Threats to those after Trump attacks them

Restricting for 12 years is one thing. Taking them home after leaving office is totally illegal. And that is the issue at hand.
Sorry Dipshit, Presidents are allowed to take records to a private residence, or Office of The Former President, however he designates, to classify, catalogue and categorize his presidential records. The President was in compliance with The LAW. It was The NARA, FBI and DOJ that broke that law and violated The Presidential Records Act.

Obama still has records from The White House he has not turned over to NARA. It is not illegal for a Former President to possess Presidential Records from his administration.

That is a lie, and is nothing but political propaganda designed to help you forward your current scam narrative.
Same as your lies about Russian Collusion and January 6th.
Lies Lies Lies.
 
just how long does one have to classify/declassify documents if not 6 years?
I honestly don't know how long, but.......but can be convinced that the clock expires when the fired president was: First, told to return them; and then next, was subpoenaed to return them.

I'm pretty sure of that.
 
I honestly don't know how long, but...
what is it about white liberals who only come across as being honest when it comes to not knowing something?
....but can be convinced that the clock expires when the fired president was: First, told to return them; and then next, was subpoenaed to return them.

I'm pretty sure of that.
so all tree really need do then is be "pretty sure" so as to satisfy the matter?
 
what is it about white liberals who only come across as being honest when it comes to not knowing something?

so all tree really need do then is be "pretty sure" so as to satisfy the matter?
This belongs on the other thread, but let us post it here to clear the facts:

Timeline

2021​

Jan. 18 Crews from a Miami news station spot at least two moving trucks at Mar-a-Lago that investigators said in court documents contained documents transported from the White House.

Jan. 20 Mr. Trump makes a rushed and chaotic exit from the White House and Joe Biden is sworn in as president.

May 6 The National Archives and Records Administration (NARA) begins approaching the former president’s team requesting missing presidential records. In the course of 2021, the archives and the Trump team had an extensive exchange about the disposition of the records from the former president’s White House.

Late December NARA is informed of 12 boxes ready for retrieval at Mar-a-Lago.

2022​

Jan. 18 NARA retrieves 15 boxes of documents from Mar-a-Lago that the agency believes contain classified national-security information.

Feb. 9 NARA refers the matter to the Justice Department. The FBI opens a criminal investigation into how classified documents became stored at Mar-a-Lago after Mr. Trump left the White House.

Feb. 18 The chief administrator for NARA reports the matter to the House Committee on Oversight and Reform. Mr. Trump issues a statement saying: “The National Archives did not ‘find’ anything, they were given, upon request, Presidential Records in an ordinary and routine process to ensure the preservation of my legacy and in accordance with the Presidential Records Act.”

April 29 NARA tells Mr. Trump’s legal team it intends to provide the documents to the FBI, revealing in a letter that officials found over 100 documents with classification markings, comprising more than 700 pages. Mr. Trump’s lawyers cite executive-privilege concerns in requesting an extension, which the agency denies.

May 10 NARA tells Mr. Trump’s lawyer it will provide the FBI with access to the records as early as May 12.

May 11 The Justice Department issues a grand jury subpoena to Mr. Trump’s team seeking all classified documents at Mar-a-Lago and tells Mr. Trump’s lawyers they can comply by relinquishing the material at the premises along with a sworn statement that they had turned over all the requested records.

May 16-18 FBI agents review the 15 boxes and find classified documents in 14 of them, including 184 marked classified, 67 marked confidential, 92 marked secret, and 25 marked top secret. Some of the information was derived from clandestine human intelligence sources, the FBI says.

May 22 Ex-White House aide Kash Patel asserts in a news report that Mr. Trump had declassified the documents found at his home, offering the first glimpse into a possible defense.

May 25 Mr. Trump’s attorney Evan Corcoran writes a letter to a top Justice Department official laying out arguments for why Mr. Trump didn’t violate any criminal laws. The letter said Mr. Trump had absolute authority to declassify classified information during his presidency. “Any attempt to impose criminal liability on a President or a former President that involves his actions with respect to documents marked classified would implicate grave constitutional separation-of-powers issues,” Mr. Corcoran wrote in the letter.

