NEWS
ANALYSIS
Document Inquiry Poses Unparalleled Test for
Justice Dept.
What had started as an effort to retrieve national
security documents has now been transformed into one of the most challenging
and complicated criminal investigations in recent memory.
Katie
Benner
By Katie
Benner
Aug. 29,
2022, 3:00 a.m. ET
https://www.nytimes.com/2022/08/29/us/politics/trump-justice-department-documents.html
WASHINGTON
— As Justice Department officials haggled for months this year with former
President Donald J. Trump’s lawyers and aides over the return of government
documents at his Florida home, federal prosecutors became convinced that they
were not being told the whole truth.
That
conclusion helped set in motion a decision that would amount to an unparalleled
test of the Justice Department’s credibility in a deeply polarized political
environment: to seek a search warrant to enter Mar-a-Lago and retrieve what
prosecutors suspected would be highly classified materials, beyond the hundreds
of pages that Mr. Trump had already returned.
By the
government’s account, that gamble paid off, with F.B.I. agents carting off
boxloads of sensitive material during the search three weeks ago, including
some documents with top secret markings.
But the
matter hardly ended there: What had started as an effort to retrieve national
security documents has now been transformed into one of the most challenging,
complicated and potentially explosive criminal investigations in recent memory,
with tremendous implications for the Justice Department, Mr. Trump and public
faith in government.
Attorney
General Merrick B. Garland now faces the prospect of having to decide whether
to file criminal charges against a former president and likely 2024 Republican
candidate, a step without any historical parallel.
Remarkably,
he may have to make this choice twice, depending on what evidence his
investigators find in their separate, broad inquiry into Mr. Trump’s efforts to
reverse the outcome of the 2020 election and his involvement with the Jan. 6
attack on the Capitol.
The
department’s Jan. 6 investigation began as a manhunt for the rioters who
attacked the Capitol. But last fall it expanded to include actions that
occurred before the assault, such as the plan to submit slates of electors to
Congress that falsely stated Mr. Trump had won in several key swing states.
This
summer, prosecutors in the U.S. attorney’s office in Washington began to ask
witnesses directly about any involvement by Mr. Trump and members of his inner
circle, including the former White House chief of staff Mark Meadows, had in
efforts to reverse his election loss.
For all his
efforts to distance the department from politics, Mr. Garland cannot escape the
political repercussions of his decisions. How he handles Mr. Trump will surely
define his tenure.
It is still
unclear how either case will play out. Prosecutors working on the investigation
into Mr. Trump’s handling of classified information are nowhere near making a
recommendation to Mr. Garland, according to people with knowledge of the
inquiry. Court filings describe the work as continuing, with the possibility of
more witness interviews and other investigative steps to come.
Numerous
inquiries. Since former President Donald J. Trump left office, he has been
facing several civil and criminal investigations into his business dealings and
political activities. Here is a look at some notable cases:
Classified
documents inquiry. The F.B.I. searched Mr. Trump’s Florida home as part of the
Justice Department’s investigation into his handling of classified materials.
The inquiry is focused on documents that Mr. Trump had brought with him to
Mar-a-Lago, his private club and residence, when he left the White House.
Jan. 6
investigations. In a series of public hearings, the House select committee
investigating the Jan. 6 attack laid out a comprehensive narrative of Mr.
Trump’s efforts to overturn the 2020 election. This evidence could allow
federal prosecutors, who are conducting a parallel criminal investigation, to
indict Mr. Trump.
Georgia
election interference case. Fani T. Willis, the Atlanta-area district attorney,
has been leading a wide-ranging criminal investigation into the efforts of Mr.
Trump and his allies to overturn his 2020 election loss in Georgia. This case
could pose the most immediate legal peril for the former president and his
associates.
New York
State civil inquiry. Letitia James, the New York attorney general, has been
conducting a civil investigation into Mr. Trump and his family business. The
case is focused on whether Mr. Trump’s statements about the value of his assets
were part of a pattern of fraud or were simply Trumpian showmanship.
Manhattan
criminal case. Alvin L. Bragg, the Manhattan district attorney, has been
investigating whether Mr. Trump or his family business intentionally submitted
false property values to potential lenders. But the inquiry faded from view
after signs emerged suggesting that Mr. Trump was unlikely to be indicted.
So far, Mr.
Garland has signaled that he is comfortable with owning all of the decisions
related to Mr. Trump. He has resisted calls to appoint a special counsel to
deal with investigations into the former president. In his first speech to the
department’s 115,000 employees last year, he expressed faith that together they
could handle any case. “All of us are united by our commitment to the rule of
law and to seeking equal justice under law,” he said.
