Federal indictment unsealed, former President Donald Trump stored classified documents in five specific rooms

WPTV 5 West Palm Beach

PALM BEACH COUNTY, Fla. — According to a federal indictment unsealed, former President Donald Trump stored classified documents in five specific rooms of Mar-a-Lago, including a bathroom and shower, an office space, a business center, and a ballroom that often-held events.

Julius

Out of 126 rooms they would store the documents on the stage of the Grand Ballroom where they have social events? Is that the best the idiots at the FBI can do?

And why a bathroom when you have 126 rooms?

This whole thing smells of a setup, where as a school child could do better!

Looks as the FBI staged this whole thing for a photo op to frame Donald Trump. After all they had 9 hours to do it!

WPTV 5 West Palm Beach

During that time, the indictment said more than 150 staff members worked there, and thousands of people, including members and guests, we're going in and out of the club until the FBI raid in August 2022.

The indictment also said more than 150 events were held at the club during that time.

The question is, could any of those people have accessed those documents?

Aronberg also added it's hard to believe there would have been boxes full of classified documents left in the ballroom during events, where people would have access to them—after all, they're an eyesore.

"Occasionally, you do see boxes in there, but they’re normally to do with events that are going to take place," said Chase Scott of Chase Scott PR.

Scott represents nonprofits across Palm Beach County for marketing and public relations, and said he has been to hundreds of fundraisers at the Club. Scott said he also has a hard time believing documents would be left in the ballroom, and said he highly doubts anyone would have been able to access any of the other rooms that contained documents.

"You could almost compare this to the White House. The White House has tours you can go on, and there are areas that are accessible to the public and there are many areas that are off limits," said Scott, "and at Mar-a-Lago, those areas are buttoned down pretty well."

Gaetz Threatens to Subpoena Jack Smith, ‘Immunize’ Trump, After Latest Charges

 Jon Dougherty August 6, 2023


Florida Republican Rep. Matt Gaetz has threatened to call Jack Smith before a congressional committee after the special counsel filed new charges against former President Donald Trump last week.

The felony charges — which include conspiracy to defraud the United States — are part of the investigation into alleged attempts to overturn the 2020 election leading up to the January 6, 2021, attack on the US Capitol.

Gaetz took Smith to task, as well as fellow Republicans, after the filing.

“House Republicans should immediately demand that Jack Smith present himself for a transcribed interview with the Judiciary Committee in the next 15 days.,” Gaetz said in a Newsmax interview he posted to YouTube.

“If he does not do that, we should send a subpoena. If he ignores the subpoena, we should hold him in criminal contempt of the Congress, so that he is the first prosecutor in American history to prosecute a case while himself under criminal contempt,” Gaetz added.

He also said he is prepared to try and force U.S. Attorney General Merrick Garland’s hand on the matter.

“If Merrick Garland doesn’t enforce that contempt, then we ought to impeach Merrick Garland,” he said.

“To showcase how political and indeed dirty this has all become, we can utilize congressional immunities to immunize President Trump,” he added, citing a section of statutory law, since upheld by the Supreme Court, that “gives any committee or subcommittee of the Congress the power to subpoena a witness, bring them in and partially immunize them.”

The law requires transactional immunity in exchange for compelled testimony; “transactional,” in this sense, “means that once a witness has been compelled to testify about an offense, he may never be prosecuted for that offense, no matter how much independent evidence might come to light,” according to a constitutional explainer on Congress’ website. 

Gaetz said it is necessary to “stand up for Congress’s equities when it comes to election interference [and] when it comes to misuse of the DOJ.”

“This is all an effort to try to distract us from the very real crimes committed by Hunter and Joe Biden,” Gaetz added.

“It’s not a coincidence that Joe Biden is going to the beach now, but it is especially not a coincidence that, on the heels of their former business partner, Devon Archer, saying that Joe Biden was functionally the closer — the guy that gave the credibility to the Biden brand so they could engage in their international influence peddling — this indictment reads like a torturing of First Amendment-protected activity,” he continued.

Last month, Gaetz introduced legislation to defund Smith’s investigation.

The Florida Republican’s bill comes as Robert Hur, a special counsel appointed by Attorney General Merrick Garland to investigate President Joe Biden’s mishandling of classified documents, hasn’t been heard from much since he was authorized in January. It also comes as Trump predicted that Smith would soon indict him over the Jan. 6, 2021, Capitol riot.

“I will be introducing legislation to DEFUND Jack Smith’s witch hunt against President Trump,” Gaetz wrote on Twitter just hours after Trump’s announcement on Truth Social.

“They are attacking our democracy and engaging in election interference right now. The United States Congress has the capability to stop this election interference, and we must act immediately!” Gaetz noted further.

In a video clip of his podcast posted along with his remarks, Gaetz argued that Trump would not be facing such legal jeopardy if he wasn’t leading President Joe Biden in a growing number of polls.

In addition, the GOP lawmaker ripped what he described as a “lack of transparency” from the Justice Department regarding who is actually involved in the probe, referencing concerns about “the team of vicious Democrats” who were a part of special counsel Robert Mueller’s ‘Russia collusion’ probe stemming from Trump’s 2016 campaign.