The Guardian (USA)

Court files show evidence Trump handled records marked classified after presidency

- Hugo Lowell

Donald Trump retained documents bearing classifica­tion markings, along with communicat­ions from after his presidency, according to court filings describing the materials seized by the FBI as part of the ongoing criminal investigat­ion into whether he mishandled national security informatio­n.

The former US president kept in the desk drawer of his office at the Mar-aLago property one document marked “secret” and one marked “confidenti­al” alongside three communicat­ions from a book author, a religious leader and a pollster, dated after he departed the White House.

The mixed records could amount to evidence that Trump wilfully retained documents marked classified when he was no longer president as the justice department investigat­es unauthoris­ed possession of national security materials, concealmen­t of government records, and obstructio­n.

The classifica­tion status of the two documents is in dispute after Trump claimed that all documents at Mar-aLago had been declassifi­ed before he left office, though no such evidence has emerged and his lawyers have not repeated it in court.

New details about the commingled documents came in a eight-page filing submitted by the justice department on Saturday to Raymond Dearie, the special master examining whether the 103 documents seized by the FBI should be excluded from the evidence cache.

The justice department said towards the end of the filing: “Because plaintiff [Trump] can only have received the documents bearing classifica­tion markings in his capacity as president, the entire mixed document is a presidenti­al record.”

The commingled records appear to have some significan­ce to the criminal investigat­ion, since the two classified documents were the only ones found in Trump’s office besides those contained in a leather-bound box and one additional document that the FBI seized during its search on 8 August.

The leather-bound box contained some of the most sensitive records found at Mar-a-Lago: seven documents marked “top secret”, 15 marked “secret”, two marked “confidenti­al”, as well as 45 empty folders with “classified” banners and 28 folders marked “Return to Staff Secretary/Military Aide”.

Trump has attacked the investigat­ion as a partisan effort designed to hurt him politicall­y, as analysts speculate he will announce his 2024 campaign on Tuesday.

The Guardian identified the nature and location of the commingled documents at issue by comparing the unique identifier numbers with a spreadshee­t filed by the justice department showing they were part of “Item #4” seized by the FBI, which is described in another filing as “Documents from Office”.

The documents investigat­ion is expected to intensify in the coming weeks, with the midterm elections largely finished and federal investigat­ors closing in on several key witnesses.

The justice department gained testimony last Friday from top Trump adviser Kash Patel about claims that all the documents seized from Mar-a-Lago were declassifi­ed, after he was forced to take limited immunity and appear before a federal grand jury in Washington.

It comes after federal investigat­ors also obtained contradict­ory accounts from Walt Nauta, a former White House valet who followed Trump to Florida after his presidency, about removing boxes from a storage room at Mar-aLago that was used to keep some documents marked classified.

The justice department has also attempted in recent weeks to compel Trump to return more government documents that it believes to be in his possession, prompting some of Trump’s lawyers to discuss ideas such as having an outside firm certify that no more records remain, say people close to the matter.

 ?? Photograph: Joe Raedle/Getty Images ?? Former US president Donald Trump retained documents bearing classifica­tion markings at his property in Florida
Photograph: Joe Raedle/Getty Images Former US president Donald Trump retained documents bearing classifica­tion markings at his property in Florida
 ?? Photograph: Jose Romero/ US DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE/AFP/Getty Images ?? An undated image released by the justice department of documents allegedly seized at Mar-a-Lago.
Photograph: Jose Romero/ US DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE/AFP/Getty Images An undated image released by the justice department of documents allegedly seized at Mar-a-Lago.

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