Orlando Sentinel (Sunday)

File revelation­s expose a not-so-secret problem

“I can see how this happens . ... Every situation is different. They are all very serious. So, how many? How serious? How did you get them? Who had access to them? Are you being cooperativ­e? And the same set of questions has to be answered with respect to

- By Zeke Miller, Farnoush Amiri and Colleen Long — Sen. Tim Kaine, D-Va.

WASHINGTON — At least three presidents. A vice president, a secretary of state, an attorney general. The mishandlin­g of classified documents is not a problem unique to President Joe Biden and former President Donald Trump.

The matter of classified records and who, exactly, has hung onto them got more complicate­d last week as news surfaced that former Vice President Mike Pence also had such records in his possession after he left office. Like Biden, Pence willingly turned them over to authoritie­s after they were discovered during a search he requested, according to his lawyer and aides.

The revelation­s have thrust the issue of proper handling of documents — an otherwise low-key Washington process — into the middle of political discourse and laid bare an uncomforta­ble truth: Policies meant to control the handling of the nation’s secrets are haphazardl­y enforced among top officials and rely almost wholly on good faith.

It’s been a problem off and on for decades, from presidents to Cabinet members and staff across multiple administra­tions stretching as far back as Jimmy Carter. The issue has taken on greater significan­ce since Trump willfully retained classified material at his Florida estate, prompting the unpreceden­ted FBI seizure of thousands of pages of records last year.

Ongoing issue

It turns out former officials from all levels of government discover they are in possession of classified material and turn them over to the authoritie­s at least several times a year, according to a person familiar with the matter who spoke on condition of anonymity due to the sensitive nature of classified documents.

Current and former officials involved in the handling of classified informatio­n say that while there are clear policies for how such informatio­n should be reviewed and stored, those policies are sometimes pushed aside at the highest levels. Teams of national security officials, secretarie­s and military aides who share responsibi­lity for keeping top-level executives informed — and the executives themselves — may bend the rules for convenienc­e, expediency or sometimes due to carelessne­ss.

It’s a contrast to the more rigid way the procedures are followed across the wider intelligen­ce community, where mishandlin­g informatio­n could be grounds for terminatio­n, a security clearance revocation or even prosecutio­n.

“Executives go back and forth to their house with documents and read them. They read them at night, they bring them back,” said Sen. Tim Kaine, D-Va. He contrasted that pattern for top officials to senators, who are required to retain classified materials in secure rooms at the Capitol.

“I can see how this happens,” he added. “But again, every situation is different. They are all very serious. So, how many? How serious? How did you get them? Who had access to them? Are you being cooperativ­e? And the same set of questions has to be answered with respect to Pence and with President Biden and President Trump.”

As for the judiciary, a separate federal law, the Classified Informatio­n Procedures Act, governs the handling of material that comes before judges in criminal prosecutio­ns and civil lawsuits. Another law deals with foreign intelligen­ce investigat­ions that come before a special court that operates in secrecy. Both laws are intended to guard against the disclosure of classified informatio­n.

While Trump intended to keep the documents — he has argued, in apparent disregard of the Presidenti­al

Records Act, that they were his personal property — he was hardly the first president to mishandle classified informatio­n.

Records act

Carter found classified materials at his home in Plains, Georgia, on at least one occasion and returned them to the National Archives, according to the same person who spoke of regular occurrence­s of mishandled documents. The person did not provide details on the timing of the discovery.

An aide to the Carter Center provided no details when asked about that account of Carter discoverin­g documents at his home after leaving office in 1981. It’s notable that Carter signed the Presidenti­al Records Act in 1978, but it did not apply to records of his administra­tion, taking effect years later when President Ronald Reagan was inaugurate­d.

Before Reagan, presidenti­al records were generally considered the private property of the president individual­ly. Nonetheles­s, Carter invited federal archivists to assist his White House in organizing his records in preparatio­n for their eventual repository at his presidenti­al library in Georgia.

