In the wake of an advancing investigation into Trump's handling of classified documents, a familiar defiance from the former President is on display.
On Wednesday, Biden responded to a reporter’s question about the FBI’s search of Mar a Lago, saying he was not told in advance about the search. District Court for the Southern District of Florida, when requesting permission to search Mar-a-Lago. The White House has insisted it has no involvement in the mechanics of the investigation. One point of contact between the White House and the National Archives on the issue came in April, when the White House counsel’s office affirmed a request from the Department of Justice to let national security officials examine the initial 15 boxes of records removed from Mar-a-Lago in order to assess any the security risks created by their having been improperly stored for a year and identify steps to protect intelligence programs, according to Steidel Wall’s letter. Two weeks later, Trump filed a motion in federal court to stop the FBI from reviewing the documents collected in the search, demanding a special master to review them to filter out information that may fall under executive privilege. Trump himself made the search public, confirming that it happened and decrying it in a public statement later that day. In January, after months of back and forth, Trump allowed 15 boxes of records to be delivered to the National Archives. Trump’s lawyers asked for more time, and after being given several more weeks, exerted the unfounded claim that the records, which belong to the federal government, were protected by Trump’s claim of executive privilege, even though he was no longer in office. 6, 2021, he derided it as “a continuation of the greatest witch hunt in the history of politics.” Sitting in the [Oval Office](https://time.com/5751532/why-democrats-attempts-to-rein-in-trump-with-impeachment-could-make-his-presidency-stronger/) with a foreign leader in December 2019, Trump said he felt the effort to impeach him was “a very sad thing for our country but it seems to be very good for me politically.” Trump’s court filings in response to the latest investigation may be giving prosecutors more ammunition to go after him. Whereas Trump was able to count on the support of Republicans in the Senate to ensure his acquittal during his impeachment trials, he faces no such protection in the current investigation.
A redacted version of the affidavit used to justify the Mar-a-Lago investigation will be released on Friday.
The Department of Justice, however, had resisted the move, arguing that its release could cause "irreparable damage" to its ongoing investigation. Trump says that request was quickly fulfilled According to Mr Trump, he told them: "Whatever you need, just let us know"
Affidavit is expected to contain information about investigation into Trump's retention of government secrets at Mar-a-Lago.
Notably, the cover sheet showed the department’s descriptions of potential crimes at Mar-a-Lago: wilful retention of national defense information, concealment or removal of government records, and obstruction of a federal investigation. One of his lawyers, Chrsitina Bobb, nonetheless attended the hearing last week to observe proceedings. Trump has said he supports unsealing the affidavit but filed no motion of his own. He assured the government: “This is going to be a considered, careful process.” How much of the affidavit will be redacted was not clear. [Florida](https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/florida), that he was inclined to make some of the affidavit public. The judge, however, disagreed that the justice department could make nothing of the affidavit public, and ordered Bratt to file one with redactions to protect the probe in case he decided to make it public. [filed a motion](https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2022/aug/20/trump-mar-a-lago-search-fbi-legal-motion) seeking the appointment of a so-called special master to determine what documents federal investigators can use as evidence, and to get a more detailed list of what was seized. [unauthorized retention of government secrets](https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2022/aug/23/trump-illegal-documents-fbi-mar-a-lago) at Mar-a-Lago, which could arise to potential charges including under the Espionage Act or obstruction of justice. [two-page ruling](https://storage.courtlistener.com/recap/gov.uscourts.flsd.617854/gov.uscourts.flsd.617854.94.0_7.pdf), the judge said the justice department’s proposed redactions were specifically restricted to keep secret grand jury material, the identities of uncharged individuals and sources and methods used in the criminal investigation – and the remainder could become public. The order from Judge Bruce Reinhart, who approved the FBI search warrant and is overseeing the case, instructed the justice department to release a redacted version of the affidavit that he had reviewed before noon on Friday. [Donald Trump’s](https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/donaldtrump) Mar-a-Lago resort in Florida earlier this month should be partly unsealed according to redactions proposed by the justice department.
The FBI raided the Mar-a-Lago home of former President Donald Trump earlier this month as part of a criminal probe of removed White House documents.
