By Susan Heavey
WASHINGTON (Reuters) – Folders marked classified and found at Donald Trump’s Florida home after he left the White House did not contain any documents, the former U.S. president said on Tuesday after reports that his team received a subpoena for one such folder.
Trump’s legal team in December and January turned over the empty folder marked classified, as well as other material with classified markings, an aide’s laptop and a thumb drive to U.S. prosecutors, CNN reported, citing multiple sources.
The Guardian, citing two sources familiar with the matter, separately reported that prosecutors subpoenaed the empty folder in January after it was seen by investigators Trump hired to search his Florida property for any remaining White House documents not turned over when he left office in 2021 and not uncovered by an FBI search last year.
In a post on his Truth Social platform, Trump said he kept folders with classified markings at his resort but they were empty. His lawyer told CNN on Sunday that Trump used the now-returned empty manila folder to block blue light from a landline phone in his bedroom “that keeps him up at night.”
The reported subpoena and newly turned-over material comes amid scrutiny over the handling of presidential and vice presidential materials — particularly classified records — that has made Trump the subject of a federal criminal investigation.
Former Vice President Mike Pence and President Joe Biden have also reported finding classified documents in their possession but have voluntarily allowed FBI searches for any remaining material that should have been given to the National Archives. Biden’s documents date to his time as former President Barack Obama’s vice president.
Trump resisted efforts to have documents in his possession returned, and the FBI in August conducted a court-approved search of Trump’s Florida property.
U.S. Special Counsel Jack Smith is investigating whether Trump or his associates obstructed the Justice Department’s probe into his retention of thousands of government records, about 300 of which were marked classified.
Trump said folders found at his Florida estate “were merely inexpensive and very common folders with … ‘Presidential Reading,’ ‘Confidential,’ ‘Classified,’ or other words stamped on the front cover” but were empty.
“I would put them in a pile and keep them as momentous. Nothing wrong with that,” wrote Trump, who is running for president again in 2024. It was not clear whether he meant to write “mementos,” meaning an object kept as a souvenir.
Smith is also investigating efforts to overturn Trump’s 2020 election loss that culminated in the deadly Jan. 6, 2021, attack on the U.S. Capitol.
U.S. Attorney General Merrick Garland has appointed a separate federal prosecutor to investigate document handling by Biden, who is weighing a run for reelection.
(Reporting by Susan Heavey; editing by Jonathan Oatis)