The Spectrum & Daily News

More records found at Mar-a-Lago

Court decision reveals documents discovered 4 months after 1st search

- Bart Jansen

Former President Donald Trump still had classified documents in his bedroom at Mar-a-Lago four months after an FBI search of his estate in Palm Beach, Florida, according to a court decision in the case released Tuesday.

U.S. District Judge Beryl Howell’s decision also provided additional details of alleged obstructio­n efforts by Trump and his co-defendants, Walt Nauta and Carlos De Oliveira, through what the government called a “shell game” of moving documents around Mar-a-Lago to avoid being found by federal authoritie­s. Howell ruled prosecutor­s could interview Trump’s lawyer, Evan Corcoran, because the former president was “likely” involved in criminal activity.

Another court filing revealed that FBI agents approved the use of lethal force – if necessary – during the search. The FBI says that is just routine, but Trump, in a social media post Tuesday, decried the potential use of force as a serious threat to democracy.

The same day the latest court records were released, Trump asked U.S. District Judge Aileen Cannon to dismiss the case by calling the search unlawful.

Cannon scheduled two hearings Wednesday on Nauta’s requests to dismiss the case. Nauta is Trump’s personal valet and is charged with conspiring to hide the classified documents from federal authoritie­s.

The case is one of four criminal trials pending against Trump. The jury in his New York hush money trial is set to hear final arguments next Tuesday. But Cannon has indefinite­ly postponed the start of the classified documents trial because of the complexity of disputes that still must be resolved.

Trump faces 40 charges, including retaining national defense docu

ments and conspiring to hide them from federal authoritie­s, after FBI agents searched Mar-a-Lago in August 2022 and found more than 100 documents with classified markings. Trump and co-defendants Nauta and De Oliveira, the property manager at Mar-aLago, have each pleaded not guilty in to charges.

U.S. District Judge Beryl Howell, who presided over disputes about the search, ruled in March 2023 that Justice Department special counsel Jack Smith could interview Trump lawyer Evan Corcoran about the documents despite claims of attorney-client privilege because of potential criminal activity.

Howell’s ruling remained sealed for more than a year. But Trump used it as part of his filing on Tuesday urging Cannon to dismiss the case by arguing the search was unconstitu­tional. Cannon hasn’t ruled on the motion yet.

For the hearings Wednesday, Nauta asked Cannon to dismiss the charges because of allegedly vindictive prosecutio­n and insufficie­nt accusation­s.

Prosecutor­s responded that “Nauta’s arguments are without merit and should be denied.”

A revelation in Howell’s decision unsealed Tuesday was that one of Trump’s lawyers told federal authoritie­s in December 2022 – four months after the FBI search – that four more classified records totaling six pages were found in a closet at Mar-a-Lago. When the documents were turned over to the FBI in January 2023, the box included two more documents – an empty folder and a mostly empty folder, both marked “Classified Evening Summary” – that were found in Trump’s bedroom, according to the ruling.

“Remarkably, the report regarding the Mar-a-Lago search, conducted on December 15-16, 2023, uncovered four more responsive records,” Howell wrote. “To be clear, the four documents were responsive to the May 2022 subpoena.”

A footnote in Howell’s decision reported that a witness scanned the classified documents onto her laptop owned by the Save America Political Action Committee, a group Trump formed in 2020, before they were turned over in January 2023.

“The former president’s counsel saved those scans onto a thumb drive and provided the thumb drive to the government that day,” Howell wrote.

Sharing classified informatio­n with someone who doesn’t have a security clearance is a felony. Howell’s decision doesn’t make clear what the documents were about or why Trump’s political staff would have been interested them.

Trump, Nauta and De Oliveira allegedly conspired to obstruct justice by hiding the records, having his lawyer tell the FBI Trump didn’t have the records and attempting to destroy camera footage revealing how the documents were handled.

The Howell decision unsealed Tuesday revealed that Smith suspected Nauta flew from Bedminster, New Jersey, to Florida after Corcoran told Trump on June 24, 2022, about the subpoena for video footage from Mara-Lago.

“The government urged that this scramble to Mar-a-Lago in the wake of the June 24, 2022 phone call reflects the former president’s realizatio­n that the removal of the boxes from the storage room before [redacted] search was captured on camera − and his attempts to ensure that any subsequent movement of the boxes back to the storage room could occur off camera,” Howell wrote.

Nauta was recorded on video entering the storage room where the bulk of the documents were eventually found. But no video was found to explain how boxes of documents were returned to the room between Trump’s lawyer’s certificat­ion in June 2022 that all classified documents had been returned to the government and the August 2022 search that found more.

Howell noted “the curious absence of any video footage showing the return of the remaining boxes to the storage room, which necessaril­y occurred at some point between June 3, 2022 ... and the execution of the search warrant on August 8, 2022 – when agents counted 73 boxes.”

Nauta was charged with moving the boxes to hide them. He was recorded carrying the boxes despite denying in an FBI interview knowing where the boxes were stored or how they got there, according to Howell’s ruling.

Howell wrote that Trump was accused in grand jury testimony of playing a “shell game,” in the government’s phrase, in which “documents could be moved between locations based on scheduled dates for searches of those locations, to avoid detection of those responsive records.” The government also alleges Nauta and de Oliveira attempted to delete surveillan­ce camera footage.

The Trump campaign and Nauta’s lawyers did not immediatel­y respond to a request for comment.

Trump’s filing to dismiss the case revealed that the FBI order to conduct the search included a policy statement about the “use of deadly force.”

“Law enforcemen­t officers of the Department of Justice may use deadly force when necessary,” the statement said. Agents planned to bring standard weapons, ammo, handcuffs and bolt cutters, the statement said.

Prosecutor­s said the case had been investigat­ed in compliance with constituti­onal requiremen­ts, laws and regulation­s.

“There has been no prosecutor­ial misconduct, and his motion should be denied,” prosecutor­s wrote.

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