A group of media organizations had asked Reinhart to unseal the entire affidavit. espionage act and the law prohibiting the removal of official records. That proposal itself is sealed, making it impossible to know what the DOJ wants to be kept hidden in the search warrant affidavit.
Judge gives US Justice Department until midday Friday to release redacted document underpinning Mar-a-Lago search.
“At a minimum, any portions of the Brief that recite those facts about the investigation, without revealing additional ones not yet publicly available — in addition to any other portions that pose no threat to the investigation — should be unsealed,” the news organisations wrote. “The amount of information that could be left after those redactions may be very, very limited,” Finkelstein said. Reinhart’s order on Thursday came just hours after a Justice Department spokesman confirmed that prosecutors had submitted a sealed copy of its affidavit with proposed redactions to the judge. It cannot be used as a weapon for political purposes.” [valid reasons](/news/2022/8/15/us-justice-dept-opposes-effort-to-unseal-trump-search-affidavit) to keep some of the document secret, including the need to protect the identities of witnesses and federal agents, as well as the government’s investigation and strategy and grand jury material. A judge in the United States has ordered the Department of Justice to publicly release a redacted version of an affidavit that underpinned
A redacted version of the affidavit justifying the FBI search of former president Donald Trump's Florida residence must be unsealed in federal court by noon ...
Les signaux inquiétants sur la santé financière et les perspectives du réseau social de Donald Trump, Truth Social, se multiplient.
DWAC a perdu 2,42% à Wall Street jeudi. La société est aussi visée par une enquête de la SEC (U.S. (DWAC), qui doit lui permettre de recevoir de l’argent frais, tarde à se concrétiser, dix mois après son annonce.
U.S. Magistrate Judge Bruce Reinhart will decide whether the sealed FBI affidavit, which presumably lays out a detailed factual basis for the search, ...
The groups noted that significant information about the investigation is already public. Documents already made public as part of the investigation show that the FBI retrieved from the property 11 sets of classified documents, including information marked at the top secret level. But he acknowledged Monday that it was possible that the redactions, or blacked-out portions, would be so extensive as to leave the public version of the document without any meaningful information.
The New York attorney general appears poised to take civil action against the former president and the Trump Organization, which also goes to trial in ...
The best deposition outcome for James would have been for Trump to admit to cooking the books. James could amend any civil suit she files to include evidence that emerges in the DA’s criminal trial. One large impediment to bringing charges was the refusal of the Trump Organization’s former chief financial officer, Allen Weisselberg, to implicate his longtime boss. “I assume she presumed that he would invoke the Fifth Amendment—that’s part of why she was chasing this so hard, to get him to testify. “Once you’re interviewing the principals, you’ve already arrived at the conclusion that there’s more than enough evidence to build a case and prove that the defendants are liable,” Tristan Snell says. “This was an attempt to turn a high-percentage case into an even-higher-percentage case.”
The judge said the government had met its obligations to justify the redactions. Several media organizations, including CBS News, have pushed for the ...
Reinhart reviewed the affidavit and its references to evidence from investigations, saying last week that "all the information that the court relied upon is in the affidavit." Investigative methods and the identities of FBI agents and witnesses are at stake, prosecutors told the judge, and said releasing the affidavit risks chilling future cooperation. The National Archives and Records Administration (NARA) received 15 boxes of presidential materials from Mar-a-Lago in January. They argued the special master – a court-appointed monitor – is necessary to protect the former president's constitutional rights. The FBI searched Trump's primary residence at Mar-a-Lago on Aug. The affidavit likely contains more information about government investigators' concerns regarding the documents allegedly held at Mar-a-Lago.
The release by noon Friday of a redacted affidavit could offer a tiny but tantalizing window into Donald Trump's legal plight over his holding of classified ...
