The FBI Must Be Frustrated To Know One Of Their Own Said This About The Case Against Trump

By Seth Cutler | Tuesday, 30 August 2022 12:00 PM
6
Views 2.2K

A former assistant director in the FBI announced that he thinks the affidavit used to obtain a search warrant of former President Donald Trump's Mar-a-Lago reveals the government has "no case" against him.

"We now know why the DOJ wanted the affidavit—which is supposed to articulate the probable cause needed for a legitimate search—to be kept under seal," wrote Kevin R. Brock, the former assistant director of intelligence for the FBI and principal deputy director of the National Counterterrorism Center (NCTC), in an opinion piece published Sunday.

The affidavit was ordered issued by a U.S. magistrate judge last week in response to court filings submitted by media outlets and third parties. The legal document, nonetheless, was heavily redacted and showed very little regarding what the FBI agents were searching for on Aug. 8 and why.

 WATCH: ASTRAZENECA SUED OVER VACCINE WOESbell_image

"First," Brock wrote, "the affidavit confirmed that the FBI's investigation was triggered in January 2022 at the request of the National Archives, which wanted certain documents, especially classified documents, that it considered to be presidential records to be turned over to it by Trump." Yet there seems to be nothing "in the affidavit asserting a refusal by Trump to cooperate," he wrote. "Second, from what I have seen, I don't believe the affidavit articulates how a federal law was or is being broken. For those who hold out hope that the affidavit's redacted sections fill that gap, there is almost no chance that they do," he went on. The legal document's probable cause arguments only deal with "half of what is required to show a possible violation of the federal statutes that are cited in the warrant," Brock wrote, adding that based on his experience, it's unlikely the government will issue more of the redacted portions of the affidavit.

 ROSIE O'DONNELL TURNS TIKTOK THERAPIST, GIVES MICHAEL COHEN PUBLIC PEP TALKbell_image

To obtain a warrant, it's not sufficient for the affidavit just to argue that there is cause to think that Trump had supposedly classified documents at Mar-a-Lago, the former official announced. At the same time, the unredacted portions do not make the case that Trump wasn't authorized to have the documents at his Florida residence. "A criminal violation of those statutes only exists if it can be established that the person being investigated was not authorized to possess, store, transfer or copy those documents," Brock stated.

 NATION IN TURMOIL: SLOVAK PRIME MINISTER CLINGS TO LIFE AFTER ASSASSINATION ATTEMPT ROCKS POLITICAL LANDSCAPEbell_image

"This is an easy element to establish against anyone in America. Except for one person." Trump and former aides have announced that while president, he had a standing order to declassify materials that left the White House's Oval Office and were sent to Mar-a-Lago. In the meantime, Trump wrote in October on his now-banned Twitter account that he had declassified some FBI-related materials. He further issued an order on Jan. 19, 2021, to declassify some FBI Crossfire Hurricane documents.

X