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    Friday, April 26, 2024

    Trump lawyers ask Justice Dept. not to charge Trump in classified-documents case

    Former President Donald Trump greets supporters before speaking at the Westside Conservative Breakfast, June 1, 2023, in Des Moines, Iowa.(AP Photo/Charlie Neibergall, File)
    President Donald Trump's lawyers, James Trusty, center, and Lindsey Halligan, left, leave the Department of Justice, Monday, June 5, 2023, in Washington. (AP Photo/Jose Luis Magana)

    Attorneys for Donald Trump went to the Justice Department on Monday morning to make their case that the government should not charge the former president in connection with his possession of classified documents after leaving office, according to people familiar with the matter.

    Trump lawyers Lindsey Halligan, John Rowley and James Trusty spent about two hours at the Justice Department and left without speaking to reporters. They met with Justice Department personnel including special counsel Jack Smith and a senior career official, but not Attorney General Merrick Garland or Deputy Attorney General Lisa Monaco, said people familiar with the matter, who like others interviewed for this article spoke on the condition of anonymity to discuss a closed-door proceeding.

    The Justice Department declined to comment.

    While it is not uncommon in high-profile cases for defense lawyers to get such a meeting with Justice Department officials toward the end of an investigation, current and former officials say such presentations rarely change prosecutors' minds.

    Two Trump advisers briefed on Monday's meeting said they continue to believe Smith will finalize a charging decision in coming weeks. The advisers said they are preparing for a potential indictment of the former president, and the meeting did not change their expectations.

    A CBS News camera crew first spotted the Trump lawyers walking into the building.

    In late May, Rowley and Trusty sent a letter to Garland asking for a meeting to discuss what they call the unfair treatment of Trump by Smith, who is leading the probe. They and Halligan - along with Timothy Parlatore, an attorney who has since left Trump's legal team - sent a much more detailed letter to members of Congress in late April saying the classified documents case should be investigated administratively, not as a criminal matter.

    Smith was appointed to lead the case in November, after Trump launched his 2024 bid for president. His team of federal prosecutors is investigating whether Trump or those close to him mishandled classified documents the former president kept after leaving office, or obstructed government efforts to retrieve them.

    As special counsel, Smith has greater autonomy than other prosecutors in the Justice Department. Under department regulations, the attorney general may overrule the special counsel only if the special counsel has failed to follow Justice Department policies and practices.

    A federal grand jury in D.C. has heard testimony from dozens of witnesses in recent months. Investigators also have surveillance video showing boxes of documents being moved at Mar-a-Lago, Trump's Florida residence and private club, and an audio recording of Trump talking about having an apparently classified document in his possession.

    In addition, testimony from at least one witness related to the documents probe has also been sought by Smith's investigators before a federal grand jury in southern Florida, a jurisdiction that includes Mar-a-Lago, a person familiar with the investigation said.

    Grand jury proceedings are secret, and prosecutors in general will not discuss an investigation while it is still ongoing.

    The classified documents case is one of four criminal probes involving the former president. Smith is separately investigating the conduct of Trump and his inner circle in connection to efforts to block results of the 2020 presidential election. The district attorney in Fulton County, Ga., is doing the same. And Trump has been indicted in New York on charges of falsifying business records connected to hush money payments during the 2016 election.

    Trump has denied wrongdoing in each case. After Monday's meeting ended, Trump posted on social media: "HOW CAN DOJ POSSIBLY CHARGE ME, WHO DID NOTHING WRONG, WHEN NO OTHER PRESIDENTS WERE CHARGED . . . THE GREATEST WITCH HUNT OF ALL TIME!"

    In the April letter to U.S. lawmakers, Trump's lawyers laid out their argument for why Trump should not be charged. They said that White House practices for handling classified information, across multiple administrations, differ so much from how other parts of the government handle national secrets, and as a result, the Mar-a-Lago case should be handled as a civil matter, not a criminal one. The letter also said that Trump's departure from the White House was rushed and that there was not sufficient opportunity to separate out papers that should not have been kept.

    The examination of Trump's retention of classified documents after leaving the White House dates back more than two years. It began with the National Archives and Records Administration, which spent months asking Trump to return what it suspected were presidential records - historical documents that are government property and that were not transferred to the Archives when Trump's term ended.

    Fifteen boxes of papers from Mar-a-Lago were sent to the Archives in early 2022. When Archives officials opened the boxes, they found more than 100 classified documents scattered among the various items. That led to questions about whether Trump had more classified papers at his Florida home. Trump's legal team handed over another 38 documents last June in response to a grand jury subpoena. But an FBI search of Mar-a-Lago two months later turned up more than 100 additional documents and items marked classified, even though the subpoena had demanded the return of any such material.

    In recent weeks, Smith's team has asked Archives officials to finish gathering and sending over a separate tranche of government documents that were the subject of a different subpoena. That subpoena, to the Archives, sought documents regarding the Trump administration's classification and declassification practices, according to a person familiar with the request, who also spoke on the condition of anonymity to discuss it. The request included classification training logs, any materials related to safeguarding sensitive documents in the Trump White House, decisions made regarding classification policy and more, this person added. The Archives has already turned over thousands of documents to the Justice Department, the person said, and is continuing to produce them on a rolling basis as quickly as possible.

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    The Washington Post's Perry Stein contributed to this report.

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