Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Looking into Biden the right thing to do

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After months of bashing the Justice Department for going after the former president, Republican­s are welcoming an investigat­ion into the current one. Attorney General Merrick Garland announced Thursday that he would be appointing a special prosecutor to investigat­e how and why classified documents from President Joe Biden’s time in the Obama administra­tion remained in his possession.

“As I have said before, I strongly believe that the normal processes of this department can handle all investigat­ions with integrity,” Garland said at a news conference Thursday. “But under the regulation­s, the extraordin­ary circumstan­ces here require the appointmen­t of a special counsel.” It was revealed this week that Biden’s legal team discovered a set of classified documents when cleaning out his personal office in Washington, D.C., in November. A second set of documents was also apparently found at his home in Delaware. Both sets of documents were said to be left over from his time as vice president. North Carolina Republican Rep. Dan Bishop expressed concern that the public was just now finding out if the documents were discovered in November.

North Carolina Sen. Thom Tillis and other Republican­s called on Garland to appoint a special prosecutor to investigat­e the Biden matter, saying “there should be no double standard in our justice system.” Garland complied. The Biden news has drawn comparison­s to the ongoing criminal investigat­ion into former President Donald Trump’s potential mishandlin­g of classified documents, which came to a head in August when the FBI executed a search warrant at Mar-a-Lago. While the inquiries into Trump and Biden both concern classified documents, the two cases appear to have key difference­s — despite the GOP’s eagerness to conflate them. A “small number” of classified documents were found in Biden’s possession, and his lawyers immediatel­y notified authoritie­s, voluntaril­y returning the documents as soon as they were discovered. More than 300 documents have been recovered from Trump since he left office in 2021, many of which were only obtained through a subpoena and a court-authorized search of his private residence.

Most significan­tly, investigat­ors are also evaluating whether to charge Trump with obstructio­n of justice or destructio­n of documents because he and his legal team may have defied subpoenas and made false statements in their failure to turn over all relevant documents. We agree with Garland’s decision to appoint a special prosecutor with Biden. An investigat­ion is not an indictment — it’s an opportunit­y to provide clarity where answers are needed, and we welcome that. It shows Americans that the Justice Department will take any potential mishandlin­g of classified documents seriously, regardless of whether the person is a Democrat or Republican. That helps refute the loud allegation­s of politiciza­tion that Republican­s have hurled at the DOJ — and are planning to investigat­e now that they’ve taken the House majority.

If the Biden and Trump situations are indeed different, then the investigat­ion will reflect that instead of allowing resentment and conspiracy to fester. Regardless, Americans should be pleased that the DOJ is doing its job.

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