It was two weeks ago today when we were first able to review some of the official documents related to the FBI’s search of Mar-a-Lago. Republicans hoping the materials would benefit Donald Trump were left disappointed: The released documents showed that federal law enforcement recovered extensive top secret and other heavily classified documents that the former president decided to keep in his glorified country club.
But as regular readers know, this was only a partial peek behind the curtain. In the days that followed, a variety of parties — including news organizations — also called for the release of the probable cause affidavit used to secure a search warrant in the first place.
Read the redacted copy of the FBI affidavit here.
In fact, Trump publicly called for the document to be entirely “unredacted“ — a move the Justice Department said would risk jeopardizing an ongoing probe, while putting people, including witnesses, in possible danger. (Whether the former president cared about these consequences wasn’t altogether clear.)
The result was an agreement of sorts: Magistrate Judge Bruce Reinhart said a copy of the search warrant affidavit could be released once it reflected federal law enforcement’s redactions.
Yesterday, Justice Department officials were ordered in court to unseal the redacted document. This afternoon, they did exactly that. NBC News reported:
A redacted copy of the FBI affidavit used to justify the search of former President Donald Trump’s Mar-a-Lago estate was unsealed Friday, revealing details of the federal government’s efforts to recover classified documents, including top-secret information. The affidavit said that in mid-May, FBI agents conducted a preliminary review of 15 boxes it had recovered from Trump’s Florida property earlier this year and “identified documents with classification markings in fourteen of the fifteen boxes.”
For those reading along at home, this is the redacted affidavit, and this is the Justice Department memo used to justify the redactions.
As you’d imagine, there’s an enormous amount to — forgive the expression — unpack here, but right off the bat, the redacted affidavit noted that once the National Archives received 15 boxes from Team Trump, it found that “a lot of classified records” were alongside assorted miscellaneous print-outs and newspaper articles.
“Of most significant concern was that highly classified records were unfoldered, intermixed with other records, and otherwise unproperly [sic] identified,” the document read.
Later in the redacted affidavit, it explained the FBI agents also reviewed the contents of the 15 boxes and found approximately 184 documents bearing classification markings, 92 documents marked as secret, and 25 documents marked as top secret.
In case this isn’t obvious, these are not small numbers.








