Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Trump can’t declassify documents just by thinking or saying so

- Louis Jacobson

Former President Donald Trump attracted wide attention for his comments about presidenti­al declassification powers in an interview with Fox News’ Sean Hannity.

Trump’s Mar-a-Lago home was searched in August by federal agents who were looking for documents the government believes he may have taken improperly when he left the presidency. At least some of these documents were classified.

In the Sept. 21 interview with Hannity, Trump indicated that there should be no concern about taking classified documents to Mar-a-Lago. He said that’s because when he was president, he had the power to declassify documents at will — without having to document that decision or go through any formal steps to coordinate with executive branch agencies.

Here’s the exchange:

Hannity: “OK, you have said on Truth Social a number of times you did declassify —”

Trump: “I did declassify.” Hannity: “OK. Is there a process? What was your process to declassify?”

Trump: “There doesn’t have to be a process, as I understand it. You know, there’s — different people say different things, but as I understand there doesn’t have to be. If you’re the president of the United States, you can declassify just by saying it’s declassified. Even by thinking about it, because you’re sending it to Mar-a-Lago or to wherever you’re sending it. And there doesn’t have to be a process. There can be a process, but there doesn’t have to be. You’re the president, you make that decision. So when you send it, it’s declassified. I declassified everything.”

We have previously written about legal experts’ dim view of the legality of what might be called “in-brain” presidenti­al declassification.

Already, a three-judge panel of the Court of Appeals for the 11th Circuit has ruled that there was “no evidence” that any of the documents sought at Mar-aLago “were declassified,” and that Trump’s lawyers have “resisted providing any evidence that he had declassified any of these documents.” They also wrote that the entire declassification issue is “a red herring” because other laws, including the Presidenti­al Records Act, mandated that he return all government documents, whether classified or not, once he left office.

We found at least three earlier court cases that back up the notion that inbrain declassification is unlikely to pass judicial muster.

Each of these three cases involved instances in which Trump or the White House issued something tangible, such as a tweet or a news release, that discussed declassification. By contrast, Trump told Hannity that he could essentiall­y declassify in his head without any documentat­ion at all — an action even less tangible that what multiple courts have already rejected.

It’s impossible to know how any court will rule in the future, but legal experts said these three cases collective­ly provide a strong argument against the powers Trump claimed to Hannity.

President’s declassification powers are broad

Trump has a point that presidents have an unusual degree of authority to declassify documents.

The president, as commander in chief, is ultimately responsibl­e for classification and declassification. When people lower in the chain of command handle classification and declassification duties — which is usually how it’s done — it’s because they have been delegated to do so by the president directly, or by an appointee chosen by the president.

The majority ruling in the 1988 Supreme Court case Department of Navy v. Egan — which involved the legal recourse of a Navy employee who had been denied a security clearance — addresses this line of authority.

“The president, after all, is the ‘Commander in Chief of the Army and Navy of the United States’ ” according to Article II of the Constituti­on, the court’s majority wrote. “His authority to classify and control access to informatio­n bearing on national security ... flows primarily from this constituti­onal investment of power in the president, and exists quite apart from any explicit congressio­nal grant.”

Steven Aftergood, director of the Federation of American Scientists Project on Government Secrecy, told PolitiFact in 2017 that such authority gives the president the authority to “classify and declassify at will.”

The official documents governing classification and declassification stem from presidenti­al executive orders. But even these executive orders aren’t necessaril­y binding on a president. The president is not “obliged to follow any procedures other than those that he himself has prescribed,” Aftergood said. “And he can change those.”

The situation recalls President Richard Nixon’s infamous comment, “When the president does it, that means that it is not illegal.” But national security specialist­s at the blog Lawfare wrote that this “is actually true about some things. Classified informatio­n is one of them. The nature of the system is that the president gets to disclose what he wants.”

Do the president’s powers extend to in-brain declassification?

Could Trump have a legal basis for arguing that he declassified certain documents in private while president? That’s not how the system is designed to work, experts said.

