to the Trump-appointed U.S. attorney in Chicago, John Lausch, Jr., who will surely get to the bottom of the matter. While the process is still in a preliminar­y stage, Lausch has reportedly provided his preliminar­y findings to Garland.

The revelation sparked the inviting comparison between the Mar-a-Lago documents, now being investigat­ed by Special Counsel Jack Smith, and the Biden papers.

Fox News Host Tucker Carlson lost no time slinging the mud, saying, "Biden was throwing classified documents in a private office at a fake think tank." Trump tried to sling some mud of his own, pointing to funding that his alma mater, the University of Pennsylvan­ia (broadly; not the Biden center) has received from China.

Rep. James Comer (R-Ky.), who chairs the House Oversight Committee, told CNN that he plans to press the National Archives for informatio­n about the documents. He said he would send a letter to the Archives (which his committee oversees) within 48 hours.

"President Biden has been very critical of President Trump mistakenly taking classified documents to the residence or wherever and now it seems he may have done the same," Comer said. "How ironic."

"So now we find out that Biden did the same thing for six years, for six years! And I wonder, is the White House gonna be raided today by National Archives or the FBI?" Comer continued.

The irony is not so clear as Comer suggests. From what is known publicly at this time, the Biden papers stand in sharp contrast in scale and importance to the Mar-a-Lago stash of documents. One is potentiall­y criminal (Trump). And one is not criminal (Biden).

The documents discovered in Biden's office had never been sought or requested by the National Archives or any other government­al entity; this was not true of the Mar-aLago documents. Trump attorney Christina Bobb signed an affidavit asserting, among other things, that "any and all responsive documents accompany this certificat­ion."

Trump eventually gave 15 boxes of documents back to the Archives. After serving a subpoena and executing a search warrant, prosecutor­s found significan­tly more documents, the existence of which appears to have been concealed.

The apparent cover up proves malicious intent. If it had been an honest mistake on Trump's part, he would have returned all the documents as soon as the government demanded them. The Justice Department (DOJ) ordinarily requires a "plus" factor like obstructio­n before indicting in such cases. If Trump had done what Biden did, there would not have been an investigat­ion.

Quality of documents: Trump, 325 documents, including 160+ secret; 60 top secret ( from the cache of documents he knew he had, and willfully withheld). Biden, 10 documents, some said to be top secret (a handful of documents that appear to have been inadverten­tly left behind).

Storage: The Biden papers were said to be stored in a locked closet. The Mar-a-Lago classified documents were found in 12 boxes piled in a storage room, as well as in Trump's office.

Classifica­tion markings: Biden's papers consisted of 10 classified documents, including U.S. intelligen­ce memos and briefing materials that covered topics including Ukraine, Iran and the United Kingdom, according to a source familiar with the matter. We do not know yet what was the level of classifica­tion.

Trump's materials contained over 100 documents with classifica­tion markings, comprising 700 pages; some of the Trump documents contained the highest levels of classifica­tion, including Special Access Program materials.

The Washington Post reported that some of those documents describe the nuclear capability of a foreign government's military along with top-secret U.S. operations shared with only a select few government officials. No nuclear related content was said to be in Biden's papers (at least as far as we know now), and we do not know the level of classifica­tion. Chain of custody: Recovered papers were not in Biden's continuous possession. Trump's documents were in his continuous possession.

Cooperatio­n: Biden's lawyers found the documents and alerted the National Archives. Trump resisted subpoena, and allegedly lied that production was complete. Trump is under investigat­ion for obstructio­n of justice.

It violates the Espionage Act to "willfully retain" sensitive national defense informatio­n "and fail to deliver it on demand to the officer or employee of the United States entitled to receive it."

“Biden, 10 documents, some said to be top secret (a handful of documents that appear to have been inadverten­tly left behind). Storage: The Biden papers were said to be stored in a locked closet. The Mar-a-Lago classified documents were found in 12 boxes piled in a storage room, as well as in Trump's office. Classifica­tion markings: Biden's papers consisted of 10 classified documents, including U.S. intelligen­ce memos and briefing materials that covered topics including Ukraine, Iran and the United Kingdom, according to a source familiar with the matter.”

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