June 2 Mr. Corcoran requests FBI agents meet him the following day at Mar-a-Lago to pick up the documents they sought.

June 3 Three agents and Jay Bratt, chief of the Justice Department’s counterintelligence and export control section, arrive at Mar-a-Lago to collectthe documents. Mr. Corcoran turns over an accordion folder containing 38 more documents marked as classified, including 17 described as top secret, 16 marked as secret, and five more marked as confidential. The former president stopped by, shook hands, and said: “I appreciate the job you’re doing,” adding: “Anything you need, let us know,” according to a person familiar with the exchange. A custodian of Mr. Trump’s records, Christina Bobb, gives agents a letter she signed saying that Mr. Trump’s team had conducted a “diligent search” after receiving the subpoena and that the documents turned over in the folder represented “any and all responsive documents.” According to the Justice Department, Mr. Corcoran said all the records from the White House were in the storage room, that no other records were in any other location and that all available boxes were searched. But the department said he wouldn’t let the agents look in the remaining boxes in the storage room to confirm no more classified documents were in them.

June 8 Mr. Bratt sends a letter to Mr. Trump’s lawyers telling them to secure the storage room and all boxes moved from the White House “until further notice.” He notes that Mar-a-Lago doesn’t have a secure location for the storage of classified information and that documents there “have not been handled in an appropriate manner or stored in an appropriate location.”

June 9 Mr. Trump’s team acknowledges receipt of the letter.

June 22 The Trump Organization, Mr. Trump’s family business, receives a subpoena for surveillance footage from cameras at Mar-a-Lago. That footage is turned over, according to an official.

Aug. 5 FBI agents obtain a warrant to search Mar-a-Lago, signed by U.S. Magistrate Judge Bruce Reinhart. The warrant cites an investigation into violations of the Espionage Act, a presidential-records law, and obstruction of justice. Investigators say they developed evidence that shows that “government records were likely concealed and removed from the Storage Room and that efforts were likely taken to obstruct the government’s investigation.”

Aug. 8 FBI agents search Mar-a-Lago, seizing 33 boxes, containers, and other evidence containing more than 100 classified records, including information classified at the highest levels.
 
This belongs on the other thread, but let us post it here to clear the facts:

Timeline

2021​

Jan. 18 Crews from a Miami news station spot at least two moving trucks at Mar-a-Lago that investigators said in court documents contained documents transported from the White House.

Jan. 20 Mr. Trump makes a rushed and chaotic exit from the White House and Joe Biden is sworn in as president.

May 6 The National Archives and Records Administration (NARA) begins approaching the former president’s team requesting missing presidential records. In the course of 2021, the archives and the Trump team had an extensive exchange about the disposition of the records from the former president’s White House.

Late December NARA is informed of 12 boxes ready for retrieval at Mar-a-Lago.

2022​

Jan. 18 NARA retrieves 15 boxes of documents from Mar-a-Lago that the agency believes contain classified national-security information.

Feb. 9 NARA refers the matter to the Justice Department. The FBI opens a criminal investigation into how classified documents became stored at Mar-a-Lago after Mr. Trump left the White House.

Feb. 18 The chief administrator for NARA reports the matter to the House Committee on Oversight and Reform. Mr. Trump issues a statement saying: “The National Archives did not ‘find’ anything, they were given, upon request, Presidential Records in an ordinary and routine process to ensure the preservation of my legacy and in accordance with the Presidential Records Act.”

April 29 NARA tells Mr. Trump’s legal team it intends to provide the documents to the FBI, revealing in a letter that officials found over 100 documents with classification markings, comprising more than 700 pages. Mr. Trump’s lawyers cite executive-privilege concerns in requesting an extension, which the agency denies.

May 10 NARA tells Mr. Trump’s lawyer it will provide the FBI with access to the records as early as May 12.