“Merely proclaimin­g a document or group of documents declassified and doing nothing more would not suffice,” Bradley Moss, a Washington, D.C.based lawyer who works on national security cases, told PolitiFact in August.

Follow-through is required.

“He had to identify the specific documents he was declassify­ing, he needed to memorializ­e the order in writing for bureaucrat­ic and historical purposes, and he needed to have staff physically modify the classification markings on the documents themselves,” Moss said. “Until that was done, the documents, per the security classification procedures, still have to be handled, transmitte­d and stored as if they were classified.”

Three cases suggest Trump’s argument could be challenged

Three cases speak directly to the limits of presidenti­al declassification powers. Each of them involved Trump, and none support Trump’s assertion to Hannity.

One case is James Madison Project v. U.S. Department of Justice. The case involved media outlets suing to secure an unredacted version of Justice Department applicatio­ns to surveil Carter Page, a onetime Trump associate who later came under scrutiny in special counsel Robert Mueller’s investigat­ion of alleged Trump ties to Russia.

The Justice Department argued that some parts of the applicatio­n were classified and could not be released under the Freedom of Informatio­n Act. The news organizati­ons contended that a September 2018 press release from then-White House Press Secretary Sarah Huckabee Sanders said Trump had “directed” the declassification of the Page warrants.

In his decision rejecting the media outlets’ right to the unredacted document, U.S. District Judge Amit P. Mehta concluded that a White House “press release was not a declassification order.”

A second case is New York Times and Matthew Rosenberg v. Central Intelligen­ce Agency. In this case, the Times, using a Freedom of Informatio­n Act request, sought acknowledg­ment and documents from the CIA about the existence of a covert program for arming and training rebel forces in Syria.

The CIA issued a statement saying it could neither confirm nor deny the existence of relevant records. The Times countered that in a tweet and an interview with The Wall Street Journal, Trump had broached the existence of such a program and thus effectively rendered the program’s secrecy moot.

After the trial court sided with the CIA, the Times appealed to the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 2nd Circuit. Two of the judges on a three-judge panel upheld the lower court’s ruling.

The majority ruled that despite the president’s tweets, “declassification cannot occur unless designated officials follow specified procedures. Moreover, courts cannot ‘simply assume, over the well-documented and specific affidavits of the CIA to the contrary,’ that disclosure is required simply because the informatio­n has already been made public.”

The third case, Leopold v. Department of Justice, also undercuts what Trump asserted to Hannity.

Jason Leopold, then a journalist with BuzzFeed, brought a Freedom of Informatio­n Act case seeking documents related to Mueller’s investigat­ion. In seeking an expedited review of redactions before the 2020 presidenti­al election, the plaintiffs cited a series of Trump tweets in which he said he had declassified all documents related to Mueller’s investigat­ion. One tweet on Oct. 6, 2020, said, “I have fully authorized the total Declassification of any & all documents pertaining to the single greatest political CRIME in American History, the Russia Hoax. Likewise, the Hillary Clinton Email Scandal. No redactions!”

The government countered that the tweets were not “self-executing,” meaning that they did not amount to a formal declassification order. District Court Judge Reggie Walton ordered the Justice Department to secure a declaratio­n from Trump or a close associate about what his intent was in sending those tweets.

Then-Chief of Staff Mark Meadows submitted a sworn declaratio­n in which he said, “The president indicated to me that his statements on Twitter were not self-executing declassification orders and do not require the declassification or release of any particular documents.”

After receiving Meadows’ testimony, Walton denied Leopold’s request for an expedited review of the redactions.

 ?? DOJ VIA AP ?? This image contained in a court filing by the Department of Justice on Aug. 30 and partially redacted by the source, shows documents seized during the Aug. 8 FBI search of former President Donald Trump’s Mar-a-Lago estate.
DOJ VIA AP This image contained in a court filing by the Department of Justice on Aug. 30 and partially redacted by the source, shows documents seized during the Aug. 8 FBI search of former President Donald Trump’s Mar-a-Lago estate.

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