New York Post

WHO DOESN’T HAVE THEM?!

Sloppy Joe can’t pass this buck

- ANDREW C. McCARTHY Andrew C. McCarthy is a former federal prosecutor.

PRESIDENT Biden, who “people know takes classified informatio­n very seriously,” maintains, through counsel, that his illegal retention of classified documents in multiple unauthoriz­ed private locations (so far, his private office, his garage, various areas of one of his homes, etc.) was an unfortunat­e case of their being “inadverten­tly misplaced.”

But inadverten­t misplaceme­nt is not a defense to felony mishandlin­g of national defense intelligen­ce by an official who has been entrusted with it.

The prosecutor needs only to prove that the accused was grossly negligent in, for example, removing the intelligen­ce from its secure government location, retaining it in an unauthoriz­ed place, and allowing it to be exposed to persons who were not authorized to see it.

It is thus peculiar to hear Biden apologists continue to repeat the “inadverten­ce” talking point. They’re not helping him.

Still, I have questions about exactly what the president’s surrogates mean when they say “classified documents were inadverten­tly misplaced.” Note the passive voice. They sometimes seem to be saying that the documents somehow misplaced themselves. At best, they are implying that this was all the fault of a sloppy aide. Rest assured, though, that Biden himself had nothing to do with it.

It’s a blame-shifting strategy: You’re to believe that it was not our notoriousl­y error-prone leader who was inadverten­tly misplacing classified intelligen­ce — i.e., exhibiting gross negligence.

This is implausibl­e on the developing record. After all, documents were removed from government safekeepin­g at different times, when Biden was in different government jobs, and they were transporte­d to different places — private offices, rooms within a private home, a private garage, etc. In all of this, there is only one common denominato­r: Joe Biden.

His government jobs, his privileged access to classified documents, his private locations. How could it be that all the “inadverten­t misplaceme­nt” always ends up with documents in Joe Biden’s personal possession? He seems exceedingl­y unlucky, no?

Senator overreach

Then, of course, there is Biden’s possession of classified documents from his decades in the Senate, which turned up in Biden’s Wilmington home during last Friday’s search by the FBI. It’s not enough to say that the president had no business holding on to those documents for at least 14 years. (Biden left the Senate to become vice president in 2009.) The point is that he shouldn’t have been holding onto them for 14 seconds.

Senators and House members are legislator­s, not national security officials. Even if they sit on committees that deal with sensitive intelligen­ce, that’s only a small part of their work. Their limited function is to oversee how the executive branch conducts security operations, not to execute such operations as if they were the president or the director of a government spy agency.

Consequent­ly, the government does not set up SCIFs (secure compartmen­ted informatio­n facilities) — secure locations for retaining and protecting classified documents — in the homes of lawmakers, as it does in the homes of top executive security officials who are on duty 24/7. If you are a senator who has a security clearance permitting you to review classified intelligen­ce, you have to go to a SCIF on Capitol Hill.

When you get there, moreover, you are not allowed to bring your cellphone or other online electronic devices inside the SCIF. You must review the intelligen­ce inside the SCIF. It is verboten to take notes (unless they are going to be left in the SCIF). Most important, you are prohibited from removing documents from the SCIF. Period.

Security clearance

As a senator, Biden should not have had any classified documents outside a SCIF. He should not have had any notes. Yet reports about the search indicate that agents seized both classified documents from Biden’s Senate tenure and notes. Since he was not supposed to have these in the first place, which “sloppy aide” could possibly be responsibl­e for “inadverten­tly misplacing” them?

Finally, let’s talk about sloppy aides. It seems Biden’s apologists would have you believe that low-level aides were running around the Obama White House, passing around classified documents here, snatching up classified documents there, and indiscrimi­nately strewing them in packing boxes during the chaos of the transition to the Trump administra­tion.

That is not the way it works. Only government officials who have security clearances are permitted to handle classified informatio­n, that informatio­n may only be reviewed in places that are authorized for the purpose, and those officials — the vice president included — are duty-bound to ensure that the informatio­n is properly secured.

Biden seems to be suggesting that sloppy aides packed classified documents in his belongings, and then sent them unsecured to multiple unauthoriz­ed locations that all just happen to be Biden’s own private locations. If this happened, these had to be either aides who have security clearances, or uncleared staffers to whom aides with security clearances unlawfully transmitte­d these documents, and who then shipped them to Biden — without his knowledge, we’re to believe.

If that is what Team Biden says happened, if that is what they are saying was what passed for security protocols in the Obama administra­tion, then that is a scandalous allegation. It would call for intensive national-security investigat­ions of all Obama officials whose belongings were packed up and shipped out of the White House when the administra­tion ended.

The media should be pressing Biden and his flacks to identify exactly which Obama administra­tion staffers supposedly violated federal criminal laws that govern the handling of classified investigat­ion.

For myself, though, I’m an Occam’s razor kinda guy: The simplest explanatio­n is the likely explanatio­n. Ergo, I don’t think this was an Obama administra­tion problem. I don’t think it was a sloppy aides problem. I think it was a Joe Biden problem — and no one who has watched Biden’s erratic half-century political career can be all that surprised.

 ?? ?? DERELICTIO­N OF DUTY: President Biden stowed classified documents in the garage with his car at his home in Delaware.
DERELICTIO­N OF DUTY: President Biden stowed classified documents in the garage with his car at his home in Delaware.
 ?? ??

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