It is unclear to what extent the document will affect Trump's framing of the case. But given the politically charged circumstances -- a search at the home of an ex-president, not to mention one who seems to be planning to run for the White House again -- the pressure to know why the DOJ mounted its search is heightened. A Trump spokesperson did not respond to multiple requests for comment. And it is possible that the released version will not move the public understanding of the case forward by much. (The Trump legal team The Justice Department had earlier argued that the document must be kept entirely under seal to protect the investigation, witnesses, sources and methods. "They illegally Raided my home, and took things that should not have been taken. Trump has called for the affidavit to be released. A group of media organizations, including CNN, had asked the judge for a full reveal of the document for exactly this reason. It is not clear that Trump's time-honored tactics of delaying, distracting and distorting will derail this case -- one of The judge appeared to agree with the Justice Department on the need for such details to be kept secret for the protection of the people involved and the integrity of the investigation. This will make it impossible for outsiders -- and Trump's legal team -- to get a full picture inside the probe.
Affidavit contains key information about investigation into retention of government secrets at former president's Florida home.
The justice department had originally opposed unsealing the affidavit at all, and only filed a redacted version after being forced by Reinhart last week. [filed a separate motion](https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2022/aug/22/trump-sues-us-government-fbi-mar-a-lago) to have a so-called special master appointed to determine what seized materials prosecutors can use as evidence in the investigation, and to force the justice department to provide a more detailed list of what was retrieved by the FBI. [notably the probable cause](https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2022/aug/23/trump-illegal-documents-fbi-mar-a-lago) – about the justice department’s investigation into the unauthorized [retention of government secrets](https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2022/aug/10/fbi-searched-trumps-home-seeking-classified-presidential-records-sources) at Mar-a-Lago, which, according to the warrant, could constitute violations of at least three criminal statutes. The imminent partial release of the affidavit is set to prove a major juncture in the developing investigation, being led by the justice department’s national security division, and the attorney general, Merrick Garland, who personally approved the warrant after days of deliberations. [two-page ruling](https://storage.courtlistener.com/recap/gov.uscourts.flsd.617854/gov.uscourts.flsd.617854.94.0_7.pdf), the judge said the justice department’s proposed redactions were narrowly tailored to keep secret grand jury material, the identities of uncharged individuals and sources and methods used in the criminal investigation – and the remainder could become public. The justice department is expected to file on Friday a redacted version of the affidavit justifying the search warrant used to seize sensitive government documents from
The Justice Department is instructed to release documentation behind the search of Trump property by noon Friday, but could appeal.
The Justice Department and any of the entities asking for public release of the affidavit could appeal his decision to a District Court judge and to the Atlanta-based 11th Circuit Court of Appeals. Adding to that pressure: Trump has used the vacuum of information to assail law enforcement and contend that the search was a politically motivated attack against a potential contender for the White House in 2024. However, the department is also under pressure to reveal more details about the basis for taking the unprecedented step of executing a search warrant at the home of a former president. However, the judge said in a written order on Monday that he would not release details about sources and methods the government relied on in the affidavit. A federal magistrate judge has ordered the unsealing of a redacted affidavit laying out the Justice Department’s evidence for the Aug. However, a Justice Department spokesman confirmed that prosecutors complied with the order to submit those suggestions by noon Thursday.
The U.S. Justice Department is set to release Friday a heavily blacked out document explaining the justification for an FBI search of former President ...
[Lifestyle](https://www.ctvnews.ca/lifestyle) [Is the mullet making a comeback? Stocks in the U.S. Canada's top film and television awards are going gender-neutral. Two strangers who are completely unrelated look so similar, even facial recognition software had a hard time telling them apart from identical twins. But as the busy fall season nears, realtors and economists are at odds over how long the pricing slide will last and how low it will go. The Justice Department had earlier contested arguments by media organizations to make any portion of the affidavit public, saying the disclosure could contain private information about witnesses and about investigative tactics. [MORE WORLD NEWS](https://www.ctvnews.ca/world) Documents already made public show the FBI retrieved from the property 11 sets of classified documents, including information marked at the top secret level. Yet even a redacted affidavit can contain at least some fresh revelations about the investigation, and is likely to help explain why federal agents who had tried for months to recover sensitive government records from Mar-a-Lago ultimately felt compelled to obtain a search warrant. In an acknowledgment of the extraordinary public interest in the investigation, U.S. Affidavits typically contain vital information about an investigation, with agents spelling out to a judge the justification for why they want to search a particular property and why they believe they're likely to find evidence of a potential crime there. The document, expected by noon, is likely to offer at least some new details about an ongoing criminal investigation that has brought fresh legal peril for Trump just as he lays the groundwork for another presidential run.
