BYRON YORK: The ‘public interest’ in the latest Trump investigation
Byron York
By Byron York
Think back five years to the frenzy of news reporting and commentary over what was called Trump-Russia “collusion” — the allegation that the 2016 Trump campaign conspired with Russia to fix the presidential election. Most of the coverage, and especially the commentary, seemed predicated on the belief that collusion did, in fact, take place. But later, in one of history’s great never minds, the extensive investigation of special counsel Robert Mueller was unable to establish that Trump-Russia collusion — prosecutors called it conspiracy or coordination — ever occurred at all.
The striking feature of the media’s collusion talkathon in 2017 and 2018 was that much of it was based on secret evidence. There were super-secret recordings of Michael Flynn, President Trump’s first national security adviser, talking to the Russians. There was secret evidence gathered by a secret FBI investigation. There was secret testimony to Mueller’s prosecutors. And there was, famously, a secret dossier of Trump allegations.
Why re-tell that story? Because there is a new special counsel investigation of Trump, now a candidate for the 2024 Republican presidential nomination. Attorney General Merrick Garland instructed the new counsel, Jack Smith, to investigate two matters: Trump’s alleged role in inciting the Jan. 6 riot and the “investigation involving classified documents and other presidential records, as well as the possible obstruction of that investigation.” What is notable about the second topic, the documents investigation, is how much, like earlier probes, it is based on secret evidence.
There is no doubt that Trump, when he left the White House, kept a significant number of documents from his presidential years. Why did he do so? The Washington Post recently reported that Justice Department prosecutors have concluded that Trump’s motive “was largely his ego and a desire to hold on to the materials as trophies or mementos.” The Biden Justice Department had looked hard for some kind of nefarious motive behind Trump’s actions and all it could come up with, if the Post is correct, was a desire for high-end souvenirs.
Nevertheless, Garland appointed a special counsel to investigate. Why? This is how Garland explained it: “Based on recent developments, including the former president’s announcement that he is a candidate for president in the next election, and the sitting president’s stated intention to be a candidate as well, I have concluded that it is in the public interest to appoint a special counsel.”
It is in the “public interest.” This is not just a legal case, Garland was saying, but one in which the public has a significant interest, and therefore one the DOJ must treat differently from other cases.
In the early weeks of the investigation, there were leaks that Trump’s papers were “classified documents relating to nuclear weapons,” in the words of the Washington Post, and also documents involving clandestine human sources who could face death or imprisonment in foreign lands if their identities were released through Trump’s actions. There were papers that “could reveal carefully guarded secrets about U.S. intelligence-gathering methods,” causing “grave concern” in the intelligence community, the Post reported. “At least one of the documents seized by the FBI describes Iran’s missile program,” the Post continued. “Other documents described highly sensitive intelligence work aimed at China.”
The DOJ is even keeping the evidence from the Trump defense. In a recent exchange of court papers, the former president’s lawyers argued that they should not be required, as the government wants, to file a declaration regarding the government’s inventory of seized documents because they do not possess the documents. Then the team added: “As to the documents that the government asserts include a classification marking, the government has not allowed [the Trump team] to review these items.”
Of course, prosecutors would argue that since no one has been charged in the case, the DOJ has no obligation to show anyone anything. Even if Trump is charged, prosecutors will probably try to keep lots of the evidence secret.
Maybe that is essential for national security. But remember what Garland said about the public’s interest in the case. One party, Trump, is running for president, while prosecutors under the authority of his potential rival, President Biden, are preparing, possibly, to file criminal charges in the case. There has been intensive media coverage of the case, much of it with the standard anti-Trump bias. What do the documents at the bottom of the case say? No one in the public knows.
It has happened before with Trump. Not too many years ago, he faced accusations — often dramatic accusations, like the notion that he was a Kremlin asset — on the basis of unseen evidence that the talking heads said was reliable but that no one in the public could evaluate. Now, it’s happening again.
