White House Defends
Discovery of More
Classified Docs in FBI
Search of Biden Home
January 24, 2023
The White House on
Monday defended itself
from growing criticism
after an FBI search
Friday at President Joe
Biden's personal
residence yielded yet
more classified
documents, by saying
that the administration
is cooperating with
authorities.
On Monday, White House
spokesperson Ian Sams
stressed that the FBI
search of Biden's
Wilmington, Delaware,
home was a "voluntary,
proactive offer by the
president's personal
lawyers."
The new discovery adds
to a continuing
Department of Justice
investigation into
Biden's handling of
sensitive material, and
has drawn growing
criticism – even from
Biden's Democratic
party. Senators Dick
Durbin and Joe Manchin
both leveled barbs
against the president
over the weekend, with
Durbin saying Biden
should be "embarrassed"
and Manchin calling the
president
"irresponsible."
Biden's lawyers say they
first found documents
with classified markings
in early November, in a
D.C. office he used
after he left the vice
presidency. They have
not said why they did
not openly announce that
discovery, informing
relevant authorities but
not the public. They
then found more
documents in December
and January in Biden's
Wilmington home.
Friday's FBI search of
that same home, which
took 13 hours, yielded
still more, said White
House lawyer Richard
Sauber in a statement
released Saturday. He
said those documents
were immediately turned
over to the Department
of Justice.
Throughout, the White
House has tried to draw
a distinction between
Biden's handling of
documents and that of
his predecessor Donald
Trump, who did not
cooperate with requests
for the materials he
took when he left
office.
"It underscores how
seriously he's taking
this issue that he would
proactively and
voluntarily disclose to
[the Department of
Justice] these findings
as soon as they occur
and that he would take
the step of giving
access to the home to
DOJ to do an exhaustive
search of the premises,"
Sams told reporters.
Sams declined, for the
second consecutive week,
to answer specific
questions: Exactly how
many documents were
found? Will there be
more searches of other
properties Biden has
used? Who pays the
president's lawyers?
What's in the documents
and does the president
know what their contents
are?
And White House press
secretary Karine
Jean-Pierre, for the
second week, faced
blistering questions
from varied U.S. and
international media
organizations.
"When you found out that
the FBI located even
more classified
materials in Wilmington,
which four-letter word
did you use?" asked a
reporter from the
right-leaning FOX news
network.
Jean-Pierre responded to
that with a laugh. But
on other, more serious
questions, she referred
reporters to White House
Counsel and to Justice
Department officials.
Yet another question she
did not answer, for two
consecutive briefings,
is whether she remains
capable of steering the
White House's
communications on the
matter. Critics have
accused the
administration of not
being transparent, and
reporters have asked for
White House lawyers to
appear before them in
public to take
questions.
Sams, who represents the
White House Counsel's
office, told reporters
in an invitation-only
conference call that the
administration wants to
let the investigation
proceed without the
appearance of
interference.
"Throughout this
process, we've tried to
give you guys public
information as it's
appropriate, consistent
with that ongoing
investigation, to
respect the integrity of
that investigation,
because again, the
president has been very
clear going all the way
back to the campaign,"
he said. "He sees the
Justice Department as
independent. Very
important to keep them
independent, to not
influence their decision
making."
And he took aim at the
media's unrelenting
demands for information.
"I
know for a lot of you
guys who have been
covering this for the
last few years,
especially, that may be
a foreign concept," he
said. "But I think that
the American people see
it for what it is, which
is the president
respecting the
appropriate entity who's
doing an investigation
and ensuring that they
have the independence
they need to conduct
that investigation."
A new poll, conducted
over the weekend, found
that 77% of Americans
believe that Donald
Trump acted
inappropriately in his
handling of classified
documents; 64% believe
the same of Biden. But,
when asked which case
was more serious, the
largest group of people
polled – 43% — said
Trump's actions were a
bigger concern.
Trump seems to be using
the Biden saga to
minimize the severity of
his actions, posting to
his social media account
over the weekend: "They
created this Documents
mess for themselves by
being so totally
DERANGED about me, and I
did NOTHING WRONG!!!"
An FBI search of Trump's
Florida home last year
yielded about 300
documents of various
levels of
classification. That
investigation is
ongoing.