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Special counsel inquiry into Trump’s classified documents


BREAKING AT 11, FORMER PRESIDENT DONALD TRUMP CRIMINALLY INDICTED FOR A SECOND TIME THIS TIME ON FEDERAL CHARGES IN RELATION TO HIS HANDLING OF CLASSIFIED INFORMATION WHILE OUT OF OFFICE. ACCORDING TO ABC NEWS, TRUMP IS CHARGED WITH AT LEAST SEVEN COUNTS IN THE INDICTMENT. THIS COMES AFTER MORE THAN 100 DOCUMENTS WITH CLASSIFIED MARKINGS WERE FOUND AT MAR A LAGO, HIS HOME IN AUGUST OF LAST YEAR. GOOD EVENING. I’M FELICIA RODRIGUEZ. THANK YOU FOR JOINING US. WE WERE THE FIRST TO BREAK THIS NEWS TONIGHT ON TV AND ON YOUR PHONE. WE HAVE LIVE TEAM COVERAGE FROM THE FEDERAL COURTHOUSE IN MIAMI WHERE TRUMP IS SET TO BE ARRAIGNED NEXT TUESDAY. OUR TARA JAKEWAY SPOKE WITH THE PALM BEACH COUNTY STATE ATTORNEY ABOUT THIS INDICTMENT. WE BEGIN WITH MY CO-ANCHOR, TODD MCDERMOTT WITH THE NEW DEVELOPMENTS AND HOW TRUMP IS RESPONDING TONIGHT. TODD. SALLY KIDD JUST THINK OF IT. TUESDAY AFTERNOON, ONE FORMER PRESIDENT WILL BE RIGHT HERE AT THE FEDERAL COURTHOUSE IN MIAMI TO BE CRIMINALLY INDICTED ON FEDERAL CHARGES. AGAIN, DONALD TRUMP WILL BE INDICTED BY THE JUSTICE DEPARTMENT FOR THE ALLEGED MISHANDLING OF THOSE TOP SECRET AND CLASSIFIED DOCUMENTS FOUND AT HIS MAR-A-LAGO HOME. THERE’S BEEN EXTENSIVE INVESTIGATIONS DONE OVER AT LEAST THE LAST YEAR. THE SPECIAL COUNSEL APPOINTED EARLIER THIS YEAR. BUT NOW DONALD TRUMP WILL MAKE HISTORY AS THE FIRST FORMER PRESIDENT TO BE INDICTED FOR FEDERAL CRIMES. HERE’S WHAT WE’VE UNCOVERED UNCOVERED ABOUT IS WHAT WE’VE UNCOVERED ABOUT THE INDICTMENT TONIGHT. AND THERE IS A LOT THERE. THERE ARE STILL A LOT MORE STILL TO BE DETERMINED. ABC NEWS REPORTS THERE WILL BE AT LEAST SEVEN COUNTS RANGING FROM WILLFUL RETENTION OF NATIONAL DEFENSE INFORMATION TO CONSPIRACY THAT WOULD DENOTE OTHER PEOPLE MORE THAN LIKELY ALSO BEING INDICTED TO A SCHEME TO CONCEAL OBSTRUCTION TO MAKING FALSE STATEMENTS. TRUMP’S LAWYER ALSO CONFIRMED LIVE TONIGHT ON CNN, AS WELL AS A COUNT FOR VIOLATING A PROVISION OF THE ESPIONAGE ACT, WHICH WOULD BE THE PART OF THE LAW GOVERNING AND COVERING MISHANDLING OF TOP SECRET CLASSIFIED MATERIAL. THE FORMER PRESIDENT HAS BEEN ORDERED TO APPEAR IN FEDERAL COURT IN MIAMI AGAIN TUESDAY. DERIVE HERE AT 3 P.M. WHEN THE FORMER PRESIDENT ARRIVES AT THE FEDERAL COURTHOUSE. IT WILL MARK THIS EXTRAORDINARY MOMENT IN US HISTORY FOR PRESIDENT. TRUMP WILL BE FORMALLY CHARGED, PLACED UNDER ARREST BY THE US GOVERNMENT THAT HE ONCE WAS ELECTED TO LEAD AND DID SO FOR FOUR YEARS. ONCE HE’S ARRESTED, HE’LL BE BOOKED AND PROCESSED AS A FEDERAL DEFENDANT, AS ANYONE ELSE WOULD, AND THEN APPEAR BEFORE A JUDGE FOR HIS ARRAIGNMENT ON THOSE COUNTS. WE BELIEVE THEY ARE SEVEN IN ALL, MR. TRUMP OR ONE OF HIS ATTORNEYS WILL THEN ENTER A NOT GUILTY PLEA BEGINNING THE PROSECUTOR PROCESS OF THE FORMER PRESIDENT. NOW, TRUMP HAS REPEATEDLY DENIED WRONGDOING AS YOU KNOW, IN A STATEMENT ON HIS SOCIAL MEDIA PLATFORM TONIGHT, THE FORMER PRESIDENT SAID THAT HIS LAWYERS HAVE BEEN INFORMED