The Guardian (USA)

Binder of classified material on Russia reportedly went missing in final Trump days

- Martin Pengelly in Washington

A 10in-thick binder containing nearly 3,000 pages of highly classified material related to the investigat­ion of Russian election interferen­ce as well as links between Moscow and Donald Trump went missing in the final days of his presidency, CNN and the New York Timesrepor­ted.

CNN said the disappeara­nce raised alarms in the American intelligen­ce community because “some of the most closely guarded national security secrets from the US and its allies could be exposed”.

The Times said national security officials were “vexed” by the disappeara­nce of the “Crossfire Hurricane binder”, which was “the name given to the investigat­ion by the FBI”.

The issue was so concerning, the Times added, the Senate intelligen­ce committee was briefed.

Now the frontrunne­r for the Republican presidenti­al nomination, Trump faces 91 criminal charges arising from his conduct since entering politics in 2015. Forty charges, brought by the special counsel Jack Smith, concern the retention of classified informatio­n after leaving office.

In August 2022, FBI agents searched Trump’s Florida home. They did not find material related to the Crossfire

Hurricane investigat­ion, the Times said.

The investigat­ion of Russian interferen­ce in the 2016 election won by Trump ended in April 2019. At that time, a report by the special counsel Robert Mueller laid out evidence of Russian interferen­ce and links between Trump and Moscow and occasions on which Trump may have tried to obstruct justice.

But Mueller did not establish collusion between Trump and Russia. Aided by his second attorney general, William Barr, Trump claimed exoneratio­n.

On Friday, reports about the missing binder – which the Times said ran to 2,700 pages – brought the Russia investigat­ion back to the headlines.

According to the Times, the binder contained “a hodgepodge of materials related to the origins and early stages of the Russia investigat­ion that were collected by Trump administra­tion officials”.

That “hodgepodge”, the paper said, “included copies of botched FBI applicatio­ns for national security surveillan­ce warrants to wiretap a former Trump campaign adviser as well as text messages between two FBI officials … expressing animus toward Mr Trump”.

The paper said the “substance” of the material was not particular­ly sensitive and was posted online, with redactions, by the FBI. Official concerns centered on what the binder could reveal about sources and methods, the Times said, while noting that the online version runs to 585 pages – more than 2,000 fewer than the missing binder.

“Among other murky details,” the paper said, “it is not known how many copies were made at the White House or how the government knows one set is missing.”

CNN said “multiple copies” of the binder were created in the last hours of the Trump administra­tion, “with plans to distribute them … to Republican­s in Congress and rightwing journalist­s”.

Trumped ordered declassifi­cation but that has not happened in full. Reportedly “deeply focused” on the binder, Trump offered to let the author of a book about him have a look inside.

“I would let you look at them if you wanted,” Trump said in April 2021, according to the Times. “It’s a treasure trove … it would be a sort of cool book for you to look at.”

Maggie Haberman, one of the reporters on Friday’s piece, wrote a book about Trump which was published last year.

Trump indicated that his last White House chief of staff, Mark Meadows,

had the binder. A lawyer for Meadows told the Times his client “never took any copy of that binder home at any time”.

Presented with the CNN report, one former Trump national security aide simply said, in a message viewed by the Guardian: “Holy cow.”

 ?? ?? Donald Trump during a meeting with Vladimir Putin in Helsinki in 2018. Photograph: Brendan Smialowski/AFP/Getty Images
Donald Trump during a meeting with Vladimir Putin in Helsinki in 2018. Photograph: Brendan Smialowski/AFP/Getty Images

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