President Donald Trump took more than 700 pages of classified documents, including some related to the nation's most covert intelligence operations, to his private club and residence in Florida when he left the White House in January 2021, according to a letter that the National Archives sent to his lawyers this year.
The letter, dated May 10 and written by the acting U.S. archivist, Debra Steidel Wall, to one of Trump's lawyers, M. Evan Corcoran, described the state of alarm in the Justice Department as officials there began to realize how serious the documents were.
It also suggested that top department prosecutors and members of the intelligence community were delayed in conducting a damage assessment about the documents' removal from the White House as Trump's lawyers tried to argue that some of them might have been protected by executive privilege.
The letter was released Monday night by one of Trump's allies in the media, John Solomon, who also serves as one of the former president's representatives to the archives. The archives then released the letter Tuesday.
It was made public shortly after Trump's lawyers filed a legal motion Monday asking a federal judge in Florida to appoint an independent arbiter, known as a special master, to weed out any documents protected by executive privilege from a trove that was removed from Mar-a-Lago during an FBI search of the property Aug. 8. The motion, filed in U.S. District Court in Southern Florida, came as a different federal judge was deciding how much, if any, of the underlying affidavit used to justify the search warrant should be publicly released.
Solomon, appearing Tuesday on a podcast run by Steve Bannon, Trump's former White House aide, tried to suggest that Wall's letter somehow implicated President Joe Biden in the struggle over the classified documents. At one point in the letter, Wall told Corcoran that Biden had agreed with her and others that Trump's attempts to assert executive privilege over the materials were baseless.
But the letter never indicated that Biden was in charge of the decision rejecting Trump's claims of privilege or that he had anything to do with the search of Mar-a-Lago, as Solomon suggested.
In fact, the letter could further implicate Trump in a potential crime. It confirmed, for instance, that the former president had kept at Mar-a-Lago documents related to Special Access Programs, some of the nation's most closely held secrets, before the FBI searched the property. The search was part of an inquiry into whether the former president had willfully retained highly sensitive national defense papers and obstructed a federal investigation.