HE HAS BEEN INDICTED AND THEY DO NOT HAVE ALL THE FORMAL CHARGING PAPERS, AS ACCORDING TO THEM. HE CALLED THE INVESTIGATION A, QUOTE, HOAX AND SAID HE IS AN INNOCENT MAN. HE ALSO WROTE THAT HE IS, QUOTE, INNOCENT AND THAT IT WAS A DARK DAY FOR THE US. NOW, DONALD TRUMP ALSO RELEASED A FOUR MINUTE VIDEO ON TRUTH SOCIAL ARGUING THAT HE IS INNOCENT OF THE INDICTMENT AGAINST HIM. AND HE’S BEEN TARGETED FOR SEVEN YEARS SINCE HE RAN FOR PRESIDENT. SO I JUST WANT TO TELL YOU, I’M AN INNOCENT MAN. I DID NOTHING WRONG. AND WE WILL FIGHT THIS OUT JUST LIKE WE’VE BEEN FIGHTING FOR SEVEN YEARS. IT WOULD BE WONDERFUL IF WE COULD DEVOTE OUR FULL TIME TO MAKING AMERICA GREAT AGAIN. AND THAT’S EXACTLY WHAT WE DID. BUT NOW, AGAIN, OUR COUNTRY IS IN DECLINE. BEE LINE WE’RE A FAILING NATION, AND THIS IS WHAT THEY DO. NOW. THE JUSTICE DEPARTMENT IS MOVING ADDITIONAL RESOURCES TO MIAMI AHEAD OF THE EXPECTED COURT APPEARANCE NEXT WEEK BY THE FORMER PRESIDENT. ACCORDING TO ABC NEWS TONIGHT, DONALD TRUMP’S TEAM IS ALREADY PLANNING A TRIP TO MIAMI AND IS THINKING OF HOLDING A CAMPAIGN EVENT AROUND THIS INDICTMENT. IT IS IMPORTANT TO NOTE THAT THE GRAND JURY HEARD TESTIMONY THAT LED TO THIS FEDERAL INDICTMENT FROM FORMER AND CURRENT TRUMP AIDES AND ALLIES, AS WELL AS HIS LAWYERS WHO WERE FORCED TO TESTIFY UNDER THE CRIMINAL EXCEPTION PROVISION. A BIG QUESTION TONIGHT IN REGARDS TO POLITICS IS HOW THIS WILL AFFECT HIS CAMPAIGN AND WILL IT HAVE ANY EFFECT ON HIM RUNNING FOR OFFICE? I WANT TO BRING IN NOW OUR REPORTER TARA JAKEWAY, WHO IS HERE WITH ME DOWN HERE IN MIAMI TO TALK ABOUT THAT. TARA. WELL, THANK YOU, TODD. THAT IS TEAMWORK RIGHT HERE AT ITS FINEST. NOW, THE PALM BEACH COUNTY STATE ATTORNEY SAYS A SECOND GRAND JURY WAS STARTED HERE IN MIAMI OUT OF CONVENIENCE. HE SAYS HE ALSO SAID IT WAS THE LOCATION WHERE THE ALLEGED MISHANDLED ING OF THE DOCUMENTS HAPPENED. AND THAT’S WHY THE SECOND GRAND JURY WAS CONVENED HERE IN SOUTH FLORIDA. NOW, A SPECIAL COUNSEL OUT OF WASHINGTON, DC HAS BEEN IN INVESTIGATING THE FORMER PRESIDENT. ON WEDNESDAY, A FORMER AIDE AND CURRENT CLOSE ALLY TO TRUMP WAS SPOTTED ARRIVING AT MIAMI FEDERAL COURT TO TESTIFY IN FRONT OF A SECOND GRAND JURY NOW ASSEMBLED IN SOUTH FLORIDA. STATE ATTORNEY DAVE ARONBERG TOUCHED ON WHY THE DOJ CHOSE SOUTH FLORIDA AND WHAT THIS INDICTMENT COULD MEAN FOR TRUMP’S TRY AT THE REPUBLICAN NOMINATION IN 2024. MUCH OF IF NOT ALL, OF THE OBSTRUCTION OCCURRED AT MAR A LAGO RIGHT HERE IN PALM BEACH COUNTY. I THINK THEY’RE ALSO TARGETING TRUMP’S ASSOCIATES LIKE HIS VALET, WHO ALLEGEDLY MOVED THE DOCUMENTS BEFORE AND AFTER THE FEDS CAME A CALLING. THE MORE INDICTMENTS AGAINST DONALD TRUMP, THE BETTER IT WILL BE FOR HIM WITHIN THE REPUBLICAN PRIMARY. I THINK HIS BASE VOTERS WILL GET MORE MOTIVATED, MORE JUICED UP TO COME OUT AND VOTE FOR HIM. BUT ARONBERG ALSO SAYS WHEN IT COMES TO THE GENERAL ELECTION, THESE INDICTMENTS COULD HAVE THE OPPOSITE EFFECT ON TRUMP. WHO WILL STILL CONSTITUTIONALLY HAVE A RIGHT TO RUN FOR PRESIDENT NO MATTER HOW MANY OF THESE INDICTMENTS HE

