The Final Days of the Trump White House: Chaos
and Scattered Papers
Government documents that President Donald J. Trump
had accumulated were with him in roughly two dozen boxes in the White House
residence. They were to go to the National Archives, but at least some ended up
in Florida.
Maggie
HabermanKatie BennerGlenn Thrush
By Maggie
Haberman, Katie Benner and Glenn Thrush
Aug. 20,
2022
https://www.nytimes.com/2022/08/20/us/politics/trump-fbi-search.html
Four days
before the end of the Trump presidency, a White House aide peered into the Oval
Office and was startled, if not exactly surprised, to see all of the
president’s personal photos still arrayed behind the Resolute Desk as if
nothing had changed — guaranteeing the final hours would be a frantic dash
mirroring the prior four years.
In the area
known as the outer Oval Office, boxes had been brought in to pack up desks used
by President Donald J. Trump’s assistant and personal aides. But documents were
strewn about, and the boxes stood nearly empty. The table in Mr. Trump’s
private dining room off the Oval Office was stacked high with papers until the
end, as it had been for his entire term.
Upstairs in
the White House residence, there were, however, a few signs that Mr. Trump had
finally realized his time was up. Papers he had accumulated in his last several
months in office had been dropped into boxes, roughly two dozen of them, and
not sent to the National Archives. Aides had even retrieved letters from Kim
Jong-un, the North Korean leader, and given them to Mr. Trump in the final
weeks, according to notes described to The New York Times.
Where all of
that material ended up is not clear. What is plain, though, is that Mr. Trump’s
haphazard handling of government documents — a chronic problem — contributed to
the chaos he created after he refused to accept his loss in November 2020,
unleashed a mob on Congress and set the stage for his second impeachment. His
unwillingness to let go of power, including refusing to return government
documents collected while he was in office, has led to a potentially damaging,
and entirely avoidable, legal battle that threatens to engulf the former
president and some of his aides.
Although
the White House Counsel’s Office had told Mark Meadows, Mr. Trump’s last chief
of staff, that the roughly two dozen boxes worth of material in the residence
needed to be turned over to the archives, at least some of those boxes,
including those with the Kim letters and some documents marked highly
classified, were shipped to Florida. There they were stored at various points
over the past 19 months in different locations inside Mar-a-Lago, Mr. Trump’s
members-only club, home and office, according to several people briefed on the
events.
Those
actions, along with Mr. Trump’s protracted refusal to return the documents in
Florida to the National Archives, prompted the Justice Department to review the
matter early this year. This month, prosecutors obtained a warrant to search
Mar-a-Lago for remaining materials, including some related to sensitive
national security matters. The investigation is active and expanding, according
to recent court filings, as prosecutors look into potentially serious
violations of the Espionage Act and obstruction of justice.
Many
questions about the mishandling of the documents lead to Mr. Trump, who often
treated the presidency as a private business. But people in his orbit also
highlight the role of Mr. Meadows, who oversaw what there was of a presidential
transition. Mr. Meadows assured aides that the harried packing up of the White House
would follow requirements about the preservation of documents, and he said he
would make efforts to ensure that the administration complied with the
Presidential Records Act, according to people familiar with those
conversations.
But as the
clock ticked down, Mr. Trump focused on pushing through last-minute pardons and
largely ignored the transition he had tried to forestall.
A spokesman
for Mr. Trump did not respond to a request for comment. Mr. Trump himself has
denounced the F.B.I. search of Mar-a-Lago as a “witch hunt.” His office has
said he had a “standing order” that materials removed from the Oval Office and
taken to the White House residence were deemed to be declassified the moment he
removed them, although none of the three potential crimes cited in the F.B.I.
search warrant depend on whether removed documents are classified.
A lawyer
for Mr. Meadows declined to comment.
Flouting
Records Rules
In his
final speech as president, Mr. Trump declared, “We were not a regular
administration.”
His
statement was indisputably accurate. From his first hours in office, Mr. Trump
had always taken a proprietary view of the presidency, describing government
documents and other property — even his staff — as his own personal
possessions. “They’re mine” is how he often put it, former aides said.
But that
was not the case. Under the Presidential Records Act, the law that strictly
governs the handling of records generated in the Oval Office, every document
belonged to taxpayers. Whether the materials were national security briefings,
reams of unclassified documents automatically uploaded to a secure server in
Pennsylvania or notes that Mr. Trump routinely ripped up or flushed down the
toilet — all were government property to be assessed and, in most cases,
transferred as part of the nation’s history to the National Archives.
