The law doesn't specify how many documents.
That GS-10 couldn't make the same mistake with a box as well as a file.
Except there's no indication it was a whole box. The report says 10 documents. That's not a whole box.
There is no process specified for a President to declassify a document.
Sure there is.
Understanding how the classification system works is critical to understanding Trump’s culpability — legal and otherwise.
www.brennancenter.org
As with classification, declassification is a two-step process. First, an authorized official must determine that the information no longer requires protection. Second, that determination must be communicated so that the protections are removed. Accordingly, when a decision has been made to declassify information, it must be marked as declassified. If the declassification affects an entire category of information, the agency’s classification guide must be updated accordingly. If it is narrower, the decision may be captured in a declassification guide — although often, the consultation process that accompanies a declassification decision is sufficient to alert the necessary personnel.
Where are all these rules set out?
For the most part, the rules for classification and declassification are set forth in presidential executive orders, along with
regulations issued by the Information Security Oversight Office — an office within the National Archives and Records Administration — implementing those orders. Most presidents, dating back to the beginning of the modern classification system in the 1940s, have issued their own executive orders on classification. Trump was an exception, issuing no order on this subject. President Biden has not yet issued an executive order on classification (although there are
reports that one is underway), so the order currently in place is
the one issued by President Obama in 2009.
Biden said the almost exact same thing as Trump that got Trump impeached. He is a well-documented racist from his time being best buddies with the KKK members of the Senate. Remember the "racial jungle" comment about his kids attending public schools? Biden has repeated stories ad nauseum that were simply impossible to have occurred.
Biden made those comments back in the 1970's when everyone realized busing was a bad idea.
Here is what the Democratic presidential candidate actually said in a 1977 Senate hearing.
www.wusa9.com
In 1977, Biden advocated achieving racial integration through affordable housing rather than busing,
The New York Times found in an analysis “of thousands of documents” from that period. It also led him to join with segregationist senators such as Jesse Helms to oppose U.S. Department of Education funding for busing.
Biden sought an "orderly integration of society," not just integration in schools, the records show. He feared busing would anger white people whose children would be sent to “inferior” schools in urban neighborhoods and from black people, whose children would come to resent conditions in the “ghetto,” the Times reported.
Next.