U.S. prosecutors should weigh releasing more Trump search details-Bolton
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[August 18, 2022]
By Sarah N. Lynch
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The U.S. Justice
Department should consider releasing at least some of the evidence it
used to justify searching former President Donald Trump's Florida home
last week, Trump's former national security adviser John Bolton said on
Wednesday.
In an interview with Reuters, Bolton said he agrees with the Justice
Department's (DOJ) concerns about releasing the affidavit it used to
convince a judge the FBI had probable cause to search Trump's home at
his Mar-a-Lago resort for classified materials.
However, he said the department's usual policy of keeping quiet about
pending investigations may not fly in this politically-charged
environment.
"Probably it shouldn't be released and I think DOJ is right. And I think
Trump in fact knows they don't want it released, which is why it's easy
for him to call for it to be released because he knows it's not going to
happen," Bolton told Reuters in an interview.
"Justice is very reluctant to do that for good reasons, but I think they
have got to be more creative here given the fire storm politically that
they face."
FBI agents on Aug. 8 recovered 11 sets of classified material from
Trump's home, according to the search warrant and property receipt that
U.S. Attorney General Merrick Garland last week asked the court to
unseal, in an unusual move.
Bolton spoke a day before U.S. Magistrate Judge Bruce Reinhart will hear
arguments in a federal court in West Palm Beach, Florida, by media
outlets who want the Justice Department to release additional sealed
records tied to the warrant, including the affidavit.
The Justice Department is expected to vigorously argue against releasing
even a redacted version, saying it contains highly classified materials,
could chill witness cooperation and would provide a "roadmap" to its
ongoing investigation.
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U.S. National Security Advisor John
Bolton speaks during a news conference in Geneva, Switzerland,
August 23, 2018. REUTERS/Denis Balibouse
Bolton said Trump had a knack for accumulating large amounts of
paper, and he can remember seeing "piles and piles" of it inside the
White House dining room. He served as Trump's national security
adviser from 2018 to 2019.
Trump also had several letters from North Korea's leader Kim Jong-un,
one of which made its way into the White House without going through
the proper screenings, said Bolton, who was later able to grab,
screen and secure that letter, but not several others he received.
"We weren't successful on the other letters, for reasons I'm not
entirely clear about," Bolton recalled. "He kept them in a file in
one of the secretary's offices...And I know he showed them to
people."
Since the FBI's search at Mar-a-Lago, Trump has repeatedly blasted
the bureau, claiming without evidence it was motivated by a partisan
witch hunt against him.
Bolton dismissed this claim, saying there is no basis to support it.
"There is no evidence there is a partisan motive here," he said. "I
think everybody just ought to calm down, whether you're pro-Trump or
anti-Trump, and let the process work its way through."
(Reporting by Sarah N. Lynch; Editing by Scott Malone and Josie Kao)
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