OPINION
GUEST ESSAY
We Knew the Justice Department Case Was
Righteous. This Affidavit Confirms It.
Aug. 26,
2022
https://www.nytimes.com/2022/08/26/opinion/redacted-affidavit-trump.html
By Andrew
Weissmann
Mr.
Weissmann was a senior prosecutor in the special counsel investigation into
Russian interference in the 2016 election.
We always
knew that whatever the information about the Mar-a-Lago search that would be
released by a federal court, it would not help Donald Trump.
We know
that not just because Judge Bruce Reinhart already concluded, based on seeing
the unredacted affidavit used to obtain the search warrant, that there was
probable cause to believe three federal crimes had been committed and that
evidence of those crimes was at Mar-a-Lago, Mr. Trump’s Florida club-residence.
Mr. Trump
knows the answers to the most important unanswered questions: What material did
he take from the White House, why did he take it, what had he done with it, and
what was he planning to do with it? There is nothing that prevented him for
over a year from publicly answering those questions; he surely has not remained
silent because the answers are exculpatory.
Above all,
the redacted affidavit (and an accompanying brief explaining the redactions),
which was released on Friday, reveals more evidence of a righteous criminal
case related to protecting information vital to our nation’s security.
I can
assure you, based on my experience as the general counsel of the F.B.I., that
although there may be too much information deemed sensitive at the lowest level
of classification, that was never the case with top-secret material.
Indeed, the
redacted affidavit details some of what was found in a preliminary review of
material earlier returned by Mr. Trump at the repeated requests of National
Archives officials, including “184 unique documents bearing classification
markings, including 67 documents marked as confidential, 92 documents marked as
secret and 25 documents marked as top secret.” An agent who reviewed that
earlier material saw documents marked with “the following
compartments/dissemination controls: HCS, FISA, ORCON, NOFORN and SI.”
The
markings for top-secret and sensitive compartmented information indicate the
highest level of security we have. Those levels protect what is rightly
described as the crown jewel of the national security community.
How to Do
Everything
Especially
with information classified at that level, the government doesn’t get to pick
and choose to defend the nation’s top secrets based on politics — it doesn’t
matter if the person in question is a Democrat or Republican, a former
president, a secretary of state or Edward Snowden. These documents belong to
the government, and their having been taken away posed a clear risk to our
national security.
The release
of the redacted affidavit provides further clarity on why Attorney General
Merrick Garland took the extraordinary step of approving the search of certain
locations at Mar-a-Lago. The short version is that nothing else had worked and top-secret
information was at stake.
In any
normal case, in my experience, with a responsible, upstanding citizen who may
have inadvertently taken government documents, a simple voluntary request for
their return would ordinarily suffice. If that failed, a grand jury subpoena
would typically do the trick. In this case, neither approach worked. The
attorney general had to resort to the most intrusive method of obtaining the
return of the documents, a search warrant approved by a federal court.
We already
had some indications as to why the search warrant was required. The head of the
National Archives and Records Administration wrote Mr. Trump’s team a letter in
May that makes clear that for months the federal archives had beseeched the
former president to return the documents and that a partial return, of 15
boxes, included over 700 pages of classified documents. And we knew that Mr.
Trump opposed the archives releasing the information to the Justice Department.
The
redacted affidavit provides additional evidence that the government exhausted
every other avenue to get the rest of the documents. It offers a few more
details about that back and forth with the Trump team. Within the Justice
Department, there seems to have been concern that the Trump team had not been
entirely forthright about having returned all the records and concern about
interference with witnesses in the case, contradicting Mr. Trump’s current
claims that he has fully cooperated with the department.
The
redacted affidavit is further proof that Mr. Trump’s flouting of criminal
statutes persisted for a long time and gives every appearance of being
intentional.
The
redacted affidavit also provides reason to believe that the Justice Department
acted quickly once it was made aware of the nature of the information that may
have remained at Mar-a-Lago. There is no question that some will say it should
have acted sooner, given the grave risk to national security posed by the
existence of highly classified documents at a place as insecure as a beach
resort that had already been the target of suspected foreign infiltration. And
supporters of Mr. Trump will continue to contend the Justice Department acted
precipitously and that he was fully cooperating — but as the disclosures on
Friday demonstrate, the facts increasingly contradict these claims.
That debate
is a sideshow. The key questions that remain include what precisely is the full
scope of what Mr. Trump took from the White House, why he took the documents
and did not return them all and what he was doing with them all this time.
The
redacted affidavit does not answer those questions, and the usually loquacious
Mr. Trump has not addressed them. But we do now know that the Justice
Department is one step closer to being able to hold Mr. Trump to account for
his actions, if it so chooses.
Under Mr.
Garland’s leadership, only the facts, law and precedent will matter. Mr.
Trump’s penchant for hyperbole and spin to his base will be ineffective in a
forum where the rule of law governs.
Andrew
Weissmann (@AWeissmann_), a former Justice Department prosecutor and senior
prosecutor in Robert Mueller’s special counsel investigation, is a professor of
practice at the New York University School of Law and the author of “Where Law
Ends: Inside the Mueller Investigation.”



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