Times-Herald (Vallejo)

Trump lawyers in court for sealed hearing in Mar-a-Lago case

- By Eric Tucker

WASHINGTON >> Lawyers for Donald Trump were in court Friday for sealed arguments as part of the ongoing investigat­ion into the presence of classified informatio­n at the former president's Florida estate.

The proceeding­s were taking place before U.S. District Judge Beryl Howell, the chief judge of the federal court in the District of Columbia. Defense lawyers were seen entering the courtroom around 2 p.m. and left more than an hour later without addressing reporters.

A lawyer for The Associated Press and other news organizati­ons had submitted a letter earlier Friday requesting media access to the hearing, but despite that, it took place entirely behind closed doors.

Court spokeswoma­n Lisa Klem said in a statement that the hearing concerned “an ongoing and sealed grand jury matter” that remains under seal.

It was not immediatel­y clear what the outcome of the proceeding­s were. The Washington Post, relying on anonymous sources, reported on Thursday that the Justice Department had earlier asked Howell to hold Trump's office in contempt for failure to fully comply with a May subpoena that sought the return of classified documents in his possession. The department also wants the Trump team to appoint a custodian of records who could attest that all classified documents have been returned, according to the Post.

Lawyers for Trump declined to comment ahead of the hearing. A Justice Department spokesman also did not return a phone message seeking comment Friday afternoon.

The roughly 100 documents marked as classified that the FBI took from Mara-Lago in August were on top of 37 documents bearing classifica­tion markings that Trump lawyers retrieved from the home during a June visit. In addition, 15 boxes containing about 184 classified documents were recovered in January by the National Archives and Records Administra­tion.

The possibilit­y that the Justice Department had not yet recovered all classified materials has existed for months.

The FBI's August search of the home came after investigat­ors developed evidence indicating that additional sensitive documents remained there, even though Trump representa­tives had certified in June that all classified documents requested in a Justice Department subpoena had been located and returned.

The Trump lawyer who made that representa­tion and who was serving as the custodian of his records at the time, Christina Bobb, was interviewe­d by the FBI in October. She told investigat­ors that she had not drafted the letter but that another Trump lawyer who she said actually prepared it had asked her to sign it in her role as a designated custodian of Trump's records, a person familiar with her account has told AP.

The Post reported earlier this week that two additional documents with classifica­tion markings were found during a recent search of a storage unit in West Palm Beach, Florida that was arranged by Trump's lawyers. Those items were then turned over to the FBI.

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