President Biden plans Friday to meet with state and local officials to discuss reproductive health care before heading to Delaware for the weekend.
[make public a redacted version of the affidavit](https://www.washingtonpost.com/national-security/2022/08/25/trump-affidavit-mar-a-lago/?itid=lk_inline_manual_2) underpinning the FBI search of former president Donald Trump’s Florida home. At the White House, President Biden plans to drop by a meeting of state and local elected officials to discuss reproductive health care before heading to Delaware for the weekend. However, it remains to be seen how much will be revealed, given the redactions.
The U.S. Justice Department is set to release Friday a heavily blacked out document explaining the justification for an FBI search of former President ...
Federal Reserve pushed back on Wall Street's hopes that it may soon let off the brakes for the economy. Canada's top film and television awards are going gender-neutral. 1 hr ago 29 between 8:33 a.m. Two strangers who are completely unrelated look so similar, even facial recognition software had a hard time telling them apart from identical twins. But as the busy fall season nears, realtors and economists are at odds over how long the pricing slide will last and how low it will go. The Justice Department had earlier contested arguments by media organizations to make any portion of the affidavit public, saying the disclosure could contain private information about witnesses and about investigative tactics. Documents already made public show the FBI retrieved from the property 11 sets of classified documents, including information marked at the top secret level. Yet even a redacted affidavit can contain at least some fresh revelations about the investigation, and is likely to help explain why federal agents who had tried for months to recover sensitive government records from Mar-a-Lago ultimately felt compelled to obtain a search warrant. In an acknowledgment of the extraordinary public interest in the investigation, U.S. Affidavits typically contain vital information about an investigation, with agents spelling out to a judge the justification for why they want to search a particular property and why they believe they're likely to find evidence of a potential crime there. The document, expected by noon, is likely to offer at least some new details about an ongoing criminal investigation that has brought fresh legal peril for Trump just as he lays the groundwork for another presidential run.
A redacted version of the affidavit will be made public after federal agents searched Trump's Florida estate to look for classified documents.
Honig, a former federal prosecutor, told CNN's New Day that "the affidavit is a written narrative. Trump fix the structural problems that led to the greatest crisis in American democracy since the Civil War. The editorial went on: "Mr. "Trump with the extreme MAGA Republicans have made their choice to go backwards, full of anger, violence, hate and division. An unredacted version was leaked to some conservative news outlets before the DOJ's version. However, he accepted redactions made by the government. "The kind of authenticity and drive Dr. [lawsuit against the DOJ](https://www.newsweek.com/five-key-points-donald-trump-lawsuit-suing-doj-mar-lago-search-1735914)asking for a special master be appointed to review seized materials. statutes including the Espionage Act. We are right now living in a Lawless Country, that just so happens to be, also, a Failing Nation!" - The Department of Justice has until 12 p.m. AMERICA TO SAVE," Trump Jr.
Two-time Oscar winner Jamie Foxx shows of his pitch-perfect impression of Donald Trump during an appearance on the Rap Radar podcast.
"I beat the virus." Who is they?" I love Death Row." Excuse me!" "I love Death Row Records. "I love Snoop D O Double G," Foxx-as-Trump continued.
The Oscar winner broke out his uncannily accurate Trump impersonation while promoting his new film, 'Day Shift.'
If SNL is looking for a new Trump now that the former president is back in the news daily for reportedly [storing classified information at Mar-a-Lago](https://www.vanityfair.com/news/2022/08/jared-kushner-donald-trump-classified-documents), Foxx should be on its short list. “He said they tried to…they tried to give him the virus. I was like, Who is they?” He switched back and forth between his eerily accurate Trump impersonation and his own voice with ease. Foxx’s incredible Trump impression shouldn’t come as a surprise. Jamie Foxx is a man of many talents. Excuse me, excuse me, excuse me—fake news.
From nailing Barack Obama and Mike Tyson to his Gatling-gun takes on Quentin Tarantino and Tom Cruise, Jamie Foxx has long proven himself one of the ...