The federal criminal investigation into former President Donald Trump’s potential mishandling of classified documents escalated in stunning fashion this week with Trump’s indictment.The indictment hasn’t been unsealed yet, so details of the charges aren’t publicly available. But the investigation – led by Justice Department special counsel Jack Smith – revolves around sensitive government papers that Trump held onto after his White House term ended in January 2021. The special counsel has also examined whether Trump or his aides obstructed the investigation.Federal authorities have recovered more than 325 classified documents from Trump. He has voluntarily given back some materials, his lawyers turned over additional files after a subpoena, and the FBI found dozens of classified records during a court-approved search of his Mar-a-Lago home last summer.Trump has denied all wrongdoing and claims the investigation is a politically motivated sham, intended to derail his ongoing campaign to win the Republican 2024 nomination and return to the White House.Here’s a timeline of the important developments in the blockbuster investigation.May 2021An official from the National Archives and Records Administration contacts Trump’s team after realizing that several important documents weren’t handed over before Trump left the White House. In hopes of locating the missing items, NARA lawyer Gary Stern reaches out to someone who served in the White House counsel’s office under Trump, who was the point of contact for recordkeeping matters. The missing documents include some of Trump’s correspondence with North Korean leader Kim Jong Un, as well as the map of Hurricane Dorian that Trump infamously altered with a sharpie pen.July 2021In a taped conversation, Trump acknowledges that he still has a classified Pentagon document about a possible attack against Iran, according to CNN reporting. The recording, which was made at Trump’s golf club in New Jersey, indicates that Trump understood that he retained classified material after leaving the White House. The special counsel later obtained this audiotape, a key piece of evidence in his inquiry.Fall 2021NARA grows frustrated with the slow pace of document turnover after several months of conversations with the Trump team. Stern reaches out to another Trump attorney to intervene. The archivist asks about several boxes of records that were apparently taken to Mar-a-Lago during Trump’s relocation to Florida. NARA still doesn’t receive the White House documents they are searching for.Jan. 18, 2022After months of discussions with Trump’s team, NARA retrieves 15 boxes of Trump White House records from Mar-a-Lago. The boxes contained some materials that were part of “special access programs,” known as SAP, which is a classification that includes protocols to significantly limit who would have access to the information. NARA says in a statement that some of the records it received at the end of Trump’s administration were “torn up by former President Trump,” and that White House officials had to tape them back together. Not all the torn-up documents were reconstructed, NARA says.Feb. 9, 2022NARA asks the Justice Department to investigate Trump’s handling of White House records and whether he violated the Presidential Records Act and other laws related to classified information. The Presidential Records Act requires all records created by a sitting president to be turned over to the National Archives at the end of their administration.Feb. 18, 2022NARA informs the Justice Department that some of the documents retrieved from Mar-a-Lago included classified material. NARA also tells the department that, despite being warned it was illegal, Trump occasionally tore up government documents while he was president.April and May 2022On April 7, NARA publicly acknowledges for the first time that the Justice Department is involved, and news outlets report that prosecutors have launched a criminal probe into Trump’s mishandling of classified documents. Around this time, FBI agents quietly interview Trump aides at Mar-a-Lago about the handling of presidential records as part of their widening investigation.April 11, 2022The FBI asks NARA for access to the 15 boxes it retrieved from Mar-a-Lago in January. The request was formally transmitted to NARA by President Joe Biden’s White House Counsel’s office, because the incumbent president controls presidential documents in NARA custody.April 29, 2022The Justice Department sends a letter to Trump’s lawyers as part of its effort to access the 15 boxes, notifying them that more than 100 classified documents, totaling more than 700 pages, were found in the boxes. The letter says the FBI and U.S. intelligence agencies need “immediate access” to these materials because of “important national security interests.” Also on this day, Trump lawyers ask NARA to delay its plans to give the FBI access to these materials. Trump’s