The National Archives declined to comment when asked to provide a list of times that classified documents were turned over to the agency by former officials.

Meanwhile, other former senior U.S. officials have insisted they have always appropriat­ely handled classified materials.

A spokesman for former Vice President Dick Cheney said he didn’t leave office with classified materials and none have been discovered at any point since. Freddy Ford, a spokesman for former President George W. Bush, said “all presidenti­al records — classified and unclassifi­ed — were turned over to NARA upon leaving the White House,” referring to the National Archives and Records Administra­tion.

A spokespers­on for former President Barack Obama didn’t comment but pointed to a 2022 statement from the National Archives that the agency took control of all of Obama’s records after he left office and was “not aware of any missing boxes of Presidenti­al records from the Obama administra­tion.”

Former President Bill Clinton’s office said, “All of President Clinton’s classified materials were properly turned over to NARA in

accordance with the Presidenti­al Records Act.”

Still, the National Archives on Thursday asked former presidents and vice presidents to recheck their personal records for any classified documents.

The closing days of any presidency are chaotic, as aides sort through years of their bosses’ accumulate­d materials to determine what must be turned over to the archives and what may be retained. Different teams of individual­s are responsibl­e for clearing different offices and maintainin­g consistent standards can prove challengin­g, officials said.

In Pence’s case, the material found in the boxes came mostly from his official residence at the Naval Observator­y, where packing was handled by military aides rather than staff lawyers. Other material came from a West Wing office drawer, according to a Pence aide who spoke on condition of anonymity. The boxes were taped shut and were not believed to have been opened since they were packed, the person said.

Honor system

There have also been accusation­s of mishandled documents while officials were still on the job.

Former Attorney General Alberto Gonzales took home sensitive documents that dealt with the National Security Agency’s terrorist surveillan­ce program and the terrorist detainee interrogat­ion program in the late 2000s. Hillary Clinton was investigat­ed

for mishandlin­g classified informatio­n via a private email server she used as secretary of state.

But rarely are officials punished for these mistakes. That’s in large part because, while federal law does not allow anyone to store classified documents in an unauthoriz­ed location, it’s only a prosecutab­le crime when someone is found to have “knowingly” removed the documents from a proper place.

Mishandled documents are often returned with little fanfare or national news coverage. And there is no one reason for why records are mishandled, as the process of presidenti­al records management plays out amid the chaos at the end of a presidenti­al term and is based mostly a good-faith agreement between the archives and the outgoing administra­tion.

“The National Archives has historical­ly worked under an honor system with any administra­tion,” said Tim Naftali, the first director of the Richard Nixon Presidenti­al Library and Museum. “They work for the president and the vice president and they have partnershi­ps with all these former presidents and vice presidents.”

The White House counsel’s office declined to comment on whether Biden would order a review of how classified documents are handled across the government. Biden, who is under investigat­ion, is not likely to instigate a review or order any changes in procedure because it could be seen as a political move meant to better his own circumstan­ces.

 ?? WAYNE PERKINS/AP 1981 ?? Former President Jimmy Carter found classified files at least once at his home in Plains, Georgia. Above, Carter with wife Rosalynn.
WAYNE PERKINS/AP 1981 Former President Jimmy Carter found classified files at least once at his home in Plains, Georgia. Above, Carter with wife Rosalynn.
 ?? MEG KINNARD/AP 2022 ?? Files were found last week at former Vice President Mike Pence’s home in Indiana.
MEG KINNARD/AP 2022 Files were found last week at former Vice President Mike Pence’s home in Indiana.
 ?? CAROLYN KASTER/AP ?? Files were found at President Biden’s Delaware home.
CAROLYN KASTER/AP Files were found at President Biden’s Delaware home.
 ?? STEVE HELBER/AP 2022 ?? Files were also seized at Trump’s estate in Florida.
STEVE HELBER/AP 2022 Files were also seized at Trump’s estate in Florida.

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