May 11 The Justice Department issues a grand jury subpoena to Mr. Trump’s team seeking all classified documents at Mar-a-Lago and tells Mr. Trump’s lawyers they can comply by relinquishing the material at the premises along with a sworn statement that they had turned over all the requested records.

May 16-18 FBI agents review the 15 boxes and find classified documents in 14 of them, including 184 marked classified, 67 marked confidential, 92 marked secret, and 25 marked top secret. Some of the information was derived from clandestine human intelligence sources, the FBI says.

May 22 Ex-White House aide Kash Patel asserts in a news report that Mr. Trump had declassified the documents found at his home, offering the first glimpse into a possible defense.

May 25 Mr. Trump’s attorney Evan Corcoran writes a letter to a top Justice Department official laying out arguments for why Mr. Trump didn’t violate any criminal laws. The letter said Mr. Trump had absolute authority to declassify classified information during his presidency. “Any attempt to impose criminal liability on a President or a former President that involves his actions with respect to documents marked classified would implicate grave constitutional separation-of-powers issues,” Mr. Corcoran wrote in the letter.

June 2 Mr. Corcoran requests FBI agents meet him the following day at Mar-a-Lago to pick up the documents they sought.

June 3 Three agents and Jay Bratt, chief of the Justice Department’s counterintelligence and export control section, arrive at Mar-a-Lago to collectthe documents. Mr. Corcoran turns over an accordion folder containing 38 more documents marked as classified, including 17 described as top secret, 16 marked as secret, and five more marked as confidential. The former president stopped by, shook hands, and said: “I appreciate the job you’re doing,” adding: “Anything you need, let us know,” according to a person familiar with the exchange. A custodian of Mr. Trump’s records, Christina Bobb, gives agents a letter she signed saying that Mr. Trump’s team had conducted a “diligent search” after receiving the subpoena and that the documents turned over in the folder represented “any and all responsive documents.” According to the Justice Department, Mr. Corcoran said all the records from the White House were in the storage room, that no other records were in any other location and that all available boxes were searched. But the department said he wouldn’t let the agents look in the remaining boxes in the storage room to confirm no more classified documents were in them.

June 8 Mr. Bratt sends a letter to Mr. Trump’s lawyers telling them to secure the storage room and all boxes moved from the White House “until further notice.” He notes that Mar-a-Lago doesn’t have a secure location for the storage of classified information and that documents there “have not been handled in an appropriate manner or stored in an appropriate location.”

June 9 Mr. Trump’s team acknowledges receipt of the letter.

June 22 The Trump Organization, Mr. Trump’s family business, receives a subpoena for surveillance footage from cameras at Mar-a-Lago. That footage is turned over, according to an official.

Aug. 5 FBI agents obtain a warrant to search Mar-a-Lago, signed by U.S. Magistrate Judge Bruce Reinhart. The warrant cites an investigation into violations of the Espionage Act, a presidential-records law, and obstruction of justice. Investigators say they developed evidence that shows that “government records were likely concealed and removed from the Storage Room and that efforts were likely taken to obstruct the government’s investigation.”

Aug. 8 FBI agents search Mar-a-Lago, seizing 33 boxes, containers, and other evidence containing more than 100 classified records, including information classified at the highest levels.
k
 
This belongs on the other thread, but let us post it here to clear the facts:

Timeline

2021​

Jan. 18 Crews from a Miami news station spot at least two moving trucks at Mar-a-Lago that investigators said in court documents contained documents transported from the White House.

Jan. 20 Mr. Trump makes a rushed and chaotic exit from the White House and Joe Biden is sworn in as president.

May 6 The National Archives and Records Administration (NARA) begins approaching the former president’s team requesting missing presidential records. In the course of 2021, the archives and the Trump team had an extensive exchange about the disposition of the records from the former president’s White House.

Late December NARA is informed of 12 boxes ready for retrieval at Mar-a-Lago.

2022​

Jan. 18 NARA retrieves 15 boxes of documents from Mar-a-Lago that the agency believes contain classified national-security information.