lawyers say they want time to examine the materials to see if anything is privileged, and that they are making a “protective assertion of executive privilege” over all the documents.Video below: Supporters gather outside Mar-a-Lago following news of Trump's indictmentMay 1, 2022Trump’s lawyers write again to NARA, and ask again that NARA postpone its plans to give the FBI access to the materials retrieved from Mar-a-Lago.May 10, 2022Debra Steidel Wall, the acting archivist of the United States, who runs NARA, informs Trump’s lawyers that she is rejecting their claims of “protective” executive privilege over all the materials taken from Mar-a-Lago and will therefore turn over the materials to the FBI and U.S. intelligence agencies, in a four-page letter.May 11, 2022The Justice Department subpoenas Trump, demanding all documents with classification markings that are still at Mar-a-Lago. At some point after receiving the subpoena, Trump asks his lawyer Evan Corcoran if there was any way to fight the subpoena, but Corcoran tells him he has to comply, according to notes Cochran took and later gave to investigators. Also after getting the subpoena, Trump aides are captured on surveillance footage moving document boxes into and out of a basement storage room – which has become a major element of the obstruction investigation.May 12, 2022News outlets report that investigators subpoenaed NARA for access to the classified documents they retrieved from Mar-a-Lago. The subpoena is the first public indication of the Justice Department using a grand jury in its investigation.June 2, 2022As part of the effort to comply with the subpoena, Corcoran searches a Mar-a-Lago storage room and finds 38 classified documents. According to a lawsuit that the former president later filed, Trump invites FBI officials to come to Mar-a-Lago to retrieve the subpoenaed materials.June 3, 2022Federal investigators, including a top Justice Department counterintelligence official, visit Mar-a-Lago to deal with the subpoena for remaining classified documents. The investigators meet with Trump’s attorneys, including Corcoran, and look around the basement storage room where the documents were stored. Trump briefly stops by the meeting to say hello to the officials, but he does not answer any questions. Corcoran hands over the 38 classified documents that he found. Trump lawyer Christina Bobb signs a sworn affidavit inaccurately asserting that there aren’t any more classified documents at Mar-a-Lago.June 8, 2022Trump’s attorneys receive a letter from federal investigators, asking them to further secure the room where documents are being stored. In response, Trump aides add a padlock to the room in the basement of Mar-a-Lago.Video below: Explaining Trump's classified document indictmentJune 24, 2022Federal investigators serve a subpoena to the Trump Organization, demanding surveillance video from Mar-a-Lago. Trump’s company complies with the subpoena and turns over the footage. CNN has reported that this was part of an effort to gather information about who had access to areas at the club where government documents were stored.Aug. 8, 2022The FBI executes a court-approved search warrant at Mar-a-Lago – a major escalation of the investigation. The search focused on the area of the club where Trump’s offices and personal quarters are located. Federal agents found more than 100 additional classified documents at the property. The search was the first time in American history that a former president’s home was searched as part of a criminal investigation.Aug. 11, 2022Trump sends a message through one his lawyers to Attorney General Merrick Garland, saying he has “been hearing from people all over the country about the raid” who are “angry,” and that “whatever I can do to take the heat down, to bring the pressure down, just let us know,” according to a lawsuit he later filed. Hours later, after three days of silence, Garland makes a brief public statement about the investigation. He reveals that he personally approved the decision to seek a search warrant, and that the Justice Department will continue to apply the law “without fear or favor.” Garland also pushes back against what he called “unfounded attacks on the professionalism of the FBI and Justice Department.”Aug. 12, 2022Federal Magistrate Judge Bruce Reinhart approves the unsealing of the Mar-a-Lago search warrant and its property receipt, at the Justice Department’s request and after Trump’s lawyers agree to the release. The warrant reveals the Justice Department is looking into possible violations of the Espionage Act, obstruction of justice and criminal handling of government records, as part of its investigation.Aug. 22, 2022Trump files a federal lawsuit seeking the appointment of a third-party attorney known as a “special master” to independently review the materials that the FBI seized from Mar-a-Lago. In the lawsuit, Trump’s lawyers argue