Journalists outside the Paul S Rogers Federal Building
and US Courthouse in downtown West Palm Beach as the document is released.
Redacted Trump Mar-a-Lago affidavit released:
five key takeaways
Affidavit, unsealed by federal magistrate judge Bruce
Reinhart, offers new details on probable cause and FBI sources
Hugo Lowell
in New York
Fri 26 Aug
2022 21.36 BST
https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2022/aug/26/redacted-trump-mar-a-lago-affidavit-fbi-takeaways
The FBI
sought to search Donald Trump’s Mar-a-Lago resort in Florida after it found
probable cause that highly sensitive national defense information and evidence
of obstruction of justice existed there, according to a redacted version of the
affidavit that got federal agents a warrant to search the former president’s
property.
The
affidavit – partially redacted by the justice department to protect details
about the criminal investigation into Trump’s unauthorized retention of
government secrets – offered several new details about the investigation that a
top official has said remains in its “early stages”.
Here are five takeaways from the affidavit, in
which the justice department also said the FBI had “not yet identified all
potential criminal confederates” and “not located all evidence related to its
investigation”:
New details on the probable cause
Foremost in
the affidavit: the justice department had good reason to believe there were
crimes being committed in specific areas of Mar-a-Lago, including Trump’s home,
the foyer to his residence known as Pine Hall, his “45 Office” and a storage
facility, among other locations.
The
affidavit did not offer an indication about potential charges against the 45th
and former president of the US, but it did mention the FBI believed that
“evidence of obstruction” would be found at the premises – indicating a wider
investigation than just the government’s efforts to recover sensitive
documents.
New details on the FBI’s sources
Speculation
has swirled for weeks around Trump and his team about how the FBI knew about
the location of his safe and specific rooms where sensitive documents remained,
and the justice department appeared to offer a glimpse into where that
information might have originated.
The justice
department said in the legal memo explaining its redactions to the affidavit
that it was seeking to protect “a significant number of civilian witnesses” –
the first such reference surrounding its sources – as well as other FBI and US
government personnel.
Classification is irrelevant
Around the
discussion in the affidavit about classified or declassified materials being
retained by Trump at Mar-a-Lago, the justice department noted that
classification does not matter for violations of the Espionage Act or statutes
concerning the removal of official documents.
The justice
department explained in a footnote that the law criminalizes “the unlawful
retention of information related to the national defense” that could harm the
United States or aid an adversary, regardless of whether the document is
classified or declassified.
FBI’s underlying basis for concern
As part of
the justification for seeking a search warrant for Mar-a-Lago, the affidavit
detailed how an FBI review of materials Trump had returned to the National
Archives in May 2022 demonstrated a track record of keeping some of the US
government’s most sensitive secrets at Mar-a-Lago.
The justice
department said among the documents recovered by the National Archives, 184 had
classification markings. Some also had markings denoting “SI” for special
intelligence, “HCS” for intelligence from human clandestine sources, and
“NOFORN” for “Not Releasable to Foreign Nationals”.
Storage room to be secured
Some people
close to Trump have tried to suggest that they were surprised that the justice
department considered the storage room as inadequate to keep boxes of
classified information because officials had supposedly only asked for a
“stronger lock” to the door, which was installed.
However,
the affidavit made no mention of a lock. In fact, it showed the justice department
told Trump’s lawyer Evan Corcoran in June that Mar-a-Lago was not authorized to
store classified information and asked the room be preserved in its condition
until further notice – suggesting it was already the subject of an
investigation.

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