House Democrats Request ‘Damage Assessment’ Following Recovery of Classified Docs
Democratic Reps. Carolyn Maloney and Adam Schiff on Saturday asked federal intelligence officials to immediately review the top secret documents that FBI agents retrieved during last week’s search of former President Donald Trump’s resort in Florida and to provide a classified briefing on their findings as soon as possible.
“Former President Trump’s conduct has potentially put our national security at grave risk,” Maloney (N.Y.), chair of the House Committee on Oversight and Reform, and Schiff (Calif.), chair of the House Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence, wrote in a letter to Director of National Intelligence Avril Haines.
“The facts that are now public make clear that a damage assessment is appropriate,” the chairs added.
As Maloney and Schiff summarized:
The recovered materials span 45 categories, including 11 sets of classified documents ranging from “Confidential” to “Secret” to “Top Secret” and “TS/SCI documents.” The unauthorized disclosure of Top Secret information would cause “exceptionally grave damage to the national security.” In addition, at least one report indicates that the FBI’s investigation focused in part on highly classified documents “relating to nuclear weapons,” which are among our nation’s most closely guarded secrets. If this report is true, it is hard to overstate the national security danger that could emanate from the reckless decision to remove and retain this material.
“If you have not already done so,” the lawmakers wrote to Haines, “we request that you instruct the National Counterintelligence Executive, in consultation with the Inspector General of the Intelligence Community and other inspectors general as appropriate, to conduct a damage assessment.”
“In addition, we ask that you commit to providing an appropriate classified briefing on the conduct of the damage assessment as soon as possible,” the pair continued. “Even as the Justice Department’s investigation proceeds, ensuring that we take all necessary steps to protect classified information and mitigate the damage to national security done by its compromise is critically important.”
As Maloney and Schiff pointed out, the two committees they lead “have conducted oversight of issues presented by the apparent mishandling of government records, both during and after the Trump administration.”
“In February,” the letter notes, “Chairwoman Maloney wrote to the National Archives and Records Administration (NARA) expressing serious concerns that records ‘appear to have been removed from the White House in violation of the Presidential Records Act’ and that reports indicated that ‘President Trump repeatedly attempted to destroy presidential records.'”
“While the former President returned 15 boxes of records to NARA earlier this year, recent developments show he continued to retain sensitive and classified materials belonging to the U.S. government,” adds the letter.
Originally published at Commondreams.org.