Statement via Trump The FBI today searched Mar-a-Lago — a stunning escalation of a federal investigation into a former president with no historical parallels. - In a blistering statement, Trump — who called it a "raid" — accused Democrats of weaponizing the justice system to undermine Republicans in the midterms and stop him from running in 2024.
- "They even broke into my safe!" he wrote. The FBI and Justice Department had yet to issue a statement or confirm details of the search by the time this newsletter was sent.
Driving the news: Two sources familiar with the matter told Axios' Jonathan Swan it was their understanding that the search was related to documents Trump took from the White House that may have been classified. - Trump was not in Florida when the search took place, another source familiar with the matter told Axios' Alayna Treene.
Flashback: The National Archives in January retrieved 15 boxes of documents and other items from Mar-a-Lago — including correspondence with North Korean leader Kim Jong Un and other world leaders — that should have been handed over when Trump's presidency ended. Between the lines: The FBI cannot execute a search warrant without approval from a federal judge. That means the Justice Department — which is engaged in multiple investigations into Trump and his allies — has probable cause that a crime was committed and that evidence exists at Mar-a-Lago. - Trump is also under federal scrutiny for his efforts to overturn the 2020 election, in addition to various criminal and civil investigations at the state level.
The big picture: This unprecedented development — and the closely watched prosecutorial steps that will follow — has the potential to tear the country apart. Trump remains the dominant force in the Republican Party and the favorite to win the GOP presidential nomination in 2024. - Trump allies will seize on the search to accuse the Biden Justice Department of a political "witch hunt."
- DOJ typically does not carry out politically sensitive law enforcement activity close to an election, though the timeframe for that guidance is ambiguous. The midterms are in 92 days.
- U.S. Attorney General Merrick Garland rarely discusses Trump investigations, but he stressed last week that no one — including the former president — is above the law.
The bottom line: "Taken together, this is one of the most significant, sensitive, and politically explosive actions the US Justice Department and FBI has ever taken — one of a tiny handful of times it's ever investigated a president," tweeted journalist and historian Garrett Graff. |
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