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Trump supporters are going bananas over the lawful search of the former president's mansion. But only in their asserted "banana republic" would a former president be above the law.
The search was portrayed in a recent letter to the editor as "the first step" in "the disintegration of our democracy" (Readers Write, Aug. 10). Apparently, the writer is unaware that multiple steps of our U.S. Capitol were bloodied when Trump rioters attacked law enforcement officers and sought to defeat our democracy by preventing Congress from certifying the Electoral College vote. This was only one of an avalanche of anti-democratic efforts by the Republican top banana to reverse his landslide defeat. Donald Trump asked the Republican secretary of state in Georgia to "find 11,780 votes, which is one more than we have" to overturn the Joe Biden election victory in that state. He planned to send fake electors to Congress after the states had already certified their votes and awarded the electors to Joe Biden. To quote one of the writers: "That is what banana republics do when they are losing their power over the people."
The same writer is appropriately grateful that "we have a justice system that is fair for everybody." The former president's premises were entered pursuant to a search warrant consistent with the Fourth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution. A search warrant is issued only after a federal court determines that the entity seeking the warrant has established, under oath or affirmation, probable cause and "particularly describ[es] the place to be searched and the persons or things to be seized." According to the Supreme Court, probable cause exists when there is "a fair probability that ... evidence of a crime will be found in a particular place."
The constitutional protection afforded by the Fourth Amendment is not found in a "banana republic" and was adhered to here.
Instead of being driven bananas by the lawful search of a residence, perhaps the writers could ask, "What was the scope of the search warrant?" and, "What items were found and taken from the residence?" The former president possesses the warrant and a receipt for the property taken but has not produced them, preferring confusion to clarity. When he left the White House, he took documents "marked as classified national security information" according to the National Archives. The documents of federal officials, including the president, belong to us, we the people, and not to Donald Trump. We are not his minions. That is how a democracy works.
Brad Engdahl, Golden Valley