Skip to content
Search AI Powered

Latest Stories

Trump Lawyers Just Contradicted Trump's Claim That He Declassified Documents In New Court Filing

Trump Lawyers Just Contradicted Trump's Claim That He Declassified Documents In New Court Filing
Win McNamee/Getty Images

Former Republican President Donald Trump's legal defense amidst the escalating fallout from the FBI search of his Mar-a-Lago residence last month is not going well--and it's his own lawyers' fault.

Trump has repeatedly justified his hoarding of the highly sensitive documents the FBI found in his office by saying he "declassified" them on his way out of the White House.


But in a new court filing, Trump's lawyers argue the classification status of the documents should be "determined later"--a direct contradiction of Trump's own defense.

Trump's lawyers were careful to argue that Trump absolutely had the right to declassify the documents--an assertion that is ultimately beside the point, as the question is whether or not they were declassified at the time he removed them.

His lawyers chose not to address that topic in any way.

The filing was in response to the DOJ's appeal of federal Judge Aileen Cannon's decision to grant Trump's request that a "special master" be appointed to review the documents found in the FBI's search.

The DOJ is seeking to shorten the review period, exclude more than 100 classified documents from its terms, and exclude claims of privilege from the agreement.

The DOJ, however, has already reviewed the documents in question during the two-week period it took for Trump's camp to file their motion, and found nearly 200 highly classified documents in the trove, including those designated "top secret" and those pertaining to an unnamed foreign nation's nuclear capabilities.

Trump's filing shows that he and his attorney are pursuing a two-pronged defense strategy: one, that "the former president" has authority to decide what is and is not classified; and two, that under the Presidential Records Act the documents in question belong with either Trump or the National Archives, but not with the DOJ.

The first assertion is outright nonsense from a legal perspective--sitting Presidents have such authority, but former presidents do not.

But these weren't the only bizarrely incompetent assertions in the filing.

Trump's lawyers also absurdly downplayed the entire saga as a "document storage dispute" and contradicted Trump's other go-to defense: that the FBI and DOJ planted the sensitive documents in his office as part of an effort to entrap him.

All in all, not a particularly convincing filing for Trump and his lawyers to say the least, and people on Twitter couldn't help but roll their collective eyes.






Even as The Department of Justice has appealed Judge Cannon's decision on a "special master," they have also signaled their approval of one of the Trump team's choices to serve in the role: Judge Raymond Dearie, a Reagan appointee to the federal bench, who now serves as a senior circuit judge. He also served on the FISA Court, which approved the surveillance of Trump ally Carter Page as part of the investigation into whether Trump colluded with Russia in the 2016 campaign.

UPDATE 9/13/22 4:20pm ET: Trump lawyer Jesse Binnall went on Newsmax to assert once again that Trump did declassify "a number of things" while he was still president.

It is notable that Trump lawyers are willing to make this assertion publicly on television but not in an official court filing.

More from People/donald-trump

Pete Buttigieg
Flagrant/YouTube

Buttigieg Explains What He Wants 'Everyday Life' To Look Like For Americans In Pitch Perfect Rant

On his Substack Wednesday, former South Bend, Indiana, Mayor Pete Buttigieg wrote about why he decided to enter the "manosphere" and sit down with the hosts of the Flagrant podcast.

The manosphere is defined as a "varied collection of websites, blogs, podcasts, and online forums by men and for men often promoting masculinity, misogyny, and opposition to feminism. Communities within it include men's rights activists, incels, Men Going Their Own Way, pick-up artists, and fathers' rights groups."

Keep Reading Show less
Jennifer Vasquez Sura
Tasos Katopodis/Getty Images

Abrego Garcia's Wife Forced To Move To Safe House After Homeland Security Shares Her Address On Social Media

The name Kilmar Abrego Garcia has been in the news steadily since his abduction by the Department of Homeland Security's Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) and the United States Supreme Court unanimously ordering he be returned to his family in Maryland.

But much less has been said or written about Abrego Garcia's American-born wife, Jennifer Vasquez Sura. The pair have been married since 2019 and share a child.

Keep Reading Show less
Sarah Michelle Gellar
Michael Buckner/Variety via Getty Images

Could SMG return to the IKWYDLS reboot?

Sarah Michelle Gellar? More like "Sarah Dead Gellar."

At least that’s what the iconic scream queen told director and best friend Jennier Kaytin Robinson when she tried to pitch all the ways to bring back Helen Shivers’ frozen corpse to life for the I Know What You Did Last Summer reboot.

Keep Reading Show less
Pete Hegseth
Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images

Hegseth Dragged After Report Reveals He Demanded His Own Makeup Studio At Pentagon

Hating drag queens and insisting on traditional gender roles is a Republican article of faith at this point.

So why is far-right MAGA Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth, who has tried to kick trans people out of the military, demanding that a makeup studio be added to the Pentagon press briefing room for him?

Keep Reading Show less