Feb. 9 NARA refers the matter to the Justice Department. The FBI opens a criminal investigation into how classified documents became stored at Mar-a-Lago after Mr. Trump left the White House.

Feb. 18 The chief administrator for NARA reports the matter to the House Committee on Oversight and Reform. Mr. Trump issues a statement saying: “The National Archives did not ‘find’ anything, they were given, upon request, Presidential Records in an ordinary and routine process to ensure the preservation of my legacy and in accordance with the Presidential Records Act.”

April 29 NARA tells Mr. Trump’s legal team it intends to provide the documents to the FBI, revealing in a letter that officials found over 100 documents with classification markings, comprising more than 700 pages. Mr. Trump’s lawyers cite executive-privilege concerns in requesting an extension, which the agency denies.

May 10 NARA tells Mr. Trump’s lawyer it will provide the FBI with access to the records as early as May 12.

May 11 The Justice Department issues a grand jury subpoena to Mr. Trump’s team seeking all classified documents at Mar-a-Lago and tells Mr. Trump’s lawyers they can comply by relinquishing the material at the premises along with a sworn statement that they had turned over all the requested records.

May 16-18 FBI agents review the 15 boxes and find classified documents in 14 of them, including 184 marked classified, 67 marked confidential, 92 marked secret, and 25 marked top secret. Some of the information was derived from clandestine human intelligence sources, the FBI says.

May 22 Ex-White House aide Kash Patel asserts in a news report that Mr. Trump had declassified the documents found at his home, offering the first glimpse into a possible defense.

May 25 Mr. Trump’s attorney Evan Corcoran writes a letter to a top Justice Department official laying out arguments for why Mr. Trump didn’t violate any criminal laws. The letter said Mr. Trump had absolute authority to declassify classified information during his presidency. “Any attempt to impose criminal liability on a President or a former President that involves his actions with respect to documents marked classified would implicate grave constitutional separation-of-powers issues,” Mr. Corcoran wrote in the letter.

June 2 Mr. Corcoran requests FBI agents meet him the following day at Mar-a-Lago to pick up the documents they sought.

June 3 Three agents and Jay Bratt, chief of the Justice Department’s counterintelligence and export control section, arrive at Mar-a-Lago to collectthe documents. Mr. Corcoran turns over an accordion folder containing 38 more documents marked as classified, including 17 described as top secret, 16 marked as secret, and five more marked as confidential. The former president stopped by, shook hands, and said: “I appreciate the job you’re doing,” adding: “Anything you need, let us know,” according to a person familiar with the exchange. A custodian of Mr. Trump’s records, Christina Bobb, gives agents a letter she signed saying that Mr. Trump’s team had conducted a “diligent search” after receiving the subpoena and that the documents turned over in the folder represented “any and all responsive documents.” According to the Justice Department, Mr. Corcoran said all the records from the White House were in the storage room, that no other records were in any other location and that all available boxes were searched. But the department said he wouldn’t let the agents look in the remaining boxes in the storage room to confirm no more classified documents were in them.

June 8 Mr. Bratt sends a letter to Mr. Trump’s lawyers telling them to secure the storage room and all boxes moved from the White House “until further notice.” He notes that Mar-a-Lago doesn’t have a secure location for the storage of classified information and that documents there “have not been handled in an appropriate manner or stored in an appropriate location.”

June 9 Mr. Trump’s team acknowledges receipt of the letter.

June 22 The Trump Organization, Mr. Trump’s family business, receives a subpoena for surveillance footage from cameras at Mar-a-Lago. That footage is turned over, according to an official.

Aug. 5 FBI agents obtain a warrant to search Mar-a-Lago, signed by U.S. Magistrate Judge Bruce Reinhart. The warrant cites an investigation into violations of the Espionage Act, a presidential-records law, and obstruction of justice. Investigators say they developed evidence that shows that “government records were likely concealed and removed from the Storage Room and that efforts were likely taken to obstruct the government’s investigation.”