that the Justice Department can’t be trusted to do its own review for potentially privileged materials that should be siloed off from the criminal probe.Sept. 5, 2022In a major ruling in Trump’s favor, Federal District Judge Aileen Cannon, a Trump appointee, grants Trump’s request for a special master to review the seized materials from Mar-a-Lago. She says the special master will have the power to look for documents covered under attorney-client privilege and executive privilege.Sept. 8, 2022The Justice Department appeals Cannon’s decision in the special master case.Sept. 15, 2022Cannon appoints senior Judge Raymond Dearie to serve as the special master and sets a November 30 deadline for the Brooklyn-based federal judge to finish his review of the seized materials.October 2022A maintenance worker drains the swimming pool at Mar-a-Lago, which ends up flooding a room where there are computer severs that contain surveillance video logs, according to CNN reporting. It’s unclear if the flood was accidental or on purpose, and it’s possible that the IT equipment wasn’t damaged, but federal prosecutors found the incident to be suspicious.Nov. 4, 2022Former Trump administration official Kash Patel testifies before the federal grand jury in the classified documents investigation. A Trump loyalist, Patel had publicly claimed that Trump declassified all the materials that ended up at Mar-a-Lago, even though there is no evidence to back up those assertions.Nov. 18, 2022Garland announces that he is appointing special counsel Jack Smith to take over the investigation.Dec. 1, 2022A federal appeals court shuts down the special master review of the documents that the FBI seized from Mar-a-Lago. The appeals panel rebuked Cannon’s earlier decisions, writing that she essentially tried to “interfere” with the criminal probe and had created a “special exception” in the law to help Trump.Video below: Boston presidential historian on Trump indictment: 'Just a bad, bad look'Dec. 23, 2022Trump attorney Timothy Parlatore testifies before the special counsel’s grand jury, where he described how Trump’s lawyers scoured his properties for classified materials. He later left Trump’s legal team.Late 2022 and early 2023Trump’s legal team searches four of his properties in Florida, New York and New Jersey for additional classified material. They find two more classified files in a Florida storage unit, and give them to the FBI. Around this time, Trump’s team also finds additional papers with classification markings at Mar-a-Lago, and they give those materials to the Justice Department. They also turn over a laptop belonging to a Trump aide who had copied those documents onto the computer, not realizing they were classified.Spring 2023A string of key witnesses testify before the special counsel’s grand jury in Washington, D.C. This includes Trump administration officials Robert O’Brien and Ric Grenell, who handled national security and intelligence matters; Margo Martin, a communications aide who continued working for Trump after he left the White House; and Matthew Calamari Sr. and his son, Matthew Calamari Jr., longtime Trump employees who oversee security for the Trump Organization.Mid-March 2023In response to a new subpoena from the special counsel, Trump’s lawyers turn over some material related to a classified Pentagon document that he discussed at a recorded meeting in 2021. However, Trump’s team wasn’t able to find the specific document – about a potential U.S. attack on Iran – that prosecutors were looking for.March 25, 2023Corcoran, the lead Trump attorney, testifies before the grand jury in Washington, D.C. This occurred after a federal judge ordered him to answer prosecutors’ questions, ruling that attorney-client privilege did not shield his discussion with Trump because Trump might been trying to commit a crime through his attorneys. Corcoran later recused himself from handling the Mar-a-Lago matter.June 2023The first public indications emerge that the special counsel is using a second grand jury in Miami to gather evidence. Multiple witnesses testify in front of the Miami-based panel, CNN reported.June 5, 2023Trump lawyers meet with senior Justice Department officials – including special counsel Smith – to discuss the Mar-a-Lago investigation. The sitdown lasted about 90 minutes, and Trump’s team raised concerns about the probe, which they have called an “unlawful” and “outrageous” abuse of the legal system.June 7, 2023News outlets report that the Justice Department recently sent a “target letter” to Trump, formally notifying him that he’s a target of the investigation into potential mishandling of classified documents.June 8, 2023News outlets report that Trump has been indicted in connection with the classified documents investigation. Trump also says in a social media post that the Justice Department informed his attorneys that he was indicted – and called the case a “hoax.”

