The US National Archives and Records Administration (NARA) released a statement on Friday in an effort to refute claims regarding former President Barack Obama's presidential records after former President Donald Trump and his supporters in conservative circles claimed that his predecessor was able to take large numbers of documents with him after he left office.
Following the Monday raid, Trump and some conservative commentators questioned Obama's alleged decision to move White House records to Chicago, Illinois, for his presidential library.
In addition, the former president's son, Donald Trump Jr., allegedly cited
the op-ed in the New York Post as justification for the claims.
Obama's papers, numbering in the tens of thousands, were indeed shipped to Chicago. However, as NARA pointed out, these materials were delivered to a federal government institution, as is the custom with presidential records.
Since all of these items are actually the property of the American people, federal law mandates that presidents and their administrations maintain a
thorough archive of communications, papers, and even gifts from their time in office.
Obama's papers were legally transferred to the National Archives, which then started the laborious process of going through them before the public could request them years later. Some of this information would then be provided to Obama's presidential library, as required by law.
Aside from the drawn-out procedures, Obama's presidential library will deviate from tradition in that the Obama Foundation will pay for the digitization of the unclassified records in an effort to democratize access to them. This will be the "first digital archives for the first digital president," according to
The New York Times.However, five years after the conclusion of Obama's presidency and the start of the record transfer, the items from the records transferred to his presidential library still have reportedly not been digitized and made publicly accessible.
On Friday evening, law enforcement unsealed a previously classified search warrant, from which it became known that a list of the items confiscated from Mar-a-Lago included 20 boxes of files and 11 sets of classified documents, some of which were labeled as top secret.
Others included an unidentified handwritten message, Roger Stone's executive pardon, and vague details regarding French President Emmanuel Macron.
The FBI obtained a search warrant in order to determine whether Trump had taken records home with him that were supposed to be handed over at the end of his tenure. The FBI investigation into Trump concerns potential violations of the espionage law, and it could result in a prison term for the former US president.