USA TODAY International Edition

Missing records expose big flaws

Trump, Biden cases show need for overhaul

- Josh Meyer

The Biden and Trump classified document revelation­s are very different, even though both indicate U. S. national security could have been put at risk by sensitive government documents stored in unsecured personal locations.

But they do have one similarity, security analysts tell USA TODAY: Both cases underscore how the U. S. system of safeguardi­ng classified presidenti­al documents is in urgent need of improvemen­t, especially during the critical period when one administra­tion hands over the White House keys to another.

The massive volume of records generated or used by the president, vice president and their large National Security Council staff are among the most closely held secrets in the U. S. government. Some would constitute a “grave threat” to U. S. national security if left unsecured or stored in places where they could potentiall­y fall into the hands of America’s adversarie­s, according to U. S. intelligen­ce guidelines. Some could disclose such things as the names of U. S. undercover spies and covert operations. Others could divulge the nuclear weapons capabiliti­es of U. S. allies and enemies.

Yet problems with safeguardi­ng such documents have been known for years, if not decades. And current and former government officials, security analysts and private watchdog groups have been pushing for reforms, with little success.

“We’re really seeing an existentia­l crisis at the highest levels of government, at the presidenti­al level,” said Lauren Harper, the director of Public Policy and Open Government Affairs at the nonpartisa­n National Security Archive in Washington. “And it’s something that we’ve certainly been saying needs to be addressed and reined in.”

Adds Scott Amey, general counsel

for the Project on Government Oversight, “I’d bet you that if they go back to all of the living presidents and root through their homes and their libraries and their warehouses and garages, they’re going to unearth some classified documents there.”

Security lapses are not uncommon

Former President Donald Trump’s problems stem from his insistence that he declassified entire boxes of documents, his resistance to returning them and the fact top secret materials were mixed in with personal items. President Joe Biden’s lapses appear more accidental, his staff has said, and involve a smaller cache of classified documents from his time as vice president that was found at a former office and at his home in Wilmington, Delaware.

The White House has refused to comment on the nature of the Biden documents, including why the documents were in his possession for such a long period of time without anyone noticing. But CNN, citing a source familiar with the matter, reported that among the items discovered in a private office last fall were 10 classified documents, including U. S. intelligen­ce memos and briefing materials that covered topics including Ukraine, Iran and the United Kingdom.

Attorney General Merrick Garland has appointed two special counsels, one each to investigat­e Trump and Biden to see if any laws were broken and to look for additional documents that may be in their possession.

Such security lapses are a somewhat regular occurrence, according to one former senior security official involved in protecting classified presidenti­al documents under Trump and his predecesso­r, Barack Obama.

A few times a year, a current or former White House official would alert authoritie­s about a classified, secret, or confidential document that had turned up somewhere, and someone with the appropriat­e security clearance would be dispatched from the White House, National Archives, or FBI to retrieve it, said the official, who spoke on the condition of anonymity to discuss matters under investigat­ion. It happens frequently enough, he said, that the National Archives and Records Administra­tion, as it is formally known, has formal written procedures for how to deal with it.

Mark Zaid, a lawyer who specialize­s in the handling of classified informatio­n, said such lapses date back to World War II or earlier, and are far more common than is known publicly.

“Before the Presidenti­al Records Act was enacted during the Carter administra­tion, these guys brought classified records home all the time,” Zaid said. “I have one in my library from the Truman administra­tion that was top secret until 1994, but it was in the possession of Truman’s chief of staff for half a century, at home somewhere because that’s what they all did.”

The Presidenti­al Records Act of 1978 was enacted after the Watergate scandal, in which former President Richard Nixon tried to claim that his secret White House tapes and other records were his personal property. It states that “the United States shall reserve and retain complete ownership, possession, and control of Presidenti­al records,” but critics have said it’s too vague in terms of what the law covers.

“Since the PRA got enacted, pretty much every presidenti­al library and administra­tion, Republican and Democrat, have had instances where classified informatio­n, unfortunat­ely, was taken home or to an office,” Zaid added. “That’s not to condone it or excuse it because it has potentiall­y serious consequenc­es for an individual who is found to have mishandled classified informatio­n. But it happens all the time.”