Everyone knows that, for the Mango Mussolini, hip-hop starts and ends with Kid Rock. But Death Row and Snoop D-O-Double-G? With a dead-on Donald Trump impersonation, Jamie Foxx announces himself as a frontrunner for the inevitable biopic
Court filing says many witnesses have been interviewed by the FBI; some classified papers sent to the National Archives in January appear to contain Trump's ...
UPDATE: A redacted version of the affidavit used to justify the Aug. 8 search of Donald Trump's Mar-a-Lago property was unsealed on Friday.
Trump claimed on his Truth Social platform that he did “nothing wrong” and that the search of his home was illegal. The release was ordered by noon on Friday. 8 search of former President Donald Trump’s Mar-a-Lago property, in which FBI agents retrieved 11 sets of classified documents.
The U.S. Justice Dept. releases redacted affidavit explaining justification for FBI search of Trump's Mar-a-Lago property.
Charles Leclerc really needed the Formula One break to clear his mind. After nearly three decades in the public eye, few can match Serena Williams' array of accomplishments, medals and awards. Federal Reserve dashed Wall Street's hopes that it may soon let off the brakes for the economy. But as the busy fall season nears, realtors and economists are at odds over how long the pricing slide will last and how low it will go. The Justice Department had earlier contested arguments by media organizations to make the affidavit public, saying any disclosure could contain private information about witnesses and about investigative tactics. The directive came hours after federal law enforcement officials submitted under seal the portions of the affidavit that they wanted to keep secret as their investigation moves forward. Documents previously made public show the FBI retrieved from the property 11 sets of classified documents, including information marked at the top secret level. Affidavits typically contain vital information about an investigation, with agents spelling out the justification for why they want to search a particular property and why they believe they're likely to find evidence of a potential crime there. Taken together, the affidavit reveals additional details about an ongoing criminal investigation that has brought fresh legal peril for Trump just as he lays the groundwork for another presidential run. In those boxes, according to the affidavit, officials located 184 documents bearing classification markings, including 25 documents marked as top secret. 8 search at Mar-a-Lago but instead concerns a separate batch of 15 boxes that the National Archives and Records Administration retrieved from the home in January. Fourteen of the 15 boxes recovered from former U.S.
However, there is a growing consensus online this week that Jamie Foxx may be the best Trump impersonator of them all after a clip surfaced showcasing the actor ...
He also appeared to mock Trump's [stance on the COVID-19 pandemic](https://www.newsweek.com/donald-trump-covid-diagnosis-republicans-hoax-study-1730042). Louis Bernard said: "This is uncanny" with AuthenticBred replying: "The Trump era in 1 minute...amazing." It can be watched [here](https://twitter.com/ElliottWilson/status/1562531424497897472). "It's the best impression of Trump EVER... "It's unbelievable," IAmHarmony said. [Mike Tyson](https://www.newsweek.com/topic/mike-tyson), Stevie Wonder and Jay-Z. [Bloomberg](https://www.newsweek.com/topic/bloomberg) interview where he was asked to [name his favorite verse from the Bible](https://www.newsweek.com/donald-trump-supporters-tricked-bible-ban-schools-prank-video-1675451). [Snoop Dogg](https://www.newsweek.com/topic/snoop-dogg) to promote the pair's new [Netflix](https://www.newsweek.com/topic/netflix) movie Day Shift. [response to the violent protests in Charlottesville](https://www.newsweek.com/2019/08/09/what-happened-charlottesville-virginia-terry-mcauliffe-book-1451608.html), Virginia, back in 2017 when he told reporters there were "very fine people on both sides." [social media](https://www.newsweek.com/topic/social-media) throughout his presidency and beyond with the likes of [Alec Baldwin](https://www.newsweek.com/topic/alec-baldwin), Dana Carvey and James Austin Johnson all turning their hand to mimicking the ex-POTUS. [Jamie Foxx's](https://www.newsweek.com/topic/jamie-foxx) impression of [Donald Trump](https://www.newsweek.com/topic/donald-trump) has gone viral on Twitter with viewers hailing it as the best impersonation they've seen yet of the former president. Chase Schleich said it was "literally the best Trump impression I've ever heard" with Senjutsusage writing: "If I didn't see it was Jamie Foxx I would have believed it was actually Trump."
