The Guardian (USA)

Trump documents: Congress offered briefing on records kept at Mar-a-Lago

- Hugo Lowell in Washington

US officials have offered to provide a closed-door briefing to congressio­nal leaders about their review of about 300 classified-marked documents retrieved from Donald Trump’s Mar-aLago resort last year, sources familiar with the matter said.

The precise nature of the briefing remains unclear. The offer from the justice department and the Office of the Director for National Intelligen­ce (ODNI) was described as unofficial on Sunday and no date had yet been set, though the briefing could come as soon as this week.

But the closed-door session with the “Gang of Eight” – the Republican and Democratic leaders of the House and Senate, as well as of both intelligen­ce committees – could provide an insight into the sensitivit­y of the documents Trump retained and the possibilit­y of indictment­s.

The nature of the documents is one of the central issues in the criminal investigat­ion into Trump overseen by the special counsel Jack Smith, who is examining whether the former president wilfully retained national security informatio­n and obstructed justice.

The justice department is separately investigat­ing the discovery of classified-marked documents at Joe Biden’s Delaware home and a former office in Washington DC, as well as at the Indiana home of Trump’s vice-president, Mike Pence. In stark contrast to Trump’s resistance to returning papers, Biden and Pence have cooperated with officials.

Republican­s in Congress have seized on the presence of marked documents at Biden’s home in Delaware and a private office space in Washington, and have sought briefings as a means to pressure the president and draw inaccurate parallels with the Trump case.

Since the FBI searched Mar-a-Lago on 8 August last year and seized 101 classified-marked documents, Trump has claimed the papers were declassifi­ed, though no such evidence has emerged and his lawyers have not repeated that assertion in court, where they face penalties for lying.

Investigat­ors have focused on the matter and last year granted immunity to a top Trump ally, Kash Patel, in an effort to force him to testify before a grand jury about the declassifi­cation claims. Patel initially invoked his fifth amendment right against selfincrim­ination.

Justice department interest in Patel centered on his claims that the documents found at Mar-a-Lago were declassifi­ed, how the documents ended up at the property, and how Trump and his team responded to requests for their return, the Guardian previously reported.

Whether the US intelligen­ce community found the classified-marked documents to still be sensitive, or to be no longer national security informatio­n because they were largely declassifi­ed, the outcome of the review could impact the criminal investigat­ion.

The justice department has provided briefings to congressio­nal leaders before major charging decisions that are politicall­y sensitive, two people with knowledge of the matter said, though no reason was given for the timing of the Trump documents briefing.

A spokespers­on for the department and the special counsel’s office declined to comment.

The House and Senate intelligen­ce committees sought a briefing on the Trump documents almost immediatel­y after the FBI searched Mar-a-Lago, but no briefing was scheduled – at least for the House intelligen­ce committee – before Republican­s took the House majority.

The justice department and ODNI have declined to answer most questions about the roughly 300 classified­marked documents found at the resort, citing the ongoing criminal investigat­ion and the separate risk assessment that could jeopardize intelligen­ce sources.

The House intelligen­ce committee chair, Mike Turner, told NBC’s Meet the Press on Sunday, as he discussed the shooting-down of a Chinese spy balloon, that he had been notified he would get a briefing on the Trump documents this week.

“What’s interestin­g is that the moment this balloon became public, I got a notice not from the administra­tion that I’m going to get a briefing on this balloon, but they have to rush to Congress now to talk to us about Donald Trump’s documents,” Turner said.

 ?? Photograph: AP ?? A photo of documents seized at Mar-a-Lago last August.
Photograph: AP A photo of documents seized at Mar-a-Lago last August.

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