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Ron Paul See other Ron Paul Articles Title: Donald Trump Tape Reveals He Uttered 10 Words That Might Have Doomed Him Donald Trump Tape Reveals He Uttered 10 Words That Might Have Doomed Him BY GIULIA CARBONARO ON 6/9/23 AT 9:58 AM EDT Trump's Classified Documents Indictment Charges: Everything We Know Donald Trump was reportedly recorded on tape saying that he could have declassified national security documents during his presidency but failed to do soa sentence which experts say might be "damning evidence." On Friday, one day after Trump was indicted on seven charges related to his handling of classified documents, CNN reported that federal prosecutors are in possession of a tape in which the former president can be heard saying that he kept "secret" military information that he no longer had the power to declassify. "As president, I could have declassified, but now I can't," a transcript of the tape said. In the recording, made during a private meeting in 2021, Trump admits to being in possession of a classified Pentagon document about a potential attack in Iran, according to CNN. Trump's alleged statement during the 2021 meeting would be significant if true because it could prove that the former president was aware that the records he kept at Mar-a- Lago were classified, going against what he has repeatedly said in the past monthsthat all documents had been declassified. Former President Donald Trump greets supporters at a Team Trump volunteer leadership training event held at the Grimes Community Complex in Grimes, Iowa, on June 1, 2023. Trump repeatedly denied keeping national security documents after leaving office, but last summer a raid by the Federal Bureau of Investigation at the former president's Mar-a-Lago resort in Florida found that several classified documents were held at the residence. On Thursday, federal prosecutors charged Trump over his retention of national security documents upon leaving the White House in January 2021, as well as the alleged obstruction of the government's efforts to retrieve them. This is the first time that a former United States president has faced federal charges. Trump denies all counts. Ryan Goodman, former special counsel at the Department of Defense, commented on the revelation contained in the tape saying : "This looks like highly damning evidence for the prosecution." While details of the indictment haven't been made public yet, two sources familiar with the situation who were not authorized to talk about it publicly told the Associated Press that Trump was indicted on seven counts related to his possession of classified material. It's unknown whether any of the seven counts relate to the meeting in 2021 recorded on tape. Many experts believe that federal prosecutors could easily prove that Trump mishandled classified documents after he left office, especially if his claim that he had previously declassified documents falls through. "It's a cakewalk for prosecutors to prove Trump illegally retained documents, from a purely legal perspective and setting aside the politics and what a Florida jury's bias might be," former federal prosecutor Neama Rahmani, president of West Coast Trial Lawyers, told Newsweek. "Trump's defense has been that he somehow declassified these documents, but if that defense falls apart then the same defense argument forces him to essentially admit he retained the documents," he said. "And the media reports of a tape recording in which Trump talked about having a classified document about Iran, that could also be used to prove that he personally knew what he had and how sensitive it was." Poster Comment: Tweet at source. When we worked on Illinois State Highways and they caught you doing something you were not supposed to be doing you went to State Plan A, admit nothing and deny everything. If that didn't work you go to State Plan B, admit nothing and deny everything. Post Comment Private Reply Ignore Thread Top Page Up Full Thread Page Down Bottom/Latest Begin Trace Mode for Comment # 4.
#1. To: BTP Holdings (#0)
Trump's sentence is legally meaningless. Here's the rub: It appears there is no formal procedure that a president must follow to declassify something. That unlike, say, pardoning someone, which requires a formal signed document invoking the Constitution and naming the person and offense. So if there is no formal procedure for declassifying something -- it could be done simply by making a statement while interviewed -- then Trump DID have that power while president and his taking classified docs to Florida could be deemed that implicit declassifying action. In effect, the president has declassification power that he wields constantly, both willingly and unwillingly, and any and every action that would normally be deemed a criminal compromise of classified info when done by anyone else is, when a president does it, deemed an act of declassification. And that would apply even if the president didn't intend to declassify something. Stated another way, it's impossible for a president to commit a classified document crime through disclosing classified information, as that would be inherently deemed an action to declassify it. The only possible exception is if it was done in a way to aid and abet an enemy of the United States in actions against the USA, which would/should be deemed treason, and even then, it would be an impeachable offense, not a criminal offense.
Doesn't matter. Like the 10th amendment.
Same as the chances of recalling Manhattan DA Alvin Bragg in deeply blue Manhattan. But perhaps the New York Attorney General could launch an investigation. ;)
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