The Boston Globe

Biden aides find more classified documents

2nd disclosure raises questions about handling

- By Glenn Thrush

WASHINGTON — President Biden’s aides found a new batch of classified documents at a second location associated with Biden, a person familiar with the situation said Wednesday — a disclosure, the second in three days, that is sure to intensify Republican attacks.

It is not clear where or when the records were recovered. But Biden’s aides have been scouring various places since November, when his lawyers discovered a handful of classified files, which included briefing materials on foreign countries, when they were closing a think tank office in Washington. The Justice Department is reviewing the discovery to determine how to proceed.

Republican­s relished in the new revelation­s, accusing Biden of hypocrisy in calling former president Donald Trump irresponsi­ble for hoarding sensitive documents at his private club and residence in Florida. This week, the new Republican chair of the House oversight committee issued a far-ranging request to the National Archives and Records Administra­tion for documents and correspond­ence.

A White House spokespers­on and a member of Biden’s legal team did not immediatel­y respond to requests for comment. A spokespers­on for the Justice Department declined to comment.

On Tuesday, Biden told reporters in Mexico City that he was “surprised” to learn in November that his lawyers found classified government documents in his former office at the Penn Biden Center for Diplomacy and Global Engagement. He said his staff had fully cooperated with the National Archives and the Justice Department.

A day later, NBC News reported that another cache had been found at a different, undisclose­d location.

Under government regulation­s, access to classified documents is limited to people who are currently authorized to see them, and the materials must be stored in special security containers. The Presidenti­al Records Act says official documents in the White House — classified and unclassifi­ed alike — should be turned over to the National Archives when an administra­tion departs.

After Trump left office, officials with the archives identified sensitive documents that had not been returned, prompting numerous appeals for their return. The matter was eventually referred to the Justice Department, which ultimately requested the search warrant that yielded the recovery of classified materials, including some bearing the most restrictiv­e top-secret markings.

By contrast, the first set of documents found by Biden’s lawyers was voluntaril­y returned to the archives in November and had not been logged as missing. It is not clear if the archives had flagged the new materials.

A spokespers­on for the archives declined to comment.

The discovery of the second batch of material raises new questions about the handling of sensitive documents by a Biden team that has prided itself for adhering to norms and rules flouted by his predecesso­r.

But the circumstan­ces of the two cases appear to be strikingly different. Unlike Trump, who resisted months of government requests to return the records stored at Mar-a-Lago and failed to fully comply with a subpoena, Biden’s team appears to have acted swiftly and in accordance with the law, immediatel­y summoning officials with the National Archives to retrieve the files.

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