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Trump looks to seize on feud with FBI as critical court hearing looms

Trump looks to seize on feud with FBI as critical court hearing looms

Ex-President Donald Trump is considering the next escalation of his feud with the FBI, which has already put agents at risk and appears to be part of his effort to turn the search of his home for classified documents into a launch pad for his likely 2024 campaign.

Trump is trying to fight back as the legal mire deepens around him and some of his closest associates rooted in his false claims that the 2020 election was stolen. But the multiple criminal, congressional and civil probes swirling around the former President are doing nothing to dim his appeal to Republican grassroots voters who are flocking to candidates who have embraced his election denialism — as Wyoming Rep. Liz Cheney’s primary defeat on Tuesday showed.

In the latest twist of the saga involving the FBI’s removal of documents from Trump’s Florida mansion last week, including some bearing the highest levels of classification, AWN reported on Wednesday that the former President is considering releasing surveillance footage of the bureau’s search. The move might be motivated by Trump’s desire to fire up his supporters with the impression that he is being persecuted, and there have been discussions of using it in campaign-style ads, one person familiar with the conversations told AWN.



It would likely cause deep alarm inside the FBI since its agents have already faced threats and intimidation from Trump supporters incited by the ex-President and his allies. Former FBI Deputy Director Andrew McCabe told AWN’s Anderson Cooper on Wednesday that the leadership of the bureau would have “deep concern” at the implications of security camera footage of the search going public.

“When you are executing a search warrant for the purpose of recovering highly classified material, the last thing you want to have is a video of that material released to the public,” McCabe said. He also warned tapes would pose an increased risk to agents involved in the search and would increase the threats to them from the ex-President’s “most extreme supporters.”

Still, the move would be consistent with Trump’s long desire to discredit the FBI. And it would allow him to whip up anger over the search and distract from the real issue in the controversy — the fact that he took classified material to his home after his administration ended, not just in possible infringements of laws on presidential records but in a manner that could threaten national security.

A critical court hearing in Florida

The report about Trump’s deliberations over security footage came on the eve of a critical next move in the case over Trump’s retention of classified documents.

The judge that authorized the warrant for the FBI search, which was unsealed last week along with property receipt, will hold a hearing on Thursday to discuss requests to unseal an affidavit that contains details of why he found probable cause that crimes had been committed.

The Justice Department has vehemently warned that disclosing the affidavit at this stage would “likely chill future cooperation” by witnesses. The bureau also wrote in its filing to the court that the probe’s focus on highly classified materials would exacerbate the harm if details were disclosed to the public prematurely. (AWN is among media organizations that asked the judge to unseal the affidavit, citing the historic importance of the search of a former president’s property).

The former President has called for the “immediate release” of the affidavit, falsely calling the search a “horrible and shocking BREAK-IN,” on his Truth Social network. The search, however, was conducted on a legally obtained warrant signed off by a judge in accordance with procedure. FBI agents took away 11 sets of classified documents, including one set marked “top secret/SCI,” one of the highest levels of classification.

One goal for Trump in seeking the release of the affidavit might be so that he could cherry pick individual pieces of information and discredit them in the eyes of his supporters — as he often does to rebut wider legal and political threats. If, as the Justice Department says, releasing this information would chill witness cooperation, the ex-President would likely see that to his benefit as well.

Still, it’s hardly certain that releasing the affidavit would benefit Trump. It could well paint an even more damning picture of his conduct than has already emerged. Similarly, one person close to Trump warned that making public surveillance footage of the search could backfire against the former President if agents are pictured carrying large numbers of documents, including classified material, away from his residence.

On the issue of the affidavit, many legal experts believe the judge is unlikely to order release of the entire document, given the government’s strong opposition and given possible fears of threats against witnesses and any FBI agent that might be named.

“I think it’s very unlikely, even if this was not a national security investigation. It’s almost unheard of for a judge to unseal the affidavit in support of a search warrant while the investigation is ongoing before anyone has been charged,” Page Pate, a constitutional law attorney, said on AWN’s “Newsroom” on Wednesday.

Some Republicans have demanded the release of the affidavit on the grounds that the FBI and the Justice Department need to justify the unprecedented step of organizing a search at the home of a former president.

But Pate said: “If the government objects to it, I don’t see the judge releasing it unless there is substantial redaction — black lines over 90% of the affidavit.”



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