The federal criminal investigation into former President Donald Trump’s potential mishandling of classified documents escalated in stunning fashion this week with Trump’s indictment.

The indictment hasn’t been unsealed yet, so details of the charges aren’t publicly available. But the investigation – led by Justice Department special counsel Jack Smith – revolves around sensitive government papers that Trump held onto after his White House term ended in January 2021. The special counsel has also examined whether Trump or his aides obstructed the investigation.

Federal authorities have recovered more than 325 classified documents from Trump. He has voluntarily given back some materials, his lawyers turned over additional files after a subpoena, and the FBI found dozens of classified records during a court-approved search of his Mar-a-Lago home last summer.

Trump has denied all wrongdoing and claims the investigation is a politically motivated sham, intended to derail his ongoing campaign to win the Republican 2024 nomination and return to the White House.

Here’s a timeline of the important developments in the blockbuster investigation.

May 2021

An official from the National Archives and Records Administration contacts Trump’s team after realizing that several important documents weren’t handed over before Trump left the White House. In hopes of locating the missing items, NARA lawyer Gary Stern reaches out to someone who served in the White House counsel’s office under Trump, who was the point of contact for recordkeeping matters. The missing documents include some of Trump’s correspondence with North Korean leader Kim Jong Un, as well as the map of Hurricane Dorian that Trump infamously altered with a sharpie pen.

July 2021

In a taped conversation, Trump acknowledges that he still has a classified Pentagon document about a possible attack against Iran, according to CNN reporting. The recording, which was made at Trump’s golf club in New Jersey, indicates that Trump understood that he retained classified material after leaving the White House. The special counsel later obtained this audiotape, a key piece of evidence in his inquiry.

Fall 2021

NARA grows frustrated with the slow pace of document turnover after several months of conversations with the Trump team. Stern reaches out to another Trump attorney to intervene. The archivist asks about several boxes of records that were apparently taken to Mar-a-Lago during Trump’s relocation to Florida. NARA still doesn’t receive the White House documents they are searching for.

Jan. 18, 2022

After months of discussions with Trump’s team, NARA retrieves 15 boxes of Trump White House records from Mar-a-Lago. The boxes contained some materials that were part of “special access programs,” known as SAP, which is a classification that includes protocols to significantly limit who would have access to the information. NARA says in a statement that some of the records it received at the end of Trump’s administration were “torn up by former President Trump,” and that White House officials had to tape them back together. Not all the torn-up documents were reconstructed, NARA says.

Feb. 9, 2022

NARA asks the Justice Department to investigate Trump’s handling of White House records and whether he violated the Presidential Records Act and other laws related to classified information. The Presidential Records Act requires all records created by a sitting president to be turned over to the National Archives at the end of their administration.

Feb. 18, 2022

NARA informs the Justice Department that some of the documents retrieved from Mar-a-Lago included classified material. NARA also tells the department that, despite being warned it was illegal, Trump occasionally tore up government documents while he was president.

April and May 2022

On April 7, NARA publicly acknowledges for the first time that the Justice Department is involved, and news outlets report that prosecutors have launched a criminal probe into Trump’s mishandling of classified documents. Around this time, FBI agents quietly interview Trump aides at Mar-a-Lago about the handling of presidential records as part of their widening investigation.

April 11, 2022

The FBI asks NARA for access to the 15 boxes it retrieved from Mar-a-Lago in January. The request was formally transmitted to NARA by President Joe Biden’s White House Counsel’s office, because the incumbent president controls presidential documents in NARA custody.

