The FBI suspiciously waited until before the midterms to retrieve those documents — NOS4A2
According to his defense he had a standing order to declassify documents so he could take them for work at Mar-a-Lago. — NOS4A2
It's irrelevant if Trump declassified the documents. — Relativist
Even if it is true that Mr. Trump deemed the files declassified before the end of his presidency, however, none of the three crimes depends on whether the documents are classified.
The first law, Section 793 of Title 18 of the U.S. Code, is better known as the Espionage Act. It criminalizes the unauthorized retention or disclosure of information related to national defense that could be used to harm the United States or aid a foreign adversary. Each offense can carry a penalty of up to 10 years in prison.
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As a result, while these classifications — especially top secret ones — can be good indicators that a document probably meets the standard of being “national defense information” covered by the Espionage Act, charges under that law can be brought against someone who hoarded national security secrets even if they were not deemed classified.
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The second, Section 1519, is an obstruction law that is part of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act, a broad set of reforms enacted by Congress in 2002 after financial scandals at firms like Enron, Arthur Andersen and WorldCom.
Section 1519 sets a penalty of up to 20 years in prison per offense for the act of destroying or concealing documents or records “with the intent to impede, obstruct or influence the investigation or proper administration of any matter” within the jurisdiction of federal departments or agencies.
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The third law that investigators cite in the warrant, Section 2071, criminalizes the theft or destruction of government documents. It makes it a crime, punishable in part by up to three years in prison per offense, for anyone with custody of any record or document from federal court or public office to willfully and unlawfully conceal, remove, mutilate, falsify or destroy it.
The president can declassify what he wants. — NOS4A2
The 1988 Supreme Court case Navy v. Egan confirmed that classification authority flows from the president except in specific instances separated from his powers by law.
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[T]here are certain materials that presidents cannot classify and declassify at will. One such category of material is the identity of spies.
Another is nuclear secrets. The Atomic Energy Acts of 1946 and 1954 produced an even stranger category of classified knowledge. Anything related to the production or use of nuclear weapons and nuclear power is inherently classified.
Can presidents declassify matters directly?
Yes, because it is ultimately their constitutional authority.
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Do presidents have to obey the usual procedures?
There is no Supreme Court precedent definitively answering that question.
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What about nuclear secrets?
They are distinct, although for purposes of criminal law there is little substantive difference.
Congress has passed a law, the Atomic Energy Act, that imposes its own legal restrictions on mishandling information about how to build a nuclear bomb or enrich nuclear material. Such information is called “restricted data.” Legally, it is not the same thing as being “classified” under the executive order, although in everyday parlance people often refer to it as classified.
https://www.nytimes.com/2022/08/14/us/politics/trump-classified-documents.html
Can presidents declassify matters directly?
Yes, because it is ultimately their constitutional authority.
…
Do presidents have to obey the usual procedures?
There is no Supreme Court precedent definitively answering that question. — NOS4A2
Such information is called “restricted data.” Legally, it is not the same thing as being “classified” under the executive order — NOS4A2
None of this has been proven and all of it is without precedent. None of us have seen the affidavit. So your claim he broke the law is without merit, and given a long and poor history of such claims, just another conspiracy in my books. — NOS4A2
Because it is a public and sensitive matter. It should be in an authority control, not in private hands or businesses.
Failure to get input from the agencies that classified it in the first place (as is normally done) makes it reckless. Do you think Trump is clairvoyant?I doubt it was reckless. — NOS4A2
Enlarge on this, because I see no logic in it.Not when those same agencies are engaged in reckless or criminal behavior. — NOS4A2
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