The federalist

The Real Scandal In The Classified Documents Debacle Is Washington’s Overclassification Problem

Washington D.C. is known for its overclassification problems.

Oona Haway, Yale Law Professor, says: more than 50 million documents Each year, they are classified. In fact, “we don’t know the exact number because even the government can’t keep track of it all,” NPR heard Hathaway last week.

The primary weapon to defeat political opponents is the law governing classified documents in private ownership.

More documents marked classified have now been found in former Vice President Mike Pence’s Indiana residence, his team announced To Congress on Tuesday. The revelation marks the latest episode in classified documents popping up in the apparently improper possession of individuals who’ve conducted state business at the highest levels of government.

Last week, a 13-hour FBI search of President Joe Biden’s Delaware residence turned up Another treasure trove of documents containing classified markings dates back to his time in public office, before he was granted full classification powers as commander–in-chief. The search by federal agents came after the president’s attorneys found secret records in several locations, including a Washington office closet and his Delaware garage.

It was Trump, the former president, who was in hot water after he was accused of threatening to resign when he wore plainclothes FBI officers. raided Mar-a-Lago, 128-room palace in search of classified documents. Operating under a broad warrant Merrick Garland issued an order allowing officials to confiscate any records Trump may have been in contact with. The agents then took 15 boxes of material from Trump’s Florida residence. The Washington Post began receiving information from deep-state DOJ officials claiming that Trump was hiding nuclear secrets.

[READ: There’s A Difference Between Biden And Trump’s Classified Documents Snafus, But It’s Not What You Think]

“A document describing a foreign government’s military defenses, including its nuclear capabilities, was found by FBI agents who searched former president Donald Trump’s Mar-a-Lago residence and private club last month, according to people familiar with the matter,” The Post reported, “underscoring concerns among U.S. intelligence officials about classified material stashed in the Florida property.”

Of course, the general public doesn’t know the exact contents of these documents. They are classified. However, the steady stream of documents appearing from three potential presidential contenders shows how laws governing classified files can be used for getting rid of almost any federal elected officials. Given that a criminal conviction of Trump has remained the top item on the Democrats’ policy agenda since 2016, it’s a conspiracy to think the enforcement of the rarely prosecuted Presidential Records Act is Not being pursued for the sole purpose of thwarting his 2024 campaign — that is until the dam of others’ classified documents broke.

The real scandal isn’t that the current president, his predecessor, and the last vice president were improperly harboring classified documents beyond their government tenure. The real scandal is Washington’s chronic overclassification problem, which leads to the laws governing classified records becoming weaponized to take out political opponents. It’s probably only


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