April 29, 2022

The Justice Department sends a letter to Trump’s lawyers as part of its effort to access the 15 boxes, notifying them that more than 100 classified documents, totaling more than 700 pages, were found in the boxes. The letter says the FBI and U.S. intelligence agencies need “immediate access” to these materials because of “important national security interests.” Also on this day, Trump lawyers ask NARA to delay its plans to give the FBI access to these materials. Trump’s lawyers say they want time to examine the materials to see if anything is privileged, and that they are making a “protective assertion of executive privilege” over all the documents.

Video below: Supporters gather outside Mar-a-Lago following news of Trump's indictment

May 1, 2022

Trump’s lawyers write again to NARA, and ask again that NARA postpone its plans to give the FBI access to the materials retrieved from Mar-a-Lago.

May 10, 2022

Debra Steidel Wall, the acting archivist of the United States, who runs NARA, informs Trump’s lawyers that she is rejecting their claims of “protective” executive privilege over all the materials taken from Mar-a-Lago and will therefore turn over the materials to the FBI and U.S. intelligence agencies, in a four-page letter.

May 11, 2022

The Justice Department subpoenas Trump, demanding all documents with classification markings that are still at Mar-a-Lago. At some point after receiving the subpoena, Trump asks his lawyer Evan Corcoran if there was any way to fight the subpoena, but Corcoran tells him he has to comply, according to notes Cochran took and later gave to investigators. Also after getting the subpoena, Trump aides are captured on surveillance footage moving document boxes into and out of a basement storage room – which has become a major element of the obstruction investigation.

May 12, 2022

News outlets report that investigators subpoenaed NARA for access to the classified documents they retrieved from Mar-a-Lago. The subpoena is the first public indication of the Justice Department using a grand jury in its investigation.

June 2, 2022

As part of the effort to comply with the subpoena, Corcoran searches a Mar-a-Lago storage room and finds 38 classified documents. According to a lawsuit that the former president later filed, Trump invites FBI officials to come to Mar-a-Lago to retrieve the subpoenaed materials.

June 3, 2022

Federal investigators, including a top Justice Department counterintelligence official, visit Mar-a-Lago to deal with the subpoena for remaining classified documents. The investigators meet with Trump’s attorneys, including Corcoran, and look around the basement storage room where the documents were stored. Trump briefly stops by the meeting to say hello to the officials, but he does not answer any questions. Corcoran hands over the 38 classified documents that he found. Trump lawyer Christina Bobb signs a sworn affidavit inaccurately asserting that there aren’t any more classified documents at Mar-a-Lago.

June 8, 2022

Trump’s attorneys receive a letter from federal investigators, asking them to further secure the room where documents are being stored. In response, Trump aides add a padlock to the room in the basement of Mar-a-Lago.

Video below: Explaining Trump's classified document indictment

June 24, 2022

Federal investigators serve a subpoena to the Trump Organization, demanding surveillance video from Mar-a-Lago. Trump’s company complies with the subpoena and turns over the footage. CNN has reported that this was part of an effort to gather information about who had access to areas at the club where government documents were stored.

Aug. 8, 2022

The FBI executes a court-approved search warrant at Mar-a-Lago – a major escalation of the investigation. The search focused on the area of the club where Trump’s offices and personal quarters are located. Federal agents found more than 100 additional classified documents at the property. The search was the first time in American history that a former president’s home was searched as part of a criminal investigation.

Aug. 11, 2022

Trump sends a message through one his lawyers to Attorney General Merrick Garland, saying he has “been hearing from people all over the country about the raid” who are “angry,” and that “whatever I can do to take the heat down, to bring the pressure down, just let us know,” according to a lawsuit he later filed. Hours later, after three days of silence, Garland makes a brief public statement about the investigation. He reveals that he personally approved the decision to seek a search warrant, and that the Justice Department will continue to apply the law “without fear or favor.” Garland also pushes back against what he called “unfounded attacks on the professionalism of the FBI and Justice Department.”

Aug. 12, 2022

Federal Magistrate Judge Bruce Reinhart approves the unsealing of the Mar-a-Lago search warrant and its property receipt, at the Justice Department’s request and after Trump’s lawyers agree to the release. The warrant reveals the Justice Department is looking into possible violations of the Espionage Act, obstruction of justice and criminal handling of government records, as part of its investigation.

