(Molly Bruns, Headline USA) Recently unsealed court documents revealed that the boxes at Mar-a-Lago did not contain state secrets, but instead held “challenge coins, garment bags, memorabilia, photograph frames and other decor.”
BREAKING: Redacted from the Mar-a-Lago search warrant affidavit AG Garland agreed to publicly release was the fact that a US Secret Service officer escorted Trump's lawyers into the storage room during the search for classified docs to comply with grand jury subpoena in June 2022
— Paul Sperry (@paulsperry_) July 8, 2023
An FBI agent signed off on the contents of the boxes, indicating that the Department of Justice knew about the lack of evidence but pushed forward with an indictment against former President Donald Trump nonetheless.
According to the Leading Report, a U.S. Secret Service officer also moved Trump’s lawyers into the storage room during the search to comply with a subpoena from June 2022—a fact that officials redacted from the search-warrant affidavit.
Attorney General Merrick Garland signed off on the release of the censored version of the affidavit.
Several pieces of evidence the DOJ claimed to have had on former President Trump turned out to be nonexistent—including a much-hyped memo allegedly relating to an attack on Iran.
Many suspected the Justice Department of leaking an audio recording supposedly related to the memo.
Special counsel Jack Smith’s indictment in June against the former commander-in-chief included 31 counts of willful retention of national defense information, despite FBI officials never recovering the memo in their legally questionable search of Mar-a-Lago—raising questions about whether it ever existed at all.
Moreover, leftist media have continued to claim, without any corroborating evidence, that the seized materials included nuclear secrets of some kind. However, the newly unsealed court documents would appear to debunk that as well.
Why does it seem like Fox News cares more about the President’s son driving really fast 5 years ago than the man running for President hoarding nuclear secrets and allegedly sharing national defense secrets with random people, while being found liable for sexual assault?
The… pic.twitter.com/fPbsP84lfO
— Brian Krassenstein (@krassenstein) July 6, 2023
Throughout the entire indictment processTrump has firmly insisted that he is not guilty of any crimes since he had the authority under the Presidential Records Act to designate files as “personal” at his discretion, according to the precedents set by prior administrations.
The GOP’s 2024 presidential frontrunner has further argued that the lawfare attacks against him are entirely politically motivated.
“They want to take away my freedom because I will never let them take away your freedom,” Trump said in a video message posted in June on his Truth Social platform.
“They are not coming after me, they’re coming after you,” he continued. “I just happen to be standing in their way.”