Aug. 8 FBI agents search Mar-a-Lago, seizing 33 boxes, containers, and other evidence containing more than 100 classified records, including information classified at the highest levels.

This belongs on the other thread, but let us post it here to clear the facts:

Timeline

2021​

Jan. 18 Crews from a Miami news station spot at least two moving trucks at Mar-a-Lago that investigators said in court documents contained documents transported from the White House.

Jan. 20 Mr. Trump makes a rushed and chaotic exit from the White House and Joe Biden is sworn in as president.

May 6 The National Archives and Records Administration (NARA) begins approaching the former president’s team requesting missing presidential records. In the course of 2021, the archives and the Trump team had an extensive exchange about the disposition of the records from the former president’s White House.

Late December NARA is informed of 12 boxes ready for retrieval at Mar-a-Lago.

2022​

Jan. 18 NARA retrieves 15 boxes of documents from Mar-a-Lago that the agency believes contain classified national-security information.

Feb. 9 NARA refers the matter to the Justice Department. The FBI opens a criminal investigation into how classified documents became stored at Mar-a-Lago after Mr. Trump left the White House.

Feb. 18 The chief administrator for NARA reports the matter to the House Committee on Oversight and Reform. Mr. Trump issues a statement saying: “The National Archives did not ‘find’ anything, they were given, upon request, Presidential Records in an ordinary and routine process to ensure the preservation of my legacy and in accordance with the Presidential Records Act.”

April 29 NARA tells Mr. Trump’s legal team it intends to provide the documents to the FBI, revealing in a letter that officials found over 100 documents with classification markings, comprising more than 700 pages. Mr. Trump’s lawyers cite executive-privilege concerns in requesting an extension, which the agency denies.

May 10 NARA tells Mr. Trump’s lawyer it will provide the FBI with access to the records as early as May 12.

May 11 The Justice Department issues a grand jury subpoena to Mr. Trump’s team seeking all classified documents at Mar-a-Lago and tells Mr. Trump’s lawyers they can comply by relinquishing the material at the premises along with a sworn statement that they had turned over all the requested records.

May 16-18 FBI agents review the 15 boxes and find classified documents in 14 of them, including 184 marked classified, 67 marked confidential, 92 marked secret, and 25 marked top secret. Some of the information was derived from clandestine human intelligence sources, the FBI says.

May 22 Ex-White House aide Kash Patel asserts in a news report that Mr. Trump had declassified the documents found at his home, offering the first glimpse into a possible defense.

May 25 Mr. Trump’s attorney Evan Corcoran writes a letter to a top Justice Department official laying out arguments for why Mr. Trump didn’t violate any criminal laws. The letter said Mr. Trump had absolute authority to declassify classified information during his presidency. “Any attempt to impose criminal liability on a President or a former President that involves his actions with respect to documents marked classified would implicate grave constitutional separation-of-powers issues,” Mr. Corcoran wrote in the letter.

June 2 Mr. Corcoran requests FBI agents meet him the following day at Mar-a-Lago to pick up the documents they sought.

June 3 Three agents and Jay Bratt, chief of the Justice Department’s counterintelligence and export control section, arrive at Mar-a-Lago to collectthe documents. Mr. Corcoran turns over an accordion folder containing 38 more documents marked as classified, including 17 described as top secret, 16 marked as secret, and five more marked as confidential. The former president stopped by, shook hands, and said: “I appreciate the job you’re doing,” adding: “Anything you need, let us know,” according to a person familiar with the exchange. A custodian of Mr. Trump’s records, Christina Bobb, gives agents a letter she signed saying that Mr. Trump’s team had conducted a “diligent search” after receiving the subpoena and that the documents turned over in the folder represented “any and all responsive documents.” According to the Justice Department, Mr. Corcoran said all the records from the White House were in the storage room, that no other records were in any other location and that all available boxes were searched. But the department said he wouldn’t let the agents look in the remaining boxes in the storage room to confirm no more classified documents were in them.

