John
Bolton Indicted Over Handling of Classified Information
Mr.
Bolton, a Trump aide turned critic, is part of a string of presidential foes to
become prosecutorial targets. But his case gained momentum in the Biden
administration.
By Devlin
BarrettGlenn Thrush and Minho Kim
Devlin
Barrett and Glenn Thrush reported from Washington, and Minho Kim from
Greenbelt, Md.
Oct. 16,
2025
https://www.nytimes.com/2025/10/16/us/politics/john-bolton-indictment-trump.html
John R.
Bolton, the national security hawk and former adviser to President Trump who
became one of his most outspoken critics, was indicted by a federal grand jury
in Maryland on Thursday on charges of mishandling classified information.
The
indictment against Mr. Bolton was 18 counts and accused him of using personal
email and a messaging app to share more than 1,000 pages of “diary” notes about
his day-to-day activities as Mr. Trump’s national security adviser in 2018 and
2019. The notes, which were sent to two family members who did not have
security clearances, included national defense information, such as details
classified as top secret, according to the indictment.
President
Trump and his former aide parted bitterly toward the end of his first term, and
the president greeted the news with grim satisfaction. “He’s a bad guy,” Mr.
Trump said in response to a question from a reporter at the White House about
Mr. Bolton. “That’s the way it goes.”
While Mr.
Bolton is part of a string of perceived enemies of the president to become
prosecutorial targets, the federal investigation into him gained momentum
during the Biden administration, when U.S. intelligence agencies gathered what
former officials have described as troubling evidence.
The
prosecution appeared to follow normal department channels, without firings or
forced transfers. Kelly O. Hayes, the U.S. attorney in Maryland, was among the
career prosecutors to sign off on the charges in conjunction with the Justice
Department’s national security division.
By
contrast, Mr. Trump in recent weeks has removed or sidelined prosecutors in
order to secure indictments against two of his longtime targets: James B.
Comey, the former F.B.I. director, and Letitia James, New York’s attorney
general.
If
convicted of the charges, Mr. Bolton, 76, could spend the rest of his life in
prison. Each count carries a maximum potential sentence of 10 years.
Mr.
Bolton is expected to surrender to the authorities on Friday and make his
initial court appearance in Greenbelt, Md., later that day.
Attorney
General Pam Bondi welcomed the charges against Mr. Bolton. “Anyone who abuses a
position of power and jeopardizes our national security will be held
accountable,” she said. “No one is above the law.”
Mr.
Bolton, in a statement, declared that the indictment was part of an
intimidation campaign against critics of Mr. Trump. “I look forward to the
fight to defend my lawful conduct and to expose his abuse of power,” he said.
The two
family members who received Mr. Bolton’s notes were not identified in the
26-page indictment, but prosecutors said Mr. Bolton occasionally used his AOL
and Google email accounts to send notes to them.
Mr.
Bolton’s written descriptions of where he learned information often indicated
that he recognized that he was describing carefully guarded government secrets,
the indictment added. One entry by Mr. Bolton began, “The intel briefer said,”
while another read, “while in the Situation Room, I learned.”
Making
matters worse, Mr. Bolton’s emails were later hacked by someone associated with
the government of Iran, the indictment said.
“A
representative for Bolton notified the U.S. government of the hack in or about
July 2021, but did not tell the U.S. government that the account contained
national defense information, including classified information, that Bolton had
placed in the account from his time as national security adviser,” according to
the filing.
One
surreal section of the indictment described Mr. Bolton apparently being taunted
by his hacker. A message on July 25, 2021, warned, “I do not think you would be
interested in the FBI being aware of the leaked content of John’s email (some
of which have been attached).” The email went on to declare, “This could be the
biggest scandal since Hillary’s emails were leaked, but this time on the GOP
side! Contact me before it’s too late.” A representative for Mr. Bolton
forwarded the email to the F.B.I.
The
indictment laid out exchanges between Mr. Bolton and the two family members
that made it clear he was meticulously assembling a record with their help,
with the intent of turning it into a book. All three knew they needed to be
discreet.
A day
after Mr. Bolton joined the White House in April 2018, the indictment said,
they started using an encrypted messaging app. “Why are we using this now? The
encryption?” one of Mr. Bolton’s correspondents asked. “Yup,” the other
responded. Mr. Bolton then chimed in: “For Diary in the future!!!!”
