
Former special counsel Jack Smith's team had evidence that President Donald Trump had classified documents, including materials relevant to business interests, after he left office following his first term, according to a memo the Justice Department gave to Congress. Subscribe to read this story ad-free Get unlimited access to ad-free articles and exclusive content.
Main Idea: A Justice Department memo shared with Congress says Jack Smith’s team had evidence that Donald Trump kept highly sensitive classified documents after leaving office.
Key Points:
The dispute can deepen public distrust in the Justice Department and weaken confidence that classified information is handled fairly and safely.
The memo may give voters more facts about Trump’s conduct and help them judge accountability before future elections.
Rate how each entity in this article affected the American people.
Central subject of the article; the memo concerns alleged handling of classified documents and prosecutors’ claims about his.
Former special counsel whose team’s memo and investigative findings are central to the story.
Named lawmaker who publicly summarized the memo and sent a letter pressing the Justice Department for more information.
Named judge whose order and prior rulings are a significant part of the legal context in the article.
Attorney General who received Raskin’s letter and is being asked for further disclosure.
Named as the president under whose administration the Justice Department appealed Cannon’s ruling and released the materials.
Named Trump chief of staff mentioned as a possible witness to the alleged showing of a classified map.
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Sign in to commentMentioned only indirectly through references to Trump’s current presidency and administration responses; minor institutional context.