June 8 Mr. Bratt sends a letter to Mr. Trump’s lawyers telling them to secure the storage room and all boxes moved from the White House “until further notice.” He notes that Mar-a-Lago doesn’t have a secure location for the storage of classified information and that documents there “have not been handled in an appropriate manner or stored in an appropriate location.”

June 9 Mr. Trump’s team acknowledges receipt of the letter.

June 22 The Trump Organization, Mr. Trump’s family business, receives a subpoena for surveillance footage from cameras at Mar-a-Lago. That footage is turned over, according to an official.

Aug. 5 FBI agents obtain a warrant to search Mar-a-Lago, signed by U.S. Magistrate Judge Bruce Reinhart. The warrant cites an investigation into violations of the Espionage Act, a presidential-records law, and obstruction of justice. Investigators say they developed evidence that shows that “government records were likely concealed and removed from the Storage Room and that efforts were likely taken to obstruct the government’s investigation.”

Aug. 8 FBI agents search Mar-a-Lago, seizing 33 boxes, containers, and other evidence containing more than 100 classified records, including information classified at the highest levels.
In other words they were after something specific and they didn't get it the first time.

And the empty folders indicate they didn't get it the second time either.

Boy.... no wonder they're pissed. lol :p

Whatever it is, Trump must still have it.

Which is why they're going after all his friends

Oh boy, this is rich. :popcorn:
 
In other words they were after something specific and they didn't get it the first time.

And the empty folders indicate they didn't get it the second time either.

Boy.... no wonder they're pissed. lol :p

Whatever it is, Trump must still have it.

Which is why they're going after all his friends

Oh boy, this is rich. :popcorn:
I agree, he is a serious threat.
 
Trump attacks the election results, threats from his supporters happen.
Trump attacks Mike Pence, threats from his supporters happen.
Trump attacks Poll Workers, threats from his supporters happen.
Trump attacks Election officials, threats from his supporters happen.
Trump attacks Congress members, threats from his supporters happen.
Trump attacks the DOJ, threats from his supporters happen.
Trump attacks the FBI, threats and attacks from his supporters happen.
Trump attacks NARA, threats from his supporters happen.

The last one is the latest coming from Trump basically sending his smoke signals to his supporters that he needs help in delegitimizing what has been happening in the past year and a half.
----------------------
The National Archives and Records Administration has become yet another target of threats in the wake of attacks by former President Donald Trump after the FBI seized government documents from his Mar-a-Lago residence, sources have told The Washington Post.

After Trump unleashed a torrent of invective against an agency widely viewed as librarian-like and apolitical, police increased patrols around the National Archives building in Washington, D.C., due to a troubling “spike in online chatter” about the facility, sources told the Post.
---
Acting archivist Debra Steidel Wall sent a message Wednesday telling NARA staff to stand strong in the face of threats, according to the Post.
“NARA has received messages from the public accusing us of corruption and conspiring against the former President, or congratulating NARA for ‘bringing him down,’” Steidel Wall wrote in the agency-wide message obtained by The Post. “Neither is accurate or welcome.”

Trump has treated the documents as his personal property, though, under the Presidential Records Act, they belong to the American people.





The above may not be all of the people or organizations being threatened by Trump supporters once he attacks them in the past six or seven years. There may be more.

Needless to say, no other former President has ever attacked any of those people or organizations, that I know of, which would lead their supporters, in office or voters, to act by threatening or even physically attacking them.

Needless to say, any other government official, and non official, etc, would have already been indicted. But supporters like Lindsay Graham have recently stated that if Trump is prosecuted, there will be riots in the street. Only making things worse for the Rule of Law.

Too much is at stake with some people, too many people, thinking that they do not have to honor and uphold the Constitution and the Rule of Law of the USA, which they swore to once they took office.
Trump attacks everyone, sooner or later. In just 4 years is administration had a 95% turnover rate, that's really insane, that shows how crazy trump is and almost impossible to get along with.
 
This belongs on the other thread, but let us post it here to clear the facts:

Timeline

2021​

Jan. 18 Crews from a Miami news station spot at least two moving trucks at Mar-a-Lago that investigators said in court documents contained documents transported from the White House.

Jan. 20 Mr. Trump makes a rushed and chaotic exit from the White House and Joe Biden is sworn in as president.

May 6 The National Archives and Records Administration (NARA) begins approaching the former president’s team requesting missing presidential records. In the course of 2021, the archives and the Trump team had an extensive exchange about the disposition of the records from the former president’s White House.

Late December NARA is informed of 12 boxes ready for retrieval at Mar-a-Lago.

2022​

Jan. 18 NARA retrieves 15 boxes of documents from Mar-a-Lago that the agency believes contain classified national-security information.

Feb. 9 NARA refers the matter to the Justice Department. The FBI opens a criminal investigation into how classified documents became stored at Mar-a-Lago after Mr. Trump left the White House.

Feb. 18 The chief administrator for NARA reports the matter to the House Committee on Oversight and Reform. Mr. Trump issues a statement saying: “The National Archives did not ‘find’ anything, they were given, upon request, Presidential Records in an ordinary and routine process to ensure the preservation of my legacy and in accordance with the Presidential Records Act.”

April 29 NARA tells Mr. Trump’s legal team it intends to provide the documents to the FBI, revealing in a letter that officials found over 100 documents with classification markings, comprising more than 700 pages. Mr. Trump’s lawyers cite executive-privilege concerns in requesting an extension, which the agency denies.

May 10 NARA tells Mr. Trump’s lawyer it will provide the FBI with access to the records as early as May 12.

May 11 The Justice Department issues a grand jury subpoena to Mr. Trump’s team seeking all classified documents at Mar-a-Lago and tells Mr. Trump’s lawyers they can comply by relinquishing the material at the premises along with a sworn statement that they had turned over all the requested records.

May 16-18 FBI agents review the 15 boxes and find classified documents in 14 of them, including 184 marked classified, 67 marked confidential, 92 marked secret, and 25 marked top secret. Some of the information was derived from clandestine human intelligence sources, the FBI says.

May 22 Ex-White House aide Kash Patel asserts in a news report that Mr. Trump had declassified the documents found at his home, offering the first glimpse into a possible defense.

May 25 Mr. Trump’s attorney Evan Corcoran writes a letter to a top Justice Department official laying out arguments for why Mr. Trump didn’t violate any criminal laws. The letter said Mr. Trump had absolute authority to declassify classified information during his presidency. “Any attempt to impose criminal liability on a President or a former President that involves his actions with respect to documents marked classified would implicate grave constitutional separation-of-powers issues,” Mr. Corcoran wrote in the letter.

June 2 Mr. Corcoran requests FBI agents meet him the following day at Mar-a-Lago to pick up the documents they sought.

June 3 Three agents and Jay Bratt, chief of the Justice Department’s counterintelligence and export control section, arrive at Mar-a-Lago to collectthe documents. Mr. Corcoran turns over an accordion folder containing 38 more documents marked as classified, including 17 described as top secret, 16 marked as secret, and five more marked as confidential. The former president stopped by, shook hands, and said: “I appreciate the job you’re doing,” adding: “Anything you need, let us know,” according to a person familiar with the exchange. A custodian of Mr. Trump’s records, Christina Bobb, gives agents a letter she signed saying that Mr. Trump’s team had conducted a “diligent search” after receiving the subpoena and that the documents turned over in the folder represented “any and all responsive documents.” According to the Justice Department, Mr. Corcoran said all the records from the White House were in the storage room, that no other records were in any other location and that all available boxes were searched. But the department said he wouldn’t let the agents look in the remaining boxes in the storage room to confirm no more classified documents were in them.

June 8 Mr. Bratt sends a letter to Mr. Trump’s lawyers telling them to secure the storage room and all boxes moved from the White House “until further notice.” He notes that Mar-a-Lago doesn’t have a secure location for the storage of classified information and that documents there “have not been handled in an appropriate manner or stored in an appropriate location.”

June 9 Mr. Trump’s team acknowledges receipt of the letter.

