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DOJ Suspects Trump Still Has Classified Documents He Removed From White House, Even After FBI Mar-A-Lago Raid

Dieu-nalio Chery | Reutersm

Former U.S. President Donald Trump throws caps as he attends a rally in Warren, Michigan, U.S., October 1, 2022.

  • The Department of Justice suspects that ex-President Donald Trump might still have classified documents that he removed from the White House when he left office in January 2021.
  • The DOJ's head of counterintelligence, Jay Bratt, recently told Trump's attorneys that the department believed he had not turned over all government documents he took when left office, classified or not.
  • The news comes two months after FBI agents empowered by a search warrant raided Trump's Mar-a-Lago residence in Florida and seized thousands of government documents.

The Department of Justice suspects that ex-President Donald Trump might still have classified documents that he removed from the White House when he left office in January 2021, people familiar with the matter told NBC News.

The DOJ's head of counterintelligence matters, Jay Bratt, recently told Trump's attorneys that the department believed he had not turned over all the government documents he took when he left office, classified or not, NBC reported.

The news, first reported by The New York Times and The Wall Street Journal, comes two months after FBI agents empowered by a search warrant raided Trump's residence in Florida and seized thousands of government documents. More than 100 of the records were marked classified.

It also comes days after acting Archivist of the United States Debra Steidel Wall, in a letter to the House Oversight and Reform Committee, said that the National Archives and Records Administration still has not recovered Trump White House staff records that are contained on nonofficial electronic accounts they used during his presidency.

NARA found more than 150 documents marked classified in boxes of records that Trump turned over to the agency from Mar-a-Lago in January.

The DOJ declined to comment.

Trump's spokesman, Taylor Budowich, in a statement to NBC News, said, "The weaponized Department of Justice and the politicized FBI are spending millions and millions of American tax [dollars] to perpetuate witch hunt after witch hunt."

Budowich said that "all recent Presidents moved millions of pages of documents," and argued that "President Trump is being unjustly, illegally, and unconstitutionally targeted because he won't stop fighting to restore power back to the people."

The Aug. 8 raid at the Mar-a-Lago Club in Palm Beach was part of an ongoing criminal investigation of Trump for the removal of government records when he left office, and potential obstruction of justice in not returning those documents as federal authorities sought their return.

By law, such records are the property of the U.S. government.

The DOJ has said that the raid found empty file folders that were marked classified. Officials also have complained that a judge's ruling temporarily barring the DOJ from examining the seized classified documents "appears to bar the FBI and DOJ" from a review that could identify other records that are "still missing."

Although the FBI searched Mar-a-Lago, where Trump resides in nonsummer months, agents did not search either his residence at his golf club in Bedminster, New Jersey, or his apartment at Trump Tower in New York City.

The Daily Mail last month published a video taken of Trump in May 2021 boarding a jet from near Mar-a-Lago as file boxes were being loaded on the plane. Trump was traveling to Bedminster at the time.

Trump's lawyers are divided over how to respond to the DOJ's suspicion that the former president still has classified material, the Times report noted. One group of attorneys, headed by Chris Kise, had suggested that Trump retain a forensic accounting firm to search for the suspected records. But other attorneys dissuaded Trump from that route, according to the report.

The latest reports on the potentially still-missing classified documents complicate an already tangled legal situation.

Judges in four federal courts, including the Supreme Court, are dealing with disputes between Trump's lawyers and the DOJ over the parameters and timing of the use of the records in the criminal probe.

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