Federal investigators obtained a search warrant for former President Donald Trump's Mar-a-Lago estate earlier this month by pointing to a raft of highly ...
The Justice Department argued against making even a redacted version of the affidavit public, warning that redactions needed to protect the integrity of the investigation and to prevent harm to individuals would be so extensive as to render the document meaningless. Both Reinhart and the Justice Department have noted an uptick in violent threats against those connected to the Trump probe as they laid out their rationale for redactions. In an order issued a short time later, the judge said that prosecutors had shown “good cause” to redact elements of the affidavit that would reveal “the identities of witnesses, law enforcement agents, and uncharged parties,” as well as “the investigation’s strategy, direction, scope, sources, and methods” and “grand jury information.” Ultimately the department resorted to getting a search warrant in order to try and obtain the materials it believed remained at Mar-a-Lago. “As I previously indicated to you, Mar-a-Lago does not include a secure location authorized for the storage of classified information,” DOJ wrote in a letter to Corcoran at the time. When prosecutors sought the search warrant for Mar-a-Lago, they included Corcoran’s letter in their submission to Magistrate Judge Bruce Reinhart. Notably, the letter came before a June 3 meeting between Trump, his attorneys and DOJ officials at Mar-a-Lago, where the department’s counterintelligence chief Jay Bratt and FBI agents viewed parts of the premises. Those arguments came in the form of a three-page, May 25 letter from Trump lawyer Evan Corcoran. The Department of Justice (DOJ), as part of the Executive Branch, is under the control of a President from the opposite party. Trump is a leader of the Republican Party. Records the FBI obtained from Trump’s Florida home in advance of the Aug. According to the affidavit, NARA officials found some of those “highly classified records were unfoldered, intermixed with other records, and otherwise unproperly [sic] identified.”
The United States Justice Department on Friday released a partially blacked-out document explaining the justification for an FBI search of former president ...
Separately, lawyers for Trump asked a federal judge to halt the FBI's review of documents recovered from his estate until a neutral special master can be appointed to inspect the records. In an acknowledgement of the extraordinary public interest in the investigation, U.S. The department also expressed concern about compromising the identities of potential witnesses or FBI agents who were involved in executing the search. 8 search at Mar-a-Lago, but instead concerns a separate batch of 15 boxes that the National Archives and Records Administration (NARA) retrieved from the home in January. Documents previously made public show that federal agents are investigating potential violations of three federal laws, including one that governs gathering, transmitting or losing defence information under the Espionage Act. It underscores the volume of sensitive government documents located at Mar-a-Lago.
The U.S. Justice Department on Friday released a partially blacked-out document explaining the justification for an FBI search of former President Donald ...
The Justice Department had earlier contested arguments by media organizations to make any portion of the affidavit public, saying the disclosure could contain private information about witnesses and about investigative tactics. Yet even a redacted affidavit can contain at least some fresh revelations about the investigation, and is likely to help explain why federal agents who had tried for months to recover sensitive government records from Mar-a-Lago ultimately felt compelled to obtain a search warrant. Affidavits typically contain vital information about an investigation, with agents spelling out to a judge the justification for why they want to search a particular property and why they believe they're likely to find evidence of a potential crime there. In an acknowledgment of the extraordinary public interest in the investigation, U.S. Though Justice Department officials are expected to have removed sensitive details about witnesses, and the scope and direction of the probe, the affidavit may offer the fullest explanation yet about the events leading up to the Aug. The document, expected by noon, is likely to offer at least some new details about an ongoing criminal investigation that has brought fresh legal peril for Trump just as he lays the groundwork for another presidential run.
It is unclear how extensive the redactions will be, but the document will provide insights into how the department came to pursue classified documents that ...