Calls to fix the problems

The Project on Government Oversight is one of several watchdog groups that have been pushing for reforms, including more funding and authority for the National Archives so it can be more aggressive about keeping current and former administra­tions in line.

“I’d love to see Congress turn their attention to the more systemic problems here and propose fixes on what we need those ( presidenti­al) offices to do,” Amey told USA TODAY, “as well as the National Archives, to make sure that classified materials don’t leave, either in computers or in banker’s boxes.”

The National Security Archive, a research and public interest law organizati­on that is not affiliated with the similar- sounding government agency, said the problems with safeguardi­ng classified U. S. documents have been made much worse because of the relatively new explosion of new forms of digital and electronic informatio­n used by presidents and their staffs.

At the end of each administra­tion, Harper said, the law requires that all of those documents be sorted, cataloged and handed over to the National Archives for processing. Depending on their level of secrecy, most eventually will be made available to the public, either at the National Archives in Washington or at the libraries of former presidents.

“Even without these kinds of extreme examples from the White House, given the sheer volume of electronic records that are being created, it is a disaster that gets worse, literally, by the day,” Harper told USA TODAY.

The U. S. government’s top secrecy czar agrees.

In his latest annual report to the president, which is required by Congress, the head of the National Archives’ Informatio­n Security Oversight Office warned of the “dire need” to revamp the entire system of protecting secret government records. That includes addressing problems created by the new forms of electronic records, as well as the longstandi­ng issue of over- classification of millions of documents that probably don’t need to be marked top secret, oversight office Director Mark Bradley wrote in the July 22 report.

Those problems, combined with the damaging effect that COVID- 19 pandemic had on the work of the National Archives’ offices in recent years, means “we can no longer keep our heads above the tsunami of digitally created classified records,” Bradley wrote.

“It will be a mammoth task to turn these tidal waves,” Bradley concluded. “It will require leadership, doggedness, money, new technology and an unwavering commitment in the face of embedded resistance” to reforming the system.

“He is absolutely right, and in my experience, he is not one prone to hyperbole,” Harper said of Bradley, who just retired after 30 years at the National Archives, the CIA and other security posts.

In her role at the National Security Archive, Harper issued a report in March 2022 concluding that despite all of its problems, annual funding for the National Archives is minuscule – roughly $ 320 million. She found the National Archives’ budget “has remained stagnant in real dollars for nearly thirty years” when adjusted for inflation, despite the vast increases in the amount of informatio­n it is required to safeguard.

The administra­tion of George H. W. Bush transferre­d over 20 gigabytes of electronic records to its presidenti­al library after leaving office in 1993, while Obama’s administra­tion had thousands of times more, at about 250 terabytes, Harper’s report said.

A last- minute frenzy

One of the biggest structural problems with the way presidenti­al documents are safeguarde­d is that each administra­tion needs to use them until the very end of their term, and then has just a few weeks, or less, to pack them up for transfer to the Archives, according to Archives guidelines and documents. During that time, potentiall­y hundreds of White House employees must pack up their things and separate their personal documents – physical and electronic – from those that need to go to the Archives for safeguardi­ng and, in some cases, eventual declassification.

That was especially the case with Biden when leaving the Obama administra­tion given the flurry of last- minute meetings – and overseas trips – he undertook to try and cement the duo’s legacy, former staffers told CNN and the New York Times.

“My thinking right now is it probably wouldn’t be a bad idea for someone to convene a group of experts to sit down and review the process,” said Larry Pfeiffer, a longtime CIA official who also ran the Obama administra­tion’s White House Situation Room.

“Are we doing everything we absolutely can do to minimize the risk of this material ending up where it’s ending up?” Pfeiffer asked. “My guess is there are probably things that could be improved upon.”

Damage assessment­s

Law enforcemen­t and intelligen­ce officials continue to do damage assessment­s to see whether U. S. national security was compromise­d by the Trump and Biden documents being stored in places where they might be accessed by America’s adversarie­s.

Historical­ly, many security experts say, far too many documents have been over- classified – often market top secret when they are not – which makes the task of safeguardi­ng the nation’s real secrets even more difficult.

Pfeiffer said that the recent controvers­ies involving both Biden and Trump have likely prompted others to see if they have any documents in their possession that need to be returned. Unless it can be proven that they took, or kept, them intentiona­lly, he said, most cases are handled administra­tively and without involvemen­t by criminal investigat­ors from the FBI or Justice Department.

