Email Shows Early Tension Between Trump and
National Archives
The archives reached out to lawyers for the former
president less than four months after he left office last year seeking help in
recovering missing material.
By Alan
Feuer and Maggie Haberman
Aug. 24,
2022
Updated
9:01 p.m. ET
https://www.nytimes.com/2022/08/24/us/politics/national-archives-letter-trump.html
Less than
four months after former President Donald J. Trump left office, the general
counsel of the National Archives reached out to three lawyers who had worked
with Mr. Trump to convey a firm message: The archives had determined that more
than two dozen boxes of Mr. Trump’s presidential records were missing, and it
needed the lawyers’ “immediate assistance” to retrieve them, according to an
email obtained by The New York Times.
The email,
sent on May 6, 2021, by the top lawyer at the archives, Gary M. Stern, was an
early sign of tension between Mr. Trump and the federal agency responsible for
safeguarding presidential records. It presaged the battle that would later
erupt over the former president’s removal of scores of highly sensitive
documents from the White House.
On Tuesday,
the archives released a separate letter, indicating that Mr. Trump had taken
more than 700 pages of classified materials when he left Washington. Among
them, the letter said, were some related to Special Access Programs, which are
among the country’s most secretive intelligence operations.
Mr. Stern’s
email did not mention any classified materials, but it did help to further
flesh out the cascading events that ultimately led to an investigation into
whether Mr. Trump wrongfully kept hold of national security documents and other
presidential records.
That
investigation, which has included steps like the issuance of federal subpoenas
and a visit to Mr. Trump by top counterintelligence prosecutors, reached a new
level this month when F.B.I. agents conducted a court-approved search of
Mar-a-Lago, the former president’s private club and residence in Florida, and
carted off more sensitive government documents, including some marked with high
levels of classification.
In his
email, Mr. Stern noted that there were two sets of documents in particular the
archives could not find: the original correspondence between Mr. Trump and the
North Korean leader Kim Jong-un, and a letter that President Barack Obama had
left for Mr. Trump on his first day in office.
Mr. Stern
told the lawyers that just before Mr. Trump left office, the letters from Mr.
Kim were placed in a binder for the president but never made their way to the
archives, as required by the law. “It is essential that these original records
be transferred to NARA as soon as possible,” he wrote, using the acronym for
the National Archives and Records Administration.
Mr. Stern’s
email was addressed to Scott Gast and Michael Purpura, two of Mr. Trump’s
representatives to the National Archives, and to Patrick F. Philbin, who served
as a senior lawyer in Mr. Trump’s White House Counsel’s Office. Another
official at the archives, John Laster, also received a copy.
Mr. Philbin
and Pat A. Cipollone, the top White House lawyer at the end of the Trump
administration, have been interviewed by the F.B.I. in connection with the
inquiry into the sensitive documents stored at Mar-a-Lago after Mr. Trump left
office, according to people familiar with the matter.
Aside from
the letters from Mr. Obama and Mr. Kim, Mr. Stern also said that “roughly two
dozen boxes of original presidential records” that Mr. Trump had kept in the
White House residence during his final year in office had not been given to the
archives. In his email, Mr. Stern said the archives never received the
materials even though Mr. Cipollone had determined that they should have been
turned over, though it remained unclear what White House officials were told
about the boxes.
A
spokeswoman for Mr. Cipollone and Mr. Philbin declined to comment on the email,
as did an adviser to Mr. Gast. Mr. Stern and Mr. Purpura did not respond to
messages seeking comment.
At one
point in his email, Mr. Stern acknowledged that “things were very chaotic” at
the end of Mr. Trump’s time in the White House, “as they always are in the
course of a one-term transition.” He added that the transfer of Mr. Trump’s
records to the archives would not be “complete for several more months.”
“But it is
absolutely necessary,” he concluded, “that we obtain and account for all
original presidential records.”
Alan Feuer
covers extremism and political violence. He joined The Times in 1999.
@alanfeuer
Maggie
Haberman is a White House correspondent. She joined The Times in 2015 as a
campaign correspondent and was part of a team that won a Pulitzer Prize in 2018
for reporting on President Trump’s advisers and their connections to Russia. @maggieNYT


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