Aug. 22, 2022

Trump files a federal lawsuit seeking the appointment of a third-party attorney known as a “special master” to independently review the materials that the FBI seized from Mar-a-Lago. In the lawsuit, Trump’s lawyers argue that the Justice Department can’t be trusted to do its own review for potentially privileged materials that should be siloed off from the criminal probe.

Sept. 5, 2022

In a major ruling in Trump’s favor, Federal District Judge Aileen Cannon, a Trump appointee, grants Trump’s request for a special master to review the seized materials from Mar-a-Lago. She says the special master will have the power to look for documents covered under attorney-client privilege and executive privilege.

Sept. 8, 2022

The Justice Department appeals Cannon’s decision in the special master case.

Sept. 15, 2022

Cannon appoints senior Judge Raymond Dearie to serve as the special master and sets a November 30 deadline for the Brooklyn-based federal judge to finish his review of the seized materials.

October 2022

A maintenance worker drains the swimming pool at Mar-a-Lago, which ends up flooding a room where there are computer severs that contain surveillance video logs, according to CNN reporting. It’s unclear if the flood was accidental or on purpose, and it’s possible that the IT equipment wasn’t damaged, but federal prosecutors found the incident to be suspicious.

Nov. 4, 2022

Former Trump administration official Kash Patel testifies before the federal grand jury in the classified documents investigation. A Trump loyalist, Patel had publicly claimed that Trump declassified all the materials that ended up at Mar-a-Lago, even though there is no evidence to back up those assertions.

Nov. 18, 2022

Garland announces that he is appointing special counsel Jack Smith to take over the investigation.

Dec. 1, 2022

A federal appeals court shuts down the special master review of the documents that the FBI seized from Mar-a-Lago. The appeals panel rebuked Cannon’s earlier decisions, writing that she essentially tried to “interfere” with the criminal probe and had created a “special exception” in the law to help Trump.

Video below: Boston presidential historian on Trump indictment: 'Just a bad, bad look'

Dec. 23, 2022

Trump attorney Timothy Parlatore testifies before the special counsel’s grand jury, where he described how Trump’s lawyers scoured his properties for classified materials. He later left Trump’s legal team.

Late 2022 and early 2023

Trump’s legal team searches four of his properties in Florida, New York and New Jersey for additional classified material. They find two more classified files in a Florida storage unit, and give them to the FBI. Around this time, Trump’s team also finds additional papers with classification markings at Mar-a-Lago, and they give those materials to the Justice Department. They also turn over a laptop belonging to a Trump aide who had copied those documents onto the computer, not realizing they were classified.

Spring 2023

A string of key witnesses testify before the special counsel’s grand jury in Washington, D.C. This includes Trump administration officials Robert O’Brien and Ric Grenell, who handled national security and intelligence matters; Margo Martin, a communications aide who continued working for Trump after he left the White House; and Matthew Calamari Sr. and his son, Matthew Calamari Jr., longtime Trump employees who oversee security for the Trump Organization.

Mid-March 2023

In response to a new subpoena from the special counsel, Trump’s lawyers turn over some material related to a classified Pentagon document that he discussed at a recorded meeting in 2021. However, Trump’s team wasn’t able to find the specific document – about a potential U.S. attack on Iran – that prosecutors were looking for.

March 25, 2023

Corcoran, the lead Trump attorney, testifies before the grand jury in Washington, D.C. This occurred after a federal judge ordered him to answer prosecutors’ questions, ruling that attorney-client privilege did not shield his discussion with Trump because Trump might been trying to commit a crime through his attorneys. Corcoran later recused himself from handling the Mar-a-Lago matter.

June 2023

The first public indications emerge that the special counsel is using a second grand jury in Miami to gather evidence. Multiple witnesses testify in front of the Miami-based panel, CNN reported.

June 5, 2023

Trump lawyers meet with senior Justice Department officials – including special counsel Smith – to discuss the Mar-a-Lago investigation. The sitdown lasted about 90 minutes, and Trump’s team raised concerns about the probe, which they have called an “unlawful” and “outrageous” abuse of the legal system.

June 7, 2023

News outlets report that the Justice Department recently sent a “target letter” to Trump, formally notifying him that he’s a target of the investigation into potential mishandling of classified documents.

June 8, 2023

News outlets report that Trump has been indicted in connection with the classified documents investigation. Trump also says in a social media post that the Justice Department informed his attorneys that he was indicted – and called the case a “hoax.”


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