In a 2022 report issued after the Trump documents became news, the independen­t research arm of Congress urged lawmakers to consider potential reforms to the way the National Archives handles presidenti­al documents.

The report, by Congressio­nal Research Service analyst Meghan Stuessy, noted that the Presidenti­al Records Act does not provide a deadline for the physical transfer of records materials, even though it does provide for a transfer of legal responsibi­lity for materials to the archivist of the U. S., who leads the National Archives.

Also, the Congressio­nal Research Service report said, “Congress may consider whether National Archives has sufficient ability to oversee the management of presidenti­al records during a presidency and whether White House staff are sufficiently trained on segregatin­g presidenti­al records from personal records.”

And it recommende­d that Congress “may also consider additional legislatio­n or oversight on the presidenti­al records transfer process at the conclusion of an Administra­tion. Congress might also assess the relationsh­ip between National Archives and DOJ with regard to investigat­ions of records removal and if either entity is helped or hampered by their joint relationsh­ip” as currently required by law.

A ‘ gentleman’s agreement’

One problem with the current system is that despite its responsibi­lities in safeguardi­ng presidenti­al documents, the National Archives has very weak oversight powers when it comes to the White House because of the traditiona­l authoritie­s granted to the executive branch of government, Harper said.

Another institutio­nal shortcomin­g, Harper said, is that the Presidenti­al Records Act “is basically a gentleman’s agreement, where a presidenti­al administra­tion will say, ‘ Look, this is the demarcatio­n between my personal and public records. And I will definitely give you all records that are meant to be public, and I’ll do so in a timely fashion.”

“But it has a lot of holes in it,” she said. “And it really took somebody like Trump to kind of shine a giant spotlight on exactly what those holes are.”

There’s also a little- known Presidenti­al Transition Improvemen­t Act that says that six months before a presidenti­al election, the White House needs to establish an agency- level council with the National Archives to make sure that the director of each government agency is prepared to oversee the orderly and responsibl­e transition from one administra­tion to the next and ensure that all records management requiremen­ts are being met.

But it doesn’t apply to the White House itself, because of longstandi­ng separation of powers policies.

One solution, Harper said, would be for Congress to add wording to the Presidenti­al Records Act directing the White House to voluntaril­y comply with the requiremen­t and get ready to hand over all relevant documents, even if the current president doesn’t think they are going to lose a reelection bid.

“What we saw with the Trump transition was that there was actually absolutely no preparatio­n, and no due diligence done for any of these records management principles,” Harper said. “You can’t force it, but this would put them on notice that there are things that they could be doing prior to an election to ensure that records don’t get lost and that they are handled appropriat­ely.”

Also, she said, if the Archives had more authoritie­s, including requiring periodic updates from the White House, it would know before the end of an administra­tion if the president and their staff were taking the appropriat­e steps to safeguard their documents.

That likely would not have mattered in the case of Trump, whose refusal to turn over documents prompted the National Archives, FBI and Department of Justice to repeatedly try to get them back, analysts said. Ultimately, a judge approved a search warrant and an initial tranche of documents was seized by authoritie­s in an early morning search.

“Obviously, there are differences here, including that Biden had some miscellane­ous documents versus all of Trump’s banker’s boxes,” said Amey. “But I do think that the big question here, and where I’d love to see a congressio­nal investigat­ion turn to, is how much of a systemic problem is this? And what are the fixes to ensure the classified material isn’t getting out into the world?”

“We’re really seeing an existentia­l crisis at the highest levels of government, at the presidenti­al level.”

Lauren Harper, director of Public Policy and Open Government Affairs

 ?? GETTY IMAGES ?? Attorney General Merrick Garland has appointed special counsels to investigat­e the document cases of Donald Trump and Joe Biden.
GETTY IMAGES Attorney General Merrick Garland has appointed special counsels to investigat­e the document cases of Donald Trump and Joe Biden.
 ?? ADAM SCHULTZ/ AP ?? A small cache of classified documents from President Joe Biden’s time as vice president was found at a former office and at his home in Wilmington, Del.
ADAM SCHULTZ/ AP A small cache of classified documents from President Joe Biden’s time as vice president was found at a former office and at his home in Wilmington, Del.

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