July 2, 2024

Trump risked most national secrets, US prosecutors allege in the indictment

3 min read
Trump risked most national secrets, US prosecutors allege in the indictment

Trump risked most national secrets about US nuclear program and potential domestic vulnerabilities in the event of an attack according to the indictment

Trump risked most national secrets about US nuclear program and potential domestic vulnerabilities in the event of an attack according to the indictment.

U.S. prosecutors unsealed a 37-count indictment against Donald Trump on Friday (June 09), accusing the former president of risking some of the country’s most sensitive security secrets after leaving the White House in 2021, Reuters reports.

Trump mishandled classified documents that included information about the secretive U.S. nuclear program and potential domestic vulnerabilities in the event of an attack, the federal indictment said.

Trump also discussed with his lawyers the possibility of lying to government officials seeking to recover the documents; stored some documents in boxes around a toilet, and moved others around his Mar-a-Lago resort home in Florida to prevent them from being found, the charges said.

Unauthorized disclosure of classified documents posed a risk to U.S. national security, foreign relations, and intelligence gathering, prosecutors said.

The classified materials came from seven federal intelligence agencies, including the Pentagon, the CIA, the National Security Agency, and the Department of Energy, the indictment said. 

One document concerned a foreign country’s support of terrorism against U.S. interests.

Investigators seized roughly 13,000 documents at Mar-a-Lago nearly a year ago. One hundred were marked as classified, even though one of Trump’s lawyers had previously said all records with classified markings had been returned to the government.

Trump has previously said he declassified those documents while president, but the indictment alleges he had acknowledged that he lost that power when he left office.

The Justice Department made the criminal charges public on a tumultuous day in which two of Trump’s lawyers, John Rowley and Jim Trusty, quit the case for reasons that were not immediately clear. 

A former aide, Walt Nauta, faces charges of being Trump’s co-conspirator.

Trump is due to make a first appearance in the case in a Miami court on Tuesday, a day before his 77th birthday.

Since Trump would serve any sentences concurrently if convicted, the maximum prison time he would face is 20 years for obstruction of justice, a charge carrying the highest penalty.

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“Our laws that protect national defense information are critical to the safety and security of the United States, and they must be enforced,” U.S. Special Counsel Jack Smith, who is leading the prosecution, said at a press conference.

“We have one set of laws in this country, and they apply to everybody,” Smith said in his first public appearance since Attorney General Merrick Garland assigned him to the investigation last year.

Smith said he would seek a speedy jury trial in Florida.

Trump has proclaimed his innocence. After the charges were unsealed, he attacked Smith on social media.

“He is a Trump Hater – a deranged ‘psycho’ that shouldn’t be involved in any case having to do with ‘Justice,'” Trump wrote on his Truth Social platform.

The indictment of a former U.S. president on federal charges is unprecedented in American history and emerges at a time when Trump is the front-runner for the Republican presidential nomination next year.

Trump’s legal woes have yet to dent his popularity with Republican voters, according to Reuters/Ipsos polling.

Trump and his allies have portrayed the case as political retaliation by Democratic President Joe Biden, but Biden has kept his distance.

The White House said Biden had no advance knowledge of the indictment, and he later declined to comment when reporters asked about it.

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