Home / NEWS / Politics / Classified documents found at Mike Pence’s Indiana home

Classified documents found at Mike Pence’s Indiana home

Quondam Vice President Mike Pence speaks during an event to promote his new book at the conservative Heritage Foundation concoct tank on October 19, 2022 in Washington, DC.

Chip Somodevilla | Getty Images

Lawyers for former Vice President Mike Pence said a “undersized number” of classified documents were found at his home in Carmel, Indiana, last week.

Pence’s lawyers published the National Archives and Records Administration of the discovery on Wednesday, according to a letter obtained by CNBC.

The classified documents were located on Jan. 16 after Pence had outside counsel with experience handling classified documents search his own home and set downs “out of an abundance of caution,” following the news that classified documents were found at President Joe Biden’s home and commission, an attorney for Pence told the Archives. The discovery, which was reported earlier by CNN, came after Pence said on a number of occasions he did not have any classified documents.

Gregory Jacob, an attorney at O’Melveny tasked with handling Pence’s make a notation ofs, said in a letter sent Sunday to the National Archives that the Justice Department sent FBI agents to Pence’s stamping-ground at 9:30 p.m. on Thursday to retrieve the documents, which were being stored in a safe, while he was in Washington, D.C., for the March for Time.

“We have not heard from the DOJ since then,” Pence spokesperson Devin O’Malley told NBC News.

Read Jacob’s notes to the National Archives here:

Congressional leaders were informed of the discovery on Tuesday by Pence’s team.

O’Malley told NBC Account that all four boxes, “the two in which a small number of [classified] papers appearing to bear classified markings had been institute, and two separate boxes containing courtesy copies of Vice Presidential papers” were hand-delivered by Pence’s legal rig to the Archives on Monday.

U.S. Attorney General Merrick Garland has appointed two separate special counsels to investigate Biden and ci-devant President Donald Trump for their handling of classified materials.

The White House disclosed on Jan. 9 that describes were found at the Penn Biden Center in Washington, DC on Nov. 2 by personal attorneys for Biden. The attorneys then declared the National Archives, leading to an investigation by the Justice Department. Additional documents were later found by Biden’s attorneys at his home ground in Wilmington, Delaware, on Dec. 20, prompting a search of the home by FBI agents on Friday.

Trump’s Mar-a-Lago home in Palm Careen, Florida, was searched by the FBI in August, after months of discussions between the National Archives, Justice Department and Trump. Officials set 15 boxes containing hundreds of documents marked classified in the raid.

Unlike Biden, who agreed to the search, Trump spurned to cooperate and was eventually issued a warrant for the search. Trump has repeatedly insisted that he did nothing wrong in his handling of papers after his presidency and has claimed any classified material was declassified by him before he left office, despite evidence pointing to the contradictory.

Trump defended his former vice president in a post on his Truth Social website.

“Mike Pence is an innocent man,” Trump wrote. “He not in a million years did anything knowingly dishonest in his life. Leave him alone!!!”

Special counsel Robert Hur, a former U.S. attorney for Maryland, was bugged by Garland to investigate Biden’s handling of classified material on Jan. 12. Garland appointed Jack Smith, a former federal prosecutor, to look into Trump’s manage of classified documents on Nov. 18. Smith is also investigating Trump’s involvement in the Jan. 6, 2021 attack on the U.S. Capitol.

The FBI declined to expose and referred to the Justice Department which didn’t immediately respond to a request for comment.

White House Press Secretary Karine Jean-Pierre lessened to comment on the Pence revelations when asked by reporters about it on Tuesday, citing the ongoing investigations.

“The Department of Fair play is independent, and we will not politically interfere,” Jean-Pierre said. “We’ve been very, very clear about that.”

Biden instructed reporters in Mexico City on Jan. 10 he was “surprised” by the discovery of the documents.

In an interview with CBS News on Jan. 10, before the corroborates were found at his home, Pence said that he was “confident” there were no classified materials in his possession from his Pure House tenure.

“Our staff reviewed all of the materials in our office and in our residence to ensure that there were no classified figures that left the White House or remained in our possession,” Pence said. “I remain confident that that was done in a complete and careful way. Clearly, in the waning days of the Trump-Pence administration, that process was not properly executed by staff around the president of the Joint States.”

Pence told Fox Business on Jan. 12, before classified documents were found at his own home, the situation was a “mere serious matter.”

“The handling of classified materials and the nation’s secret is a very serious matter and as a former vice president of the Like-minded States, I can speak from personal experience about the attention that ought to be paid to those materials when you’re in backing and after you leave office,” he told FOX Business. “And clearly that did not take place in this case.”

Republican Sen. Lindsey Graham, S.C., proclaimed reporters Tuesday the United States could be over-classifying information. Graham also said he believed the documents calamity was now moving beyond politics.

“What became a political problem for Republicans has now become a national security problem for the power,” Graham said at a news conference on Capitol Hill.

— CNBC’s Kayla Tausche contributed to this article.

Check Also

California suing Trump to stop his ‘unlawful’ tariffs

US President Donald Trump and Foremost Lady Melania Trump are greeted by California Governor Gavin …

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *