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International

FBI didn’t think it had cause to raid Trump but DOJ did it anyway

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Newly released internal FBI records show that agents themselves doubted they had enough evidence to justify the August 2022 raid on President Trump’s Mar-a-Lago home, but were pushed forward anyway by senior officials inside the Biden Justice Department — a decision that Republican lawmakers now say confirms a grave abuse of federal power.

The documents, made public Tuesday by Senate Judiciary Committee Chairman Chuck Grassley, reveal weeks of internal frustration inside the FBI as agents struggled to establish probable cause that classified material remained at Trump’s Palm Beach estate. In one July 13, 2022 email from the FBI’s Washington Field Office, an official complained that investigators had spent six “counterproductive” weeks chasing a warrant without uncovering any new evidence. “We haven’t generated any new facts, but keep being given draft after draft after draft,” the official wrote, questioning how long the effort could continue without a witness or fresh intelligence to justify a search. Despite those concerns, the DOJ pressed ahead.

Grassley called the disclosures “shocking,” writing on X that the records show the “FBI DID NOT BELIEVE IT HAD PROBABLE CAUSE to raid Pres Trump’s Mar-a-Lago home but Biden DOJ pushed for it anyway.” The Iowa Republican said the emails and memoranda point to a “miscarriage of justice” driven from the top down, not a careful law-enforcement decision grounded in evidence. According to the records, witness interviews conducted after Trump returned classified documents on June 3, 2022 failed to produce proof that sensitive materials were still being concealed at the resort.

Emails exchanged in the week leading up to the Aug. 8 raid show FBI officials actively searching for what they described as a “second path” to obtain a warrant, while also warning about how the operation would look if carried out against a former president. Washington Field Office counterintelligence chief Tony Riedlinger and then-assistant director Steven D’Antuono were included on the discussions, which stressed the need for a “professional, low key” approach and cooperation from Trump attorney Evan Corcoran — a plan that agents cautioned “may not go well at DOJ.” Internal correspondence shows that senior Justice Department officials were unmoved by those concerns. One DOJ official later told colleagues he “frankly [didn’t] give a damn about the optics.”

The records also indicate the DOJ had been preparing for a raid far earlier than previously acknowledged. Emails from early June 2022 show prosecutors wanted a search warrant ready within days of a meeting with Corcoran, anticipating noncompliance and refusing to grant extensions for document production. By July, the scope of the proposed search had expanded dramatically, covering Trump’s office, storage rooms, owner’s quarters, and any other spaces that might have held government records — with only guest rooms explicitly excluded.

When the warrant was finally executed, it bore little resemblance to the restrained operation agents had discussed internally. Trump was not in Florida at the time, having traveled to his Bedminster golf club in New Jersey, leaving behind only a small staff. Dozens of FBI agents arrived with lights and sirens, searched multiple areas of the property, entered Melania Trump’s bedroom, and cracked open a safe in Trump’s office. Agents remained on site for most of the day. Trump condemned the action on Truth Social, calling it unprecedented and unnecessary after months of cooperation. “Nothing like this has ever happened to a President of the United States before,” he wrote.

Attorney General Merrick Garland ultimately approved the raid over objections raised within the FBI. The search later became the foundation for special counsel Jack Smith’s indictment of Trump in June 2023 on multiple counts related to classified documents. That case collapsed when U.S. District Judge Aileen Cannon ruled that Smith had been unlawfully appointed without congressional authorization.

In a cover letter accompanying the document release, FBI Assistant Director Marshall Yates said the bureau was turning over the records in the interest of transparency and restoring public trust. For Grassley and other Republicans, the emails instead reinforce what Trump supporters have argued for years — that the Mar-a-Lago raid was not the product of neutral law enforcement, but a politically driven decision imposed by a Justice Department willing to override its own investigators to target a sitting president’s chief political rival.

Crime

Trump designates fentanyl a ‘weapon of mass destruction’

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From The Center Square

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Following an alarming rise in fentanyl deaths in recent years, President Donald Trump is taking another step in cracking down on the deadly drug seeping its way onto American streets by designating it a weapon of mass destruction.

The president signed the executive order Monday during an event in the Oval Office, saying the illicit drug “is closer to a chemical weapon than a narcotic.”

The designation comes on the heels of the administration’s increasing military presence in the Caribbean, targeting narco-terrorists and “successful” meetings with Chinese leaders, who have vowed to crack down on the production of precursors of the drug.

Critics of Trump’s move want to address the fentanyl crisis through a different way. For example, a 2024 bill from attorneys general asking former President Joe Biden to do the same thing expressed concerns about political optics and the language akin to military. Overreach and blurred lines in domestic actions, such as rounding up users.

The order would provide the secretaries of the Department of War and Department of Homeland Security to “update all directives regarding the armed forces’ response to chemical incidents in the homeland to include the threat of illicit fentanyl.”

Trump said the fentanyl drug trade “threatens” national security by fueling “lawlessness” in the Western Hemisphere. This is the area of North America and South America, and the islands near each.

“The production and sale of fentanyl by foreign terrorist organizations and cartels fund these entities’ operations – which include assassinations, terrorist acts, and insurgencies around the world – and allow these entities to erode our domestic security and the well-being of our nation,” the order says in part.

Trump said two cartels are predominantly responsible. The Sinaloa Cartel and the Jalisco New Generation Cartel, known also as CJNG, are based in Mexico.

The Drug Enforcement Agency said last December that in 2023, more than 107,000 people died from drug overdoses, with nearly 70% attributed to opioids, like fentanyl.

In late February, the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention via its National Vital Statistics System predicted a 24% decline in drug overdose deaths for the 12 months ending in September. The finding was based on 87,000 drug overdose deaths from October 2023 to September 2024, down from 114,000 the year prior.

Trump declared opioid overdose a public health emergency in 2017 during his first term.

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International

Russia Now Open To Ukraine Joining EU, Officials Briefed On Peace Deal Say

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From the Daily Caller News Foundation

By Wallace White

Russia has expressed willingness to let Ukraine join the European Union (EU) as part of a future peace deal, U.S. officials told the Daily Caller News Foundation.

In addition to possible EU membership, Russia might also accept a new security guarantee for Ukraine that provides NATO-like protections as part of the deal, the officials told the DCNF. U.S. Special Envoy Steve Witkoff and Jared Kushner are currently in Berlin for peace negotiations with European leaders and Ukraine, and are expected to meet with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy to discuss the peace talks, the officials said.

“Russia, in a final deal, has indicated they would be willing…to Ukraine joining the EU,” one official told the DCNF.

The officials expressed confidence they have resolved “90%” of the issues between Russia and Ukraine in the new deal, but did not elaborate on the outstanding issues from Russian President Vladimir Putin or Zelenskyy.

Ukraine has said it was willing to give up its NATO aspirations in a peace deal with Russia, marking a major shift from Zelenskyy’s previous position at the start of the conflict. President Donald Trump previously urged the leader to drop his NATO push in August, saying he would end the “almost immediately” if Ukraine gave it up.

Discussions in Berlin with Zelenskyy mainly focused on the U.S. security guarantee, though it is unclear how the new agreement would provide Article 5-like protections in practice and whether the deal would be binding, the officials told the DCNF. The officials also said that involved European nations have expressed approval of the new guarantees.

Earlier, European leaders strongly objected to the initial 20-point proposal set forth by the Trump administration in November.

Zelenskyy’s administration has also been mired in a corruption scandal that threatens to undo his grip on power, as the National Anti-Corruption Bureau of Ukraine launched a probe into Zelenskyy’s business partners who allegedly laundered $100 million from Ukraine’s nuclear energy company.

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