Mr. Trump’s
lawyers and aides were well versed in the records act, even if Mr. Trump
routinely flouted it. Donald F. McGahn II, Mr. Trump’s first White House
counsel, instituted a protocol for the proper handling of materials and gave
presentations on the law to staff members, former officials said. After the
2020 election, White House officials held conversations about the fact that
someone needed to retrieve documents that Mr. Trump had accumulated in the residence
over many months, according to former officials.
By the end
of the administration, the White House counsel, Pat A. Cipollone, and his
deputy, Patrick F. Philbin, were keenly aware that Mr. Trump’s handling of
documents was a potential problem, according to people in their orbit.
But it is
unclear how much bandwidth either man had to deal with the issue. Mr. Trump was
on contentious terms with Mr. Cipollone after the election and often berated
the lawyer for objecting to his attempts to subvert Joseph R. Biden Jr.’s
victory, according to former officials.
Adding to
the disarray was the absence of the White House staff secretary, Derek Lyons,
who managed paperwork inside the executive complex but had stepped down on Dec.
18, 2020. That left Mr. Meadows, a former House member with no significant
executive experience before joining Mr. Trump’s staff, responsible for
overseeing a transition process the president wanted no part of.
Mr.
Meadows’s immediate predecessors in that role — President Barack Obama’s last
chief of staff, Denis McDonough, and President George W. Bush’s final chief of
staff, Joshua B. Bolten — had created teams to scrub West Wing offices of
anything that belonged to the archives and made the stewardship of government
records a priority.
It is
unclear whether Mr. Meadows took the same measures, former aides said. But in
the administration’s final weeks, the White House emailed all of its offices
detailed instructions about returning documents and cleaning out their spaces.
Mr. Meadows followed up on those notes and encouraged offices to comply,
according to a person familiar with those conversations.
Mr. Meadows
also assured White House staff members that he would talk to Mr. Trump about
securing records, including ones stashed in the residence, according to two
people with knowledge of the situation.
Regardless
of whether Mr. Meadows followed through on those promises, by early 2021, after
Mr. Trump had left the White House, officials with the archives realized they
were missing significant material.
They
reached out to, among others, Scott Gast, who had been a lawyer in the White
House Counsel’s Office under Mr. Trump, and Mr. Philbin. The two men, along
with Mr. Meadows and four other Trump officials, had been appointed by Mr.
Trump on his last full day in office to work with the National Archives.
The
archivists were particularly insistent about getting back the missing
correspondence from the North Korean leader and a letter left on the Resolute
Desk for Mr. Trump by Mr. Obama, both of significant historical value.
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in the past? Can we corroborate the information? Even with these questions
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Learn more
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Archives
officials also asked Mr. Gast and Mr. Philbin about the roughly two dozen boxes
that had been in the residence during the Trump administration’s final days.
Mr. Philbin responded that he would work to get them in the hands of the
archives and reached out to Mr. Meadows, who said he would help make it happen,
according to former officials.
But
archives officials did not get what they wanted until they traveled to
Mar-a-Lago and retrieved 15 boxes of material in January 2022. Subsequently,
archives officials told Mr. Trump’s team that they had identified social media
records that had not been preserved, and that they had learned White House
staff members had not preserved official business they had conducted on their
personal electronic messaging accounts.
They
referred the matter to the Justice Department. In the spring, both Mr. Philbin
and Mr. Gast were questioned by the F.B.I. about the boxes; Mr. Cipollone was
also interviewed at some point. A grand jury was formed.
In June,
one of Mr. Trump’s lawyers signed a statement asserting that all relevant
documents with classified markings from the boxes that had been requested — by
then they were stored in a basement area at Mar-a-Lago — had been returned. The
Justice Department would later file a detailed affidavit to a federal judge in
Florida, revealing that the department believed possible crimes had been
committed, precipitating the search on Aug. 8 at the club.
Declassifying
F.B.I. Materials
One of the
few robust discussions about government documents at the end of the Trump
administration focused on Crossfire Hurricane, the F.B.I. investigation into
whether the Trump campaign conspired with Russian officials. While that
inquiry, which began in 2016, did not ultimately accuse Mr. Trump of criminal
behavior, he remained obsessed with it throughout his term.
In Mr.
