Donald Trump has clearly violated yet another federal law (the Presidential Records Act) by illegally taking at least 15 boxes of White House documents that lawfully should have been turned over to the National Archives and bringing them to his Florida home. There are reports that Trump also stole various pieces of White House furniture.
McGahn said Trump would "rip up everything". Depending on which documents were ripped or burned, Trump could potentially face obstruction of justice charges.
The Post interviewed "11 former Trump staffers, associates and others familiar with the habit" to report on Trump's illegal and "relentless" shredding of papers was "a problematic practice" and "far more widespread and indiscriminate than previously known". Trump's staff came up with "special practices to deal with the torn fragments".
"It is absolutely a violation of the act," said Courtney Chartier, president of the Society of American Archivists. "There is no ignorance of these laws. There are White House manuals about the maintenance of these records."
Stephen Gillers, a New York University law professor and constitutional scholar, said White House documents are government property under the Presidential Records Act.
[D]estroying them could be a crime under several statutes that make it a crime to destroy government property . . . A president does not own the records generated by his own administration. The definition of presidential records is broad. Trump's own notes to himself could qualify and destroying them could be the criminal destruction of government property.Post:
One person familiar with the National Archives process said that staff there were stunned at how many papers they received from the Trump administration that were ripped, and described it internally as "unprecedented."
One senior Trump White House official said he and other White House staffers frequently put documents into "burn bags" to be destroyed, rather than preserving them, and would decide themselves what should be saved and what should be burned. When the Jan. 6 committee asked for certain documents related to Trump's efforts to pressure Vice President Mike Pence, for example, some of them no longer existed in this person's files because they had already been shredded, said someone familiar with the request. . . .
[T]orn documents were [also] found in classified burn bags, which are used to dispose of documents, according to one former Trump White House official. Records personnel would routinely dump the contents of burn bags on a table and try to puzzle out which of the torn documents needed to be taped together and preserved, the former official said. . . .
Trump's chaotic approach to handling physical documents leaves gaping holes in the historical record, not to mention being disrespectful to the archivists and general public.
"We don't know how much of it was or was not successfully taped back together," [James] Grossman [executive director of the American Historical Association] said. "Also, how much did the taxpayers pay to have a bunch of highly qualified archivists sit at a desk and tape things back together?"
Turns out, this was a crime scene. pic.twitter.com/3iW7YXhpgx
— LB (@LincolnsBible) February 8, 2022
omg
— Eric Boehlert (@EricBoehlert) February 8, 2022
NYT frames Trump illegally taking docs from WH as being an honest mistake pic.twitter.com/zoBPVYbj06
"The recovery of 15 boxes from Trump’s Florida resort, including letters from Barack Obama and Kim Jong Un, underscores the previous administration’s cavalier handling of presidential records"
— Zhi Zhu (@ZhiZhuWeb) February 8, 2022
Hey @washingtonpost
Shouldn't that be ILLEGAL mis-handling?https://t.co/9kt9Pvdc33
This is illegal -- and potentially obstruction of justice or another serious crime, depending on what was in the boxes.
— Richard W. Painter (@RWPUSA) February 8, 2022
National Archives says Trump took 15 boxes of White House records to Florida https://t.co/g1qnnt3P1H via @nbcnews
Former President Trump had to return 15 boxes of documents that were improperly taken from the White House, the National Archives says. https://t.co/mQSwhzEbt1
— NBC News (@NBCNews) February 8, 2022
In 2016 @nytimes wallpapered A1 w/Hillary's email. In 2022, Trump walking out of office w/15 boxes of material is buried on A12 w/an unverifiable excuse for why he took the docs & the reporters pretending the media didn't drive the aforementioned email story. cc @EricBoehlert pic.twitter.com/ip1cOHjaVX
— scary lawyerguy (@scarylawyerguy) February 8, 2022
Trump is now disqualified from holding public office again both by inciting an insurrection (Amendment 14, Section III) AND by violating the #PresidentialRecordsAct by repeatedly destroying WH documents and stealing 15 boxes. It’s up to us to demand that these be enforced. pic.twitter.com/iCMFkpK92P
— Andrew Wortman ๐ณ️๐ (@AmoneyResists) February 8, 2022
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