On Aug. 8, 2022, FBI agents completed a surprise court-approved search of Donald Trumpâs Mar-a-Lago property and removed boxes containing what investigators described as hundreds of pages of top-secret records. In a conference call that evening, Assistant Attorney General Matt Olsen heard investigators describe materials that included information about covert operations and U.S. spying powers, and that the records were found in locations including Trumpâs personal office, residence, and a bathroom shower.
Olsen asked Julie Edelstein, described as the Justice Departmentâs top expert on mishandling classified records, what steps should follow. Edelstein responded that, for anyone else, arrest would be immediate, citing the criminality of knowingly taking classified documents outside secure facilities and the aggravating factor of concealment after a May 2022 subpoena to return all classified records.
The context included the National Archivesâ recovery of 15 boxes in January 2022, discovery of classified material, a May 11 subpoena with a May 24 deadline, and a June 3 handover of 38 classified documents by Trumpâs lawyer at Mar-a-Lago.