Daily Freeman (Kingston, NY)

Obstructio­n a major focus in Trump documents probe

- By Eric Tucker, Jill Colvin and Michael Balsamo

WASHINGTON >> The FBI investigat­ion into top-secret government informatio­n discovered at Mar-aLago is zeroing in on the question of whether former President Donald Trump’s team criminally obstructed the probe. A new document alleges that government records had been concealed and removed and that law enforcemen­t officials were misled about what was still there.

The allegation does not necessaril­y mean that Trump or anyone else will ultimately face charges. But it could pose the most direct legal threat to Trump and those in his orbit, in part because the Justice Department has historical­ly regarded obstructio­n as an aggravatin­g factor that tilts in favor of bringing criminal charges involving the mishandlin­g of classified informatio­n.

“It goes to the heart of trying to suborn the very integrity of our criminal justice system,” said David Laufman, who once oversaw the same Justice Department counterint­elligence section now responsibl­e for the Mar-a-Lago investigat­ion.

The latest Justice Department motion in the case is focused less on the removal last year of classified informatio­n from the White House to Mara-Lago and more on the events of this past spring and summer. That’s when law enforcemen­t officials tried — unsuccessf­ully — to get all documents back and were assured, falsely, that everything had been accounted for after a “diligent search.”

The Justice Department issued a subpoena in May for the records, and officials visited Mara-Lago on June 3 to collect them. When they got there, Tuesday’s department document says, they were handed by a Trump lawyer a “single Redweld envelope, double-wrapped in tape” containing documents.

A custodian for the records presented a sworn certificat­ion to the officials saying that “any and all responsive documents” to the subpoena had been located. A Trump lawyer said all records that had come from the White House had been held in one location — a storage room — and there were none in any private space or other spot at the house.

But the FBI came to doubt the truth of those statements and obtained a search warrant to return on Aug. 8.

Officials had “developed evidence that government records were likely concealed and removed from the Storage Room and that efforts were likely taken to obstruct the government’s investigat­ion,” the new Justice Department filing says.

In their August search, agents found classified documents not only in the storage room, but also in the former president’s office — including three classified documents found not in boxes but in office desks, according to the Justice Department.

In some instances, the agents and attorneys conducting the review of seized documents required additional clearances since the material was so highly classified.

“That the FBI, in a matter of hours, recovered twice as many documents with classifica­tion markings as the ‘diligent search’ that the former president’s counsel and other representa­tives had weeks to perform calls into serious question the representa­tions made in the June 3 certificat­ion and casts doubt on the extent of cooperatio­n in this matter,” the document states.

The Justice Department has stated in court filings that, besides investigat­ing crimes related to the mishandlin­g of national defense informatio­n and other documents, it is also looking into whether anyone committed obstructio­n.

It is not clear from the filing how much of that inquiry might center on Trump, who has repeatedly insisted that his team was cooperativ­e with the FBI, versus any of his lawyers or representa­tives involved in making the representa­tions to the department.

Obstructio­n matters because it’s one of the factors investigat­ors look for in weighing whether to bring charges. For instance, in his July 2016 announceme­nt that the FBI would not be recommendi­ng criminal charges against Hillary Clinton in an investigat­ion involving handling of her emails, FBI Director James Comey cited the absence of obstructio­n as one of the reasons.

When the Justice Department charged former CIA Director David Petraeus in 2015 with sharing classified informatio­n with his biographer, it made a point of including in court documents details about false statements prosecutor­s said he made during an FBI interview.

It is not the first time that an obstructio­n investigat­ion has surfaced in connection with Trump. Special Counsel Robert Mueller investigat­ed whether Trump had obstructed an inquiry into whether his 2016 presidenti­al campaign had colluded with Russia, and though Mueller did not recommend charges against the then-sitting president, he also pointedly declined to exonerate him.

In the current case, federal investigat­ors are likely evaluating why Trump representa­tives provided statements about the status of classified informatio­n at Mar-a-Lago that proved easily contradict­ed by the evidence, as well as which individual­s were involved in removing boxes. and why.

Sarah Krissoff, a New York lawyer and former federal prosecutor, said the detailed informatio­n in this week’s filing tells its own tale.

“Reading between the lines of what they were saying here, it suggests that they had very direct informatio­n from a source regarding the location of classified documents within Mar-a-Lago and essentiall­y the concealmen­t of, or lack of cooperatio­n with, the prior efforts to recover those documents,” she said.

The purpose of the Tuesday night filing was to oppose a request from the Trump legal team for a special master to review the documents seized during this month’s search and to return to him certain seized property. U.S. District Judge Aileen Cannon is to hear arguments on the matter on Thursday.

Cannon on Saturday said it was her “preliminar­y intent” to appoint such a person but also gave the Justice Department an opportunit­y to respond.

On Monday, the department said it had already completed its review of potentiall­y privileged documents and identified a “limited set of materials that potentiall­y contain attorney-client privileged informatio­n.” It said Tuesday that a special master was therefore unnecessar­y and that the presidenti­al records that were taken from the home do not belong to Trump.

 ?? STEVE HELBER/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? This is an aerial view of former President Donald Trump’s Mar-a-Lago club in Palm Beach, Fla., on Wednesday.
STEVE HELBER/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS This is an aerial view of former President Donald Trump’s Mar-a-Lago club in Palm Beach, Fla., on Wednesday.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States