White House: DOJ searched Biden home after 'voluntary, proactive offer'
by lawyers
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[January 24, 2023]
By Steve Holland, Nandita Bose and Jarrett Renshaw
WASHINGTON (Reuters) -The White House said on Monday that a search by
the Justice Department of President Joe Biden's home on Friday had been
carried out after a "voluntary, proactive offer" by his personal lawyers
to the department.
The White House Counsel's Office also said it was reviewing recent
record requests from the Republican-led House Oversight Committee and
pledged to respect legislative oversight but warned its cooperation may
be limited by executive privilege and an ongoing Department of Justice
investigation.
A new search of Biden's home in Wilmington, Delaware, by the department
had found six more items, including documents with classification
markings, a lawyer for the president said in a statement on Saturday
night. It was the latest in a string of discoveries of classified
documents at Biden's Wilmington home and at a temporary office at the
University of Pennsylvania.
Some of the most recently disclosed classified documents and
"surrounding materials" dated from Biden's tenure in the U.S. Senate,
where he represented Delaware from 1973 to 2009, according to his
lawyer, Bob Bauer. Other documents had been from his tenure as vice
president in the Obama administration, from 2009 through 2017, Bauer
said.
"This was a voluntary, proactive offer by the president's personal
lawyers to DOJ to have access to the home," said White House
spokesperson Ian Sams.
Sams declined to provide more clarity on the exact content of the
materials taken from the Wilmington house. Biden had been kept informed
throughout this process, the White House said.
The search increases the legal and political stakes for Biden, who has
insisted that the previous discovery of classified material at his home
and former office would eventually be deemed inconsequential.
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U.S. President Joe Biden waves as he
boards Air Force One for return travel to Washington, at Dover Air
Force Base in Dover, Delaware, U.S., January 23, 2023. REUTERS/Ken
Cedeno
Sams also said the White House counsel had sent a letter to James
Comer, the chairman of the Republican-controlled House of
Representatives Oversight Committee, in response to Comer's
inquiries about the classified documents found at Democrat Biden's
home and office.
Comer, a Kentucky Republican, sent a letter this month requesting
documents such as visitor logs, the documents turned over to the
Justice Department and a list of people who had access to Biden's
campus office in Philadelphia.
The White House said it was seek to "accommodate legitimate
oversight interests within the Committee's jurisdiction while also
respecting the separation of powers and the constitutional and
statutory obligations of the Executive Branch."
A spokesperson for the House committee said the White House's
suggestion that it needed to determine whether the requests were
related to legitimate oversight undercut Biden's public pledge of
transparency.
"This is not 'legitimate' transparency from President Biden who once
claimed he'd have the most transparent administration in history,"
the spokesperson said.
(Reporting by Steve Holland, Nandita Bose and Jarrett Renshaw in
Washington; Editing by Grant McCool and Bradley Perrett)
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