June 22 The Trump Organization, Mr. Trump’s family business, receives a subpoena for surveillance footage from cameras at Mar-a-Lago. That footage is turned over, according to an official.

Aug. 5 FBI agents obtain a warrant to search Mar-a-Lago, signed by U.S. Magistrate Judge Bruce Reinhart. The warrant cites an investigation into violations of the Espionage Act, a presidential-records law, and obstruction of justice. Investigators say they developed evidence that shows that “government records were likely concealed and removed from the Storage Room and that efforts were likely taken to obstruct the government’s investigation.”

Aug. 8 FBI agents search Mar-a-Lago, seizing 33 boxes, containers, and other evidence containing more than 100 classified records, including information classified at the highest levels.

Wow. Trump should be under the the damned jail.
 
Collins noted that these forums “had been relatively dead in the last few months, with users headed over to general Trump forums and militia/Q influencer Telegrams. Not anymore.”

The New York Times recently explored just how deeply Truth Social has become a hub of QAnon activity. A recent report from media watchdog NewsGuard found the platform hosted 88 users, each with more than 10,000 followers, promoting QAnon theories on Truth Social. Over 30 of these accounts had been previously banned by Twitter.

“He’s not simply President Trump the political leader here—he’s the proprietor of a platform,” Newsguard CEO Steven Brill told the Times. “That would be the equivalent of Mark Zuckerberg reposting content from supporters of QAnon.”

(full article online)

"Banned by Twitter" translates to "utterly credible."
 
Trump attacks everyone, sooner or later. In just 4 years is administration had a 95% turnover rate, that's really insane, that shows how crazy trump is and almost impossible to get along with.
That sounds like made-up horseshit to me.
 
Trump attacks the election results, threats from his supporters happen.
Trump attacks Mike Pence, threats from his supporters happen.
Trump attacks Poll Workers, threats from his supporters happen.
Trump attacks Election officials, threats from his supporters happen.
Trump attacks Congress members, threats from his supporters happen.
Trump attacks the DOJ, threats from his supporters happen.
Trump attacks the FBI, threats and attacks from his supporters happen.
Trump attacks NARA, threats from his supporters happen.

The last one is the latest coming from Trump basically sending his smoke signals to his supporters that he needs help in delegitimizing what has been happening in the past year and a half.
----------------------
The National Archives and Records Administration has become yet another target of threats in the wake of attacks by former President Donald Trump after the FBI seized government documents from his Mar-a-Lago residence, sources have told The Washington Post.

After Trump unleashed a torrent of invective against an agency widely viewed as librarian-like and apolitical, police increased patrols around the National Archives building in Washington, D.C., due to a troubling “spike in online chatter” about the facility, sources told the Post.
---
Acting archivist Debra Steidel Wall sent a message Wednesday telling NARA staff to stand strong in the face of threats, according to the Post.
“NARA has received messages from the public accusing us of corruption and conspiring against the former President, or congratulating NARA for ‘bringing him down,’” Steidel Wall wrote in the agency-wide message obtained by The Post. “Neither is accurate or welcome.”

Trump has treated the documents as his personal property, though, under the Presidential Records Act, they belong to the American people.





The above may not be all of the people or organizations being threatened by Trump supporters once he attacks them in the past six or seven years. There may be more.

Needless to say, no other former President has ever attacked any of those people or organizations, that I know of, which would lead their supporters, in office or voters, to act by threatening or even physically attacking them.

Needless to say, any other government official, and non official, etc, would have already been indicted. But supporters like Lindsay Graham have recently stated that if Trump is prosecuted, there will be riots in the street. Only making things worse for the Rule of Law.

Too much is at stake with some people, too many people, thinking that they do not have to honor and uphold the Constitution and the Rule of Law of the USA, which they swore to once they took office.

Thank God they're only threats.

Meantime at Ranch Bidenista, Las Vegas Democrat official stabs to death a journalist, and in North Dakota a drunken Dimm runs over and murders a Republican after a political argument.

You don't know shit from shinola!!
 

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