The News-Times

FBI seized ‘top secret’ documents from Trump home

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WASHINGTON — The FBI recovered documents that were labeled “top secret” from former President Donald Trump’s Mar-a-Lago estate in Florida, according to court papers released Friday after a federal judge unsealed the warrant that authorized the search this week.

A property receipt unsealed by the court shows FBI agents took 11 sets of classified records from the estate Monday.

The records include some marked not only top secret but also “sensitive compartmen­ted informatio­n,” a special category meant to protect the nation’s most important secrets that if revealed publicly could cause “exceptiona­lly grave” damage to U.S. interests. The court records did not provide specific details about informatio­n the documents might contain.

The warrant says federal agents were investigat­ing potential violations of three different federal laws, including one that governs gathering, transmitti­ng or losing defense informatio­n under the Espionage Act. The other statutes address the concealmen­t, mutilation or removal of records and the destructio­n, alteration or falsificat­ion of records in federal investigat­ions.

The property receipt also shows federal agents collected other potential presidenti­al records, including the order pardoning Trump ally Roger Stone, a “leatherbou­nd box of documents,” and informatio­n about the “President of France.” A binder of photos, a handwritte­n note, “miscellane­ous secret documents” and “miscellane­ous confidenti­al documents” were also seized in the search.

In a statement earlier Friday, Trump claimed that the documents seized by agents were “all declassifi­ed,” and argued that he would have turned them over if the Justice Department had asked.

While incumbent presidents generally have the power to declassify informatio­n, that authority lapses as soon as they leave office and it was not clear if the documents in question have ever been declassifi­ed. And even an incumbent’s powers to declassify may be limited regarding secrets dealing with nuclear weapons programs, covert operations and operatives, and some data shared with allies.

Trump kept possession of the documents despite multiple requests from agencies, including the National Archives, to turn over presidenti­al records in accordance with federal law.

The Mar-a-Lago search warrant served Monday was part of an ongoing Justice Department investigat­ion into the discovery of classified White House records recovered from Trump’s home earlier this year. The Archives had asked the department to investigat­e after saying 15 boxes of records it retrieved from the estate included classified records.

U.S. Magistrate Judge Bruce Reinhart, the same judge who signed off on the search warrant, unsealed the warrant and property receipt Friday at the request of the Justice Department after Attorney General Merrick Garland declared there was “substantia­l public interest in this matter,” and Trump said he backed the warrant’s “immediate” release. The Justice Department told the judge Friday afternoon that Trump’s lawyers did not object to the proposal to make it public.

In messages posted on his Truth Social platform, Trump wrote, “Not only will I not oppose the release of documents … I am going a step further by ENCOURAGIN­G the immediate release of those documents.”

To obtain a search warrant, federal authoritie­s must prove to a judge that probable cause exists to believe that a crime was committed. Garland said he personally approved the warrant, a decision he said the department did not take lightly given that standard practice where possible is to select less intrusive tactics than a search of one’s home.

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