Trump facing new charges in classified documents case

Prosecutors allege former President Donald Trump asked an employee to delete security footage at his Florida estate. He also faces a new count of willfully retaining national defense information.

An aerial view of President Donald Trump's Mar-a-Lago estate is seen Aug. 10, 2022, in Palm Beach, Florida. Mr. Trump, plus a third defendant, are facing additional charges for attempts to delete video evidence in the classified documents case.

Steve Helber/AP

July 28, 2023

Former President Donald Trump faced new charges Thursday in a case accusing him of illegally retaining classified documents, with prosecutors alleging that he asked a staffer to delete security camera footage at his Florida estate in an effort to obstruct a federal investigation into the records.

The new indictment includes extra charges of obstruction and willful retention of national defense information, adding fresh detail to a criminal case issued last month against Mr. Trump and a close aide.

The Florida charges came as a surprise at a time of escalating anticipation of a possible additional indictment in Washington over his efforts to overturn the results of the 2020 presidential election. The latest allegations also make clear the vast, and still not fully known, scope of legal exposure faced by Mr. Trump as he seeks to reclaim the White House in 2024 while fending off criminal cases in multiple jurisdictions.

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The updated indictment from special counsel Jack Smith centers on surveillance footage at Mr. Trump’s Mar-a-Lago estate in Palm Beach, evidence that has long been vital to the case. Mr. Trump is alleged to have asked for the footage to be deleted after FBI and Justice Department investigators visited in June 2022 to collect classified documents he took with him after leaving the White House. The new indictment also charges him with illegally holding onto a document he’s alleged to have shown off to visitors in New Jersey.

A Trump spokesperson dismissed the new charges as “nothing more than a continued desperate and flailing attempt” by the Biden administration “to harass President Trump and those around him” and to influence the 2024 presidential race.

Prosecutors accuse Mr. Trump of scheming with his valet, Walt Nauta, and a Mar-a-Lago property manager, Carlos De Oliveira, to conceal the footage from federal investigators after they issued a subpoena for it. Video from the property would ultimately play a significant role in the investigation because, prosecutors said, it captured Mr. Nauta moving boxes of documents in and out of a storage room – including a day before an FBI visit to the property. The boxes were moved at Mr. Trump’s direction, the indictment alleges.

According to the indictment, Mr. Nauta met with Mr. De Oliveira on June 25, 2022, at Mar-a-Lago, where they went to a security guard booth where surveillance video is displayed on monitors and walked with a flashlight through a tunnel where the storage room was located, observing and pointing out surveillance cameras.

Two days later, according to the indictment, Mr. De Oliveira walked through a basement tunnel with an unidentified Trump employee to an audio closet, where Mr. De Oliveira in a private conversation asked how many days the server retained footage.

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Mr. De Oliveira, prosecutors said, told the employee that Mr. Trump wanted the server deleted and asked, “What are we going to do?”

During a voluntary interview with the FBI last January, prosecutors say, Mr. De Oliveira lied when he said he “never saw nothing” with regard to boxes at Mar-a-Lago.

Mr. De Oliveira was added to the indictment, charged with obstruction and false statements related to that FBI interview. His lawyer declined to comment Thursday evening.

The new charges were filed as Mr. Trump is bracing for the prospect of an additional indictment related to his efforts to undo the 2020 election in the run-up to the Jan. 6, 2021, riot at the U.S. Capitol. Last week, he revealed he had received a letter from the Justice Department informing him he was a target in that probe, suggesting that charges could be forthcoming. His lawyers met with prosecutors in Mr. Smith’s office earlier Thursday to discuss that case.

But despite the anticipation, the only charges filed Thursday were in Florida, not Washington.

The superseding indictment also charges Mr. Trump with an additional count of willfully retaining national defense information, arising from a document he showed off to visitors at his Bedminster, New Jersey, golf club during a July 2021 interview for a memoir of his onetime chief of staff Mark Meadows. Prosecutors have described the document as a Pentagon plan of attack and Mr. Meadows, in his subsequent book, said the country it concerned was Iran.

The indictment says the document was returned to the federal government on Jan. 17, 2022, which is the date Mr. Trump provided 15 boxes of records to the National Archives. The decision to charge him with possession of that document is notable since the other records cited in the indictment are ones that Mr. Trump either handed over to authorities in June 2022 in response to a grand jury subpoena demanding the return of classified documents, or ones the FBI found during an August search of Mar-a-Lago.

Mr. Trump denied he had secret documents before him when he spoke.

“There wasn’t a document. I had lots of paper. I had copies of newspaper articles, I had copies of magazines, I had copies of everything,” he said in an interview with Fox News host Bret Baier.

Both Mr. Trump and Mr. Nauta have pleaded not guilty to the original 38-count indictment. Mr. De Oliveira is due in court in Florida on Monday.

The trial for Mr. Trump and Mr. Nauta is currently scheduled for May 20, 2024. It was unclear if the addition of a new defendant would result in a postponement.

This story was reported by The Associated Press.