FBI raid of Trump Mar-A-Lago home & Indictment
Special counsel Jack Smith took over the case in November 2022. In June 2023, Smith’s team indicted Trump on 37 counts, accusing him of unauthorized retention of defense information, conspiring to obstruct justice, withholding government documents, scheming to conceal information from a grand jury, and causing false statements to be made to the government. They also charged Trump’s personal aide Walt Nauta on six counts, accusing him of making false statements to the FBI and conspiring with Trump to conceal information.

Why did Trump do it?

6/20/23
by Byron York,
from Washington Examiner,
6/19/23:

WHY DID TRUMP DO IT? There are a lot of questions surrounding the federal indictment of former President Donald Trump, which alleges that after leaving the White House, Trump kept secret national defense information he was not legally allowed to possess. Questions such as: Did Trump, as president, have the authority to decide what to keep, and what to give to the National Archives, after leaving office? And just how sensitive were the documents he kept? And even if Trump lacked the specific authority, and the papers were sensitive, has the Justice Department overreached by charging Trump with 37 felonies? Underlying all those questions is a more fundamental question: Why did Trump keep all that stuff in the first place? Whether it was legal or not, why did he do it? As they always do, Trump's adversaries have leaped to the darkest explanation possible.

Now, there is growing agreement that the answer — why Trump did it — might be much simpler. Trump kept the documents alongside copies of newspapers, magazines, internet printouts, pins, hats, jackets, and other stuff because he is a pack rat. Or, to put it more diplomatically, because he likes to collect things.

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