An NYPD officer guards Trump Tower after the FBI raided the former president’s summer residence. REUTERS

Nuclear material, foreign leaders, national security… No one knows for sure what was contained in the 20 boxes of documents seized by the FBI at Donald Trump’s Mar-a-Lago mansion. And it will not be known, because for this they were classified. House Intelligence Committee President Adam Schiff, who has permission to view these types of documents, wrote to the Justice Department yesterday asking for a full assessment of the potential damage that could result from these documents being out of control. for a year and a half.

Friday’s release of a search warrant and inventory of what the FBI seized at the Mar-a-Lago mansion ended in Trump style. An hour before a federal judge in Florida declassified the resume, seven pages of unidentified “sources” were obtained by various media outlets at the request of the Justice Department. The first, The Wall Street Journal, is owned by tycoon Rupert Murdoch, whose headline support for Trump was critical to his political career but is beginning to wane.

Chaos has engulfed media newsrooms with different versions of what Trump’s lawyers have had since Monday. The receipt was actually signed by Christina Bob, who was a Marine Corps judge and leading far-right network One America News. According to the ex-president, he was shown a search warrant “from three meters.” Of course, he was not allowed to enter during the search, and the security cameras in the mansion were turned off.

There were 20 boxes in total, seven of which contain documents with the highest US government security clearance, “Confidential Indoor Information” (SCI), which can only be partially seen. At the White House, they are kept in a safe and cannot be taken out of the room. “The walls are full of photos of convicted spies,” Robbert Gibbs, who was White House press secretary under Obama, told MSNBC. In addition, there are two “different” with “top secret” documents, one “secret”, two “confidential” and another “with a signature stamp”.

The only ones the FBI was able to freely describe were “A Clemency Order for Roger Stone Jr.,” a friend of Trump, and “Information Relating to the President of France.” Why would Trump keep information about Emmanuel Macron? His appearance at the top of the list has left many stumped.

The former president’s fortune does not protect Trump from lawsuits that could be brought under the Espionage, Obstruction of Justice and Concealment of Evidence Act, as his immunity only covers acts committed during his term. In sum, the sentences can reach 33 years in prison, but at a minimum, they deprive him of the right to again hold public office.

After the inventory was released, Trump accused Obama of also taking “33 million pages of documents, many of which are classified,” to his Chicago residence. Something that elicited a categorical denial from the National Archives, which prides itself on being in control of this historic presidency.

Trump also claimed that “they just had to ask for them,” but for the Justice Department, the operation was a last resort. The National Archives began searching for them shortly after he left the White House by helicopter on January 21 last year. The case was referred to the FBI when it became known that among the documents there were those that could jeopardize national security. In June, he was ordered to surrender them by court order, but his lawyers insisted he had nothing else. An informant from their entourage would have completely blown up the place where they were.

Source: El Correo

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