Over the
course of this year, as prosecutors sought to understand how sensitive
government documents ended up at Mr. Trump’s Florida resort, they began to
examine whether three laws had been broken: the Espionage Act, which outlaws
the unauthorized retention or disclosure of national security information; a
law prohibiting the mishandling of sensitive government records; and a law
against obstructing a federal investigation.
By
summertime, the investigation into Mr. Trump’s handling of classified
information had started to yield compelling indications of possible intent to
thwart the law, according to two people familiar with the work. While there was
not necessarily ironclad evidence, witness interviews and other materials began
to point to the possibility of deliberate attempts to mislead investigators. In
addition to witness interviews, the Justice Department obtained security camera
footage of various parts of Mar-a-Lago from the Trump Organization.
What we
consider before using anonymous sources. How do the sources know the
information? What’s their motivation for telling us? Have they proved reliable
in the past? Can we corroborate the information? Even with these questions
satisfied, The Times uses anonymous sources as a last resort. The reporter and
at least one editor know the identity of the source.
The heavily
redacted affidavit explaining the government’s desire for a search warrant said
that the Justice Department had “probable cause to believe that evidence of
obstruction will be found at” Mar-a-Lago, and that “the government has
well-founded concerns that steps may be taken to frustrate or otherwise
interfere with this investigation if facts in the affidavit were prematurely
disclosed.”
But a
decision about whether to charge Mr. Trump over attempts to obstruct the
investigation, or his handling of sensitive national security information,
would involve a variety of considerations.
At the
heart of the case would be evidence uncovered by the F.B.I., which is still
trying to understand how and why government records made their way to
Mar-a-Lago and why some remained there despite repeated requests for their
return by the National Archives and a later subpoena from the Justice
Department.
But the
highly classified nature of some of the documents retrieved from Mar-a-Lago and
the possible evidence of obstruction are only some elements that will go into
any final decision about pursuing a prosecution.
Career
national security prosecutors will conduct a robust analysis of whether that
evidence persuasively shows that laws were broken. That process will include a
look at how the facts have been applied in similar cases brought under those
same laws, information that prosecutors examined when they investigated former
Secretary of State Hillary Clinton and the former C.I.A. director David H.
Petraeus.
In the case
involving Mrs. Clinton’s use of a private email server, for instance, officials
in the national security division asked prosecutors to dive deep into the
history of the Espionage Act. At issue was whether her handling of classified
information indicated she had engaged in gross negligence. One compelling case
of gross negligence that they did find, involving a former F.B.I. agent,
included far more serious factors. After examining past examples, they found
that her case did not meet that standard. In the end, the consensus was not to
charge Mrs. Clinton.
But Mr.
Trump’s case presents the additional question of obstruction of justice, and
the possibility that evidence could show that he or his legal team defied the
Justice Department to hold onto documents that belonged to the government.
That in
some ways echoes a previous obstruction inquiry conducted by Robert S. Mueller
III, the special counsel who examined whether Russia interfered in the 2016
election. His final report showed that Mr. Trump tried to curtail, or even end,
the special counsel inquiry as he learned more about it. But Mr. Mueller
declined to say whether Mr. Trump had broken the law, allowing the attorney
general at the time, William P. Barr, to clear Mr. Trump of that crime.
There is no
way to know whether the Justice Department has facts regarding obstruction that
meet its standard of prosecution, which is evidence that would “probably be
sufficient to obtain and sustain a conviction.”
But the
Justice Department’s own legal filings have thrust the question of obstruction
into public view. Should Mr. Garland find that there is not enough evidence to
indict Mr. Trump, the Justice Department under two successive administrations
will have chosen not to recommend prosecuting Mr. Trump for that crime.
If Mr.
Garland chooses to move forward with charges, it will be a historic moment for
the presidency, a former leader of the United States accused of committing a
crime and possibly forced to defend himself before a jury of his fellow
citizens. It is a process that could potentially unfold even as he runs again
for the White House against an incumbent whose administration is prosecuting
him.
That, too,
runs huge risks for the department’s credibility, particularly if the national
security threat presented by Mr. Trump’s possession of the documents,
inevitably disclosed at least in part during the course of any trial, do not
seem substantial enough to warrant such a grave move.
Mr. Garland
and his investigators are fully aware of the implications of their decisions,
according to people familiar with their work. The knowledge that they will be
scrutinized for impropriety and overreach, they say, has underscored the need
to hew to the facts.
But a decision
to prosecute — or to decline to prosecute — has political implications that Mr.
Garland cannot escape. And no matter of judiciousness can change the fact that
he is operating within an America as politically divided as it has been in
decades.
Mr. Trump’s
supporters have viewed any investigative steps around the former president as
illegitimate attacks by a partisan Justice Department that is out to get him.
And his detractors believe that any decision not to prosecute, no matter the
evidence, would show that Mr. Trump is indeed above the law.
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
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