Over 200 Donald Trump Documents to Be Handed Over in Huge Court Defeat

Authored by newsweek.com and submitted by BelleAriel
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A former White House aide in the Trump administration has been ordered by a judge to hand over between 200 and 250 emails from an encrypted account, as they were identified as relating to presidential business.

It comes after FBI agents raided Donald Trump's Mar-a-Lago residence in Palm Beach, Florida in August 2022 to obtain documents from his time in the White House under the Presidential Records Act (PRA). More than 13,000 documents were seized, 103 of which were classified.

The ruling by Colleen Kollar-Kotelly, U.S. district judge for the District of Columbia, on Thursday marks a stunning legal defeat for Peter Navarro, a former assistant to the president, who oversaw trade policy and, in the last few weeks of the Trump presidency, published a report alleging widespread election fraud.

Navarro refused to produce any of the emails until he had been granted immunity for the act of returning the records, court documents show, after which the lawsuit was filed by the United States government.

It is unclear exactly what the contents of the emails pertain to, and could prove damaging to Trump as he faces other legal challenges amid a 2024 presidential bid. The National Archives and Records Administration (NARA) first became aware of the emails on the private account through a House investigation into the White House's coronavirus pandemic response.

In her ruling, Judge Kollar-Kotelly said lawyers for Navarro had told officials in July 2022 that they had found more than 1,700 documents on his personal ProtonMail account using search terms provided by NARA.

Based on their review of these documents, they said that 200-250 of them were PRA records that should be returned to the nation. Kollar-Kotelly called for "immediate compliance" from Navarro that the court would oversee.

In her ruling, she noted that under the PRA, presidential aides must copy any records that relate to official business from non-official accounts to their government email account within 20 days, and to NARA at the end of the administration.

Kollar-Kotelly pointed to a February 2017 memorandum issued by the White House counsel's office, which informed employees of these requirements, stating: "presidential records are the property of the United States...When you leave [Executive Office of the President] employment, you may not take any presidential records with you."

"Plainly, he did neither during his tenure in the White House, nor has he forwarded Presidential record emails in the years since," the judge wrote in an at-times scathing judgment.

Kollar-Kotelly denied Navarro's motion to dismiss the case, describing his arguments as "without merit," and granted the motion put to her by the U.S. government.

Newsweek reached out to Navarro via email for comment.

For years, Trump has claimed various investigations and probes into his affairs as politically-motivated "witch hunts," and has suggested that the federal government was being used against him by his political enemies.

He was quick to draw a comparison between the FBI raid of his property and the revelations that Joe Biden, his successor as president, had also been found to have stored official documents in his home in Wilmington, Delaware, and his office at the Penn Biden Center in Washington, D.C.

However, while Trump's lawyers claimed ahead of the Mar-a-Lago raid that all classified documents had been handed over, Biden's lawyers notified the National Archives as soon as they discovered the documents in his personal possession.

Navarro was last year indicted for two counts of contempt of Congress over his refusal to comply with a subpoena issued by the House Committee on the January 6 uprising. He vowed to fight the case in a statement on his website.

Best_Biscuits on March 10th, 2023 at 15:09 UTC »

Trump and his staff seem to be oblivious to the fact that nearly everything they wrote, did, or talked about while government employees belongs to the government. So, all emails Navarro sent or received while working from Trump belong to the government. They are not his. Working for the fed is not like working for a business.

Captain_Rational on March 10th, 2023 at 14:41 UTC »

A former White House aide in the Trump administration has been ordered by a judge to hand over between 200 and 250 emails from an encrypted account, as they were identified as relating to presidential business.

It comes after FBI agents raided Donald Trump's Mar-a-Lago residence in Palm Beach, Florida in August 2022 to obtain documents from his time in the White House under the Presidential Records Act (PRA). More than 13,000 documents were seized, 103 of which were classified.

The ruling by Colleen Kollar-Kotelly, U.S. district judge for the District of Columbia, on Thursday marks a stunning legal defeat for Peter Navarro, a former assistant to the president, who oversaw trade policy and, in the last few weeks of the Trump presidency, published a report alleging widespread election fraud.

Navarro refused to produce any of the emails until he had been granted immunity for the act of returning the records, court documents show, after which the lawsuit was filed by the United States government.

When the US Government has to file lawsuits in order to compel compliance with the law, it is clear that our legal protections in government are just not equipped to handle the depth of malfeasance that today's Republicans are prepared to sink to.

However, what troubles me most is just how much lawlessness that conservative voters are happy to tolerate!

When the voters themselves become this corrupt, what hope is there for the stability of our democracy?

When voters joyfully put willfully lawless candidates into office, the government necessarily becomes untrustworthy.

And a government that cannot be trusted by it's people simply cannot stand.

cromethus on March 10th, 2023 at 13:15 UTC »

These scumbags are amazing.

"I'm not complying with the law until you promise not to punish me."

Yeah, that's not how this works.