Sen. Mark Warner (D-Va.) says that the Senate Intelligence Committee, which he chairs, needs to obtain a briefing on the documents taken from former President Donald Trump’s Mar-a-Lago residence.
Neither the Department of Justice (DOJ) nor the FBI has elaborated on what documents were taken during the Aug. 8 raid. Prosecutors with the DOJ, in a heavily redacted affidavit that was unsealed last month, wrote there was “probable cause” to believe that allegedly classified materials remained at Mar-a-Lago and included a photo that purported to show “TOP SECRET” documents strewn about the floor of Trump’s Florida home.
Special Master
Among other items, Trump said FBI agents took personal and medical records, tax files, and even his passports during the raid. The former president, who also has accused the bureau of searching former First Lady Melania Trump’s closet and clothing, said officials within the DOJ have leaked information to the mainstream media about the case.A federal judge in Florida, Aileen Cannon, last week sided with Trump’s lawyers last week and ordered the appointment of a special master to review the documents, which the DOJ sought to block. On Sept. 9, Trump and the DOJ submitted their special master candidates to Cannon.
Cannon, in concurring with Trump’s lawyers, wrote that she has concerns about possible DOJ leaks and said such disclosures would cause damage to Trump.
Warner signaled to CBS that “once we get clarification from the judge in Florida,” the Intelligence Committee will make a decision.
“I do not think we should have as- as the Intelligence Committee, a briefing on the ongoing investigation,” he said. “What our responsibility is, is to assess whether there has been damage done to our intelligence collection and maintenance of secrets capacity. That is a damage assessment, that frankly, even the judge in Florida has said, can continue.”