Trump’s Florida home this month and recovered government documents that should have been left in the custody of the National Archives when he left office, agents were executing a warrant that referred to three federal laws. Right-wing critics contend that his approval of the search warrant was a partisan attempt to harass a former president. Trump had held on to and flagged the incident to the Justice Department for guidance. The National Archives later said that at the end of the Trump administration Bratt subsequently emailed the lawyer and told him to further secure the documents in the storage area with a stronger padlock. May 6: The general counsel of the National Archives reached out to three lawyers who had worked with Mr. Bush, a Republican, and Bill Clinton, a Democrat, said the process of identifying presidential records and sending them to the archives begins months, if not years, before a president leaves the White House for the final time at noon on Jan. Information placed within a SAP is available to only a handful of high-level officials, including the president and top national security personnel. Trump to have avoided what’s become a legal conflagration would have been to simply turn over to the National Archives that government papers he’d kept at Mar-a-Lago. Instead, they are intended to limit the number of people who have access to secret or top secret materials. The government is not required to show it to them. It is unclear how extensive the redactions will be, but the document will provide insights into how the department came to pursue classified documents that ended up at Mar-a-Lago.
Redacted document provides more information about evidence that led to unprecedented search of Mar-a-Lago this month.
[was released](/news/2022/8/12/fbi-recovered-top-secret-documents-from-trumps-mar-a-lago-home) on August 12, revealing that the Department of Justice was investigating the former president for mishandling classified documents. “Whether or not the Justice Department pursues the charges has to be assessed in light of who the defendant would be. Trump had argued that the search was unwarranted because he would have handed the documents over if asked. “Judge Bruce Reinhart should NEVER have allowed the Break-In of my home,” he wrote on his platform Truth Social. “The FBI’s investigation has established that documents bearing classification markings, which appear to contain National Defense Information (NDI), were among the materials,” it read. But media organisations had asked for the document to be made public, citing “utmost public interest”.
Donald Trump kept dozens of classified documents at his Mar-a-Lago resort, including top secret intelligence information, according to a document released ...
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A major ingredient of the rule of law is finality. Perhaps Garland's Justice Department will announce both indictments on the same day.
A major ingredient of the rule of law is finality. Trump will settle with James on the fraud charges, announce he will not run for office and accept some level of responsibility for the riot, after which he will claim he was “beautifully” exonerated. Garland might seek a deal whereby Trump is not charged criminally on the condition that he not seek public office again. The closer we get to 2023, the more Trump can argue that any decision to prosecute is politically motivated. Trump recently [invoked his Fifth Amendment privilege against self-incrimination nearly 450 times](https://www.nbcnews.com/news/us-news/trump-deposed-ny-ag-civil-probe-business-practices-rcna42355) in a deposition in that case, and Garland may decide to let the New York case be the last word. He knows how the game is played, and he has always managed to win it. “President Trump is still liable for everything he did while he was in office,” he said on the Senate floor. 6 melee is overwhelming, not the least of which being the testimony of Cassidy Hutchinson before the House Committee that Trump knew that the mob was armed before he sent them up to Capitol Hill. A former judge with a fierce veneration of precedent, Garland may take stock from Nixon’s pardon and believe that indicting Trump would deviate from a bad case for the nation and presidential accountability standing for the unfortunate proposition that former presidents ought not be criminally charged for their excesses while in office. And there is an aroma about the circumstance that, without any obvious skill sets or qualifications, he accepted extravagant fees for sitting on the board of Burisma, a Ukrainian company. [broad federal investigation](https://www.nytimes.com/2022/03/16/us/politics/hunter-biden-tax-bill-investigation.html) of Hunter headed up by [David Weiss](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/David_C._Weiss), the holdover United States attorney in Delaware, has [picked up steam](https://www.cnn.com/2022/03/30/politics/hunter-biden-federal-investigation-heats-up/index.html). attorneys in the country who, although appointed for a term, serve at the pleasure of the president.
Top secret files were kept at Mar-a-Lago along with assorted newspapers and magazines, say investigators.
There are several pages in which not a single word is visible. A separate document explaining the proposed redactions noted that some parts of the affidavit must remain under seal to "protect the safety and privacy of civilian witnesses, in addition to law enforcement personnel, as well as to protect the integrity of the ongoing investigation". "There is also probable cause to believe that evidence of obstruction will be found at the premises," the agent added. The justice department said it censored the affidavit to protect "a significant number of civilian witnesses". The FBI agent who drafted the affidavit wrote they had "probable cause" to believe that "evidence, contraband, fruits of crimes or other items illegally possessed" would be discovered. The FBI told a judge they expected to find "evidence of obstruction" of justice in a search of former President Donald Trump's Florida home, according to newly released court papers.