The
charging document laid out a number of 20- to 50-page documents that Mr. Bolton
sent to the two people over the app. After sending one 24-page document about
his time as the national security adviser, Mr. Bolton followed up with a
message that read, “None of which we talked about!!!” One of the recipients
wrote back: “Shhhhh.”
Mr.
Bolton’s lawyer, Abbe Lowell, said in a statement that the facts of the case
“were investigated and resolved years ago.” Mr. Bolton, like many public
officials, “kept diaries — that is not a crime,” Mr. Lowell added. Those
diaries, Mr. Lowell said, were unclassified records that were shared “only with
his immediate family, and known to the F.B.I. as far back as 2021.”
In
August, F.B.I. agents searched Mr. Bolton’s Maryland home and his office in
Washington, carrying out boxes of papers, computer files and other materials as
part of the investigation. Subsequent court filings indicated that some
documents with low-level classification markings were found. Thursday’s filing
said that printed versions of Mr. Bolton’s diary entries, which contained
classified information, were found in the search of his home.
The New
York Times has previously reported that the United States gathered data from an
adversary’s spy service, including emails with sensitive information that Mr.
Bolton, while working in the first Trump administration, appeared to have sent
to people close to him on an unclassified system, the people said, speaking on
the condition of anonymity to discuss a sensitive case.
Mr.
Bolton apparently sent the messages to people close to him who were helping him
gather material that he would use in his 2020 memoir, “The Room Where It
Happened,” which offered a highly critical behind-the-scenes look at the Trump
administration.
None of
the classified information described in the indictment was mentioned in the
book, according to the filing, which said that Mr. Bolton shared intelligence
about a foreign adversary’s plan for a future missile launch, a covert action
in a foreign country and sensitive sources and methods used to collect
intelligence.
Mr.
Bolton has been a prolific television pundit for more than a decade, and
Thursday’s indictment used some of his own statements against him, including
his declaration that if he had done what Hillary Clinton did in using a private
email server as secretary of state, “I’d be in jail right now.”
Prosecutors
also cited his criticism of the Trump administration earlier this year when it
was disclosed that officials had used Signal, a commercial messaging app, to
discuss an upcoming military strike in Yemen.
“I
couldn’t find a way to express how stunned I was that anybody would do this,”
he said in April. “You simply don’t use commercial means of communication,
whether it’s supposedly an encrypted app or not, for these kinds of
discussions.”
While the
Bolton case has taken a number of unexpected turns over the years, it stretches
back to the waning days of the first Trump administration, when White House
officials were furious that Mr. Bolton had written the book.
Shortly
before Mr. Bolton’s memoir was published, the administration went to court
seeking to delay its release. The Justice Department around that time also
opened a criminal investigation into whether Mr. Bolton had mishandled
classified information by disclosing certain details in the book. A judge later
concluded that he might have published classified information, but the criminal
investigation appeared to languish until the intelligence about his emails was
gathered years later.
A 2021
settlement of the litigation over the book included the condition that Mr.
Bolton return to the government any material in his possession “that may
contain classified information,” the indictment said.
Earlier
this year, John Ratcliffe, the C.I.A. director, briefed Kash Patel, the F.B.I.
director, on the information collected about Mr. Bolton’s emails. The officials
believed that the material Mr. Bolton had transcribed into the unclassified and
unsecured email contained classified information.
Each
intelligence agency makes its own determinations about what information is
classified, so it is often up to the “originating” agency to decide whether
pieces of information are classified, and how sensitive they are.
Mr.
Bolton was investigated under the Espionage Act, a 1917 law that has in recent
years taken on an outsize role in American politics as investigators have
pursued similar cases against high-profile officials or candidates.
During
the 2016 presidential campaign, Mrs. Clinton was investigated for her use of a
private email server to handle her work as secretary of state.
In 2022,
F.B.I. agents searched Mr. Trump’s Mar-a-Lago home in Florida and found more
than 100 classified documents, in addition to others retrieved earlier. Mr.
Trump was indicted in that case, but the charges were dismissed by a trial
judge during the 2024 presidential campaign.
And in
early 2023, the Justice Department appointed a special counsel to investigate
how classified documents had ended up in President Joseph R. Biden Jr.’s office
and home after he left the vice presidency.
James C.
McKinley Jr. contributed reporting.
Devlin
Barrett covers the Justice Department and the F.B.I. for The Times.
Glenn
Thrush covers the Department of Justice for The Times and has also written
about gun violence, civil rights and conditions in the country’s jails and
prisons.
Minho Kim
covers breaking news and climate change for The Times. He is based in
Washington.


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