Legal pundits differ on FBI raid on Trump residence

When the FBI executed a search warrant at Trump’s Mar-a-Lago estate last week, federal authorities recovered 11 sets of documents marked as confidential or secret, according to the property receipt from the search.

While questions focussing on the investigation remain unanswered — specifically whether Trump himself was the target of the probe — legal pundits across the political spectrum were quick to highlight similarities, and differences, between the search of the former president’s home and the FBI’s investigation into Hillary Clinton’s emails, media reports say.

Both investigations are linked to the potential mishandling of confidential information by top officials at the highest levels of government, media reports said, adding, however, that in Hilary Clinton’s case, authorities were looking at the former secretary of state’s use of a private email account for communication with her staff — some of that correspondence was later found to contain confidential information. In Trump’s case, the probe stems from boxes of classified documents found at the former president’s Florida home.

Alan Dershowitz, a renowned attorney and professor emeritus at Harvard Law School, says that comparing the two investigations, and questioning whether the legal process is being applied equally, is appropriate.

“Until (US Attorney General Merrick) Garland fully and specifically answers the hard questions about what appears to be unequal application of rules and practices, ‘what about her emails?’ will be a pertinent question,” Dershowitz wrote in an op-ed for the Wall Street Journal.

Other experts told NewsNation there are stark legal differences between the two cases.

“Whereas Hillary Clinton’s email server never contained properly marked classified information in the various emails received from or sent to unclassified government email accounts, the documents in Donald Trump’s possession were properly marked as classified and continued to have those markings at the time of their seizure,” Bradley Moss, a Washington-based national security lawyer, wrote in an email.

In fact, the Mar-a-Lago search warrant cited a potential violation of a criminal statute related to obstruction as one of the reasons for seeking the warrant. “My educated guess is that the Justice Department is looking at a different violation of law in the case of the former president versus Secretary Clinton,” said Jamil Jaffer, the founder and executive director of the National Security Institute at George Mason University.

In July 2016, then-FBI Director James Comey announced the findings from the Clinton email investigation and determined that the former secretary of state was “extremely careless” in her handling of “very sensitive, highly classified information”, but did not find clear evidence that Clinton “intended to violate laws governing the handling of classified information.”

Due to that lack of clear evidence, Comey concluded that “no reasonable prosecutor” would bring criminal charges in such a case and advised federal prosecutors against doing so. Now, the question of intent may be the key difference between the two investigations.

The search of Trump’s Florida home is just the latest development in a months-long probe into the former president’s handling of government documents. In June, one of Trump’s lawyers signed a statement asserting that all classified material at Mar-a-Lago had been returned, according to reporting from the New York Times.

But the FBI’s search last week, which recovered 11 sets of documents marked as confidential or secret, suggests that at least some of the classified material had not been returned.

–IANS

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