DOJ SAID NO FBI AT ‘DOCS’ HUNT
The excuse? Prez lawyers 'cooperative'
The Department of Justice decided against having FBI agents watch over a search for classified documents conducted by President Biden’s lawyers at his Delaware homes — in part because the attorneys were deemed to be cooperating with the DOJ investigation, according to a report.
The Wall Street Journal reported Tuesday that DOJ officials also opted for the hands-off approach in order to avoid complicating future phases of the probe and to not interfere with special counsel Robert Hur’s work.
According to the Journal, Biden’s attorneys were given permission by the department to search the 80-year-old president’s Wilmington and Rehoboth Beach residences for sensitive documents and notify the DOJ if any were found so that law enforcement could take custody.
The agreement between the DOJ and Biden’s legal team was sealed after around 10 documents with classified markings — some dealing with Ukraine, Iran and the United Kingdom — were found in the president’s former office at the Penn Biden Center think tank Nov. 2.
When those papers were discovered, the lawyers immediately notified the DOJ, according to White House spokesman Ian Sams, which triggered an initial inquiry led by Chicago US Attorney John Lausch and led the Biden team to scour other properties for additional documents.
The Journal, citing current and former law-enforcement officials, reported that by not utilizing the FBI at the early stage of the investigation, the DOJ can hold the bureau in reserve if Biden’s team is no longer deemed to be playing ball.
The FBI declined to comment to The Post about its role in the probe.
The Journal report came shortly after White House press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre was grilled at her regular briefing about how the DOJ investigation could be considered “independent” when Biden’s lawyers are the ones performing the actual searches for documents.
“You’ve repeatedly emphasized the need — just as you did today — for independence, for the integrity of the Department of Justice investigation, [which is] one reason why you continue to point us to the
DOJ. So I wonder, why then did the White House counsel go to Wilmington to facilitate the handingover of documents to the DOJ?” asked Weijia Jiang of CBS News.
“I appreciate the questions. I know there’s going to continue to be dozens more questions probably today and I will say reach out to the White House Counsel’s Office,” the press secretary said. “I’m just going to leave it there. That is something for them to answer.”
Republicans have accused the department of handling Biden’s classified-document investigation with kid gloves compared to the federal probe into former President Donald Trump’s retention of sensitive material from his White House days.
Last August, more than 100 classified files were recovered by federal agents during an FBI raid of Trump’s Mar-a-Lago home in Florida.
“The double standard here is astounding. The underlying behavior at issue — a president’s retention of old classified documents dating back to a past presidency — is materially the same in both cases,” Sen. Josh Hawley (R-Mo.) wrote in a letter to Attorney General Merrick Garland this month.
“But in President Trump’s case, that retention triggered an unprecedented raid on the home of a former president, rationalized with a thicket of partisan doublespeak,” Hawley added, calling on Garland to appoint a special prosecutor, which Garland did on Jan. 12.
The White House Counsel’s Office has declined to say whether Biden would be willing to sit for an interview with special counsel Hur if asked.
Five more pages of classified documents were discovered in Biden’s Wilmington, Del., home last week, the White House said Saturday, after the president admitted last Thursday that an unspecified number of classified documents were found in the home’s garage next to his prized 1967 Chevrolet Corvette. The White House also noted that another document was found in a nearby room of the house.