Trump’s last weeks in office, Mr. Meadows, with the president’s blessing,
prodded federal law enforcement agencies to declassify a binder of Crossfire
Hurricane materials that included unreleased information about the F.B.I.’s
investigative steps and text messages between two former top F.B.I. officials,
Peter Strzok and Lisa Page, who had sharply criticized Mr. Trump in their
private communications during the 2016 election.
The F.B.I.
worried that releasing more information could compromise the bureau, according
to people familiar with the debate. Mr. Meadows dismissed those arguments,
saying that Mr. Trump himself wanted the information declassified and
disseminated, they said.
Just three
days before Mr. Trump’s last day in office, the White House and the F.B.I.
settled on a set of redactions, and Mr. Trump declassified the rest of the
binder. Mr. Meadows intended to give the binder to at least one conservative
journalist, according to multiple people familiar with his plan. But he
reversed course after Justice Department officials pointed out that
disseminating the messages between Mr. Strzok and Ms. Page could run afoul of
privacy law, opening officials up to suits.
None of
those documents or any other materials pertaining to the Russia investigation
were believed to be in the cache of documents recovered by the F.B.I. during
the search of Mar-a-Lago, according to a person with knowledge of the
situation.
Mr. Trump’s
final hours in office were in large part consumed by pardons. On the evening of
Jan. 19, 2021, he pardoned Stephen K. Bannon, his former chief strategist, who
had been indicted by federal prosecutors in Manhattan for defrauding Mr.
Trump’s supporters.
The next
morning, during his last minutes in office, he pardoned Albert J. Pirro Jr.,
the former husband of the Fox News host Jeanine Pirro, who in 2000 had been
convicted of tax evasion and conspiracy and sentenced to 29 months in prison.
Amid the
pardons, many or all of the boxes in Mr. Trump’s residence were shipped off —
it is not clear precisely when or by what means — to Mar-a-Lago.
Letter for
Biden
If Mr.
Trump or Mr. Meadows needed a paradigm for the appropriate handling of
government documents, they needed to look no further than Vice President Mike
Pence’s office.
Two of Mr.
Pence’s senior aides — Marc Short, his chief of staff, and Greg Jacob, his
counsel — oversaw the indexing and boxing up of all of his government papers,
according to three former officials with knowledge of the work.
Their goal:
ensuring that Mr. Pence left office without a single paper that did not belong
to him, one of the officials said.
That was in
line with the record-keeping actions of the Obama administration, a process
that was overseen by Dana Remus. She returned to the White House at 10 a.m. on
Mr. Biden’s Inauguration Day to meet Mr. Cipollone in her new capacity as the
incoming president’s counsel.
The meeting
was short, and it set a pattern of amiable conversations between the two
lawyers over the next year, according to people familiar with their
interactions.
There were
no comparable interactions between Mr. Meadows and Ron Klain, Mr. Biden’s
incoming White House chief of staff.
After weeks
of rebuffing Mr. Klain’s invitations to meet in person, Mr. Meadows told Mr.
Klain to come to his big corner office — soon to be Mr. Klain’s office — at 10
a.m. on Inauguration Day, after Mr. Trump was set to depart. When Mr. Klain
arrived, no one was inside. Mr. Klain waited until someone came to get him,
saying that Mr. Meadows was in the basement, in the Situation Room. They
finally met at 10:45 a.m.
“I’m sorry
this meeting is late — I only have a few minutes to meet with you,” Mr. Meadows
said, explaining that Mr. Trump had departed late for his final trip to Joint Base
Andrews, according to a person with knowledge of the situation.
That
afternoon, Mr. Biden arrived in the Oval Office and found a letter waiting for
him in a drawer from Mr. Trump. It was two large pages, with Mr. Trump’s
distinctive handwriting visible to an aide watching Mr. Biden read it. The new
president remarked that Mr. Trump had been more gracious in the letter than he
had anticipated.
It was one
of Mr. Biden’s first records that will have to be turned over to the archives.
David E.
Sanger contributed reporting.
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
Katie Benner
covers the Justice Department. She was part of a team that won a Pulitzer Prize
in 2018 for public service for reporting on workplace sexual harassment issues.
@ktbenner
Glenn
Thrush covers the Department of Justice. He joined The Times in 2017 after working
for Politico, Newsday, Bloomberg News, the New York Daily News, the Birmingham
Post-Herald and City Limits. @GlennThrush




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