Daily Tribune (Philippines)

Six more classified docs found in Biden home

More classified documents embarrass the US president

-

WASHINGTON, United States (AFP) — Officials from the United States Department of Justice found six more classified documents during a search of Joe Biden’s family home in Delaware this week, the president’s personal lawyer said in a statement Saturday.

The new disclosure served up another embarrassi­ng twist for Biden in an affair dogging him just as he gets ready to declare whether he will run for another term in 2024.

Biden insists he has done nothing wrong and has downplayed the situation as an innocent mistake.

Documents from his time as vice president and marked as classified first turned up in an office at a Biden-affiliated think tank in Washington last year, and then again at his home in Delaware. Altogether they are about a dozen documents.

After the second find, the White House offered to let the Department of Justice search the Delaware home — the search was carried out on Friday and is now concluded, Biden attorney Bob Bauer said.

“DoJ took possession of materials it deemed within the scope of its inquiry, including six items consisting of documents with classifica­tion markings and surroundin­g materials,” Bauer said.

The search lasted more than 12 hours and covered “all working, living and storage spaces in the home,” Bauer said.

“DoJ had full access to the President’s home, including personally handwritte­n notes, files, papers, binders, memorabili­a, to-do lists, schedules and reminders going back decades,” he said.

Some of the new papers seized were from Biden’s time in the Senate and some were from his tenure as vice president, according to Bauer.

Bauer said Biden’s personal lawyers and White House counsel previously arranged with the Justice Department to be present during the inspection, and they agreed to not publicize news of the search in advance “in accordance with its standard procedures.”

Some of the new papers seized were from Biden’s time in the Senate.

The White House has said the earlier batches of documents were turned over to the Justice Department and National Archives, which handles presidenti­al records, as soon as they were found.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines