Why is the FBI raiding Trump over a misdemeanor?

It’s deja vu all over again. Many on TBP might remember the old story of Clinton’s lackey Sandy Berger sneaking out classified documents from the National Archives by stuffing them in his pants and then later shredding them at his leisure.

What the media is leaving out of the FBI’s raid on Mar-a-Lago is the fact that stealing from the National Archives is a misdemeanor with a maximum punishment of 1 year in jail and up to $100,000 fine. When Sandy Berger pleaded guilty his sweetheart deal was no jail time, a $10,000 fine, surrendering his security clearance for 3 years, and he didn’t have to give a reason for why he committed his crime.

Not that his conviction really mattered because Sandy Berger ended up dead 11-months later.

Curious minds would like to know why the FBI is making much-a-do over a misdemeanor? Why did the FBI confiscate Freedom Caucus Rep. Scott Perry’s cell phone at the airport?

FLASHBACK: Former Clinton Aide Pleads Guilty to Taking Classified Docs

Via Foxnews

For months, he called it an honest mistake.

But on Friday, Sandy Berger (search) pleaded guilty to a misdemeanor in federal court. Berger, who served as President Clinton’s national security adviser, is acknowledging that it wasn’t an honest mistake and that he intentionally took and destroyed copies of classified documents from the National Archives (search) and cut them up with scissors.

Berger acknowledged to U.S. Magistrate Deborah Robinson that he intentionally took and deliberately destroyed three copies of the same document dealing with terror threats during the 2000 millennium (search) celebration. He then lied about it to Archives staff when they told him the documents were missing.

“Guilty, your honor,” Berger responded when asked how he pleaded.

Robinson did not ask Berger why he cut up the materials and threw them away at the Washington office of his Stonebridge International consulting firm. Berger, accompanied by his wife, Susan, did not offer an explanation when he addressed reporters outside the federal courthouse following the hearing.

“It was a mistake and it was wrong,” he said, refusing to answer questions.

It’s part of a plea agreement between Berger — who still claims he hasn’t done anything criminally wrong — and the Justice Department so he doesn’t get jail time.

Noel Hillman, chief of the Justice Department’s public integrity section, would not discuss Berger’s motivation, but said the former national security adviser understood the rules governing the handling of classified materials. Berger only had copies of documents; all of the originals remain in the government’s possession, Hillman said.

The charge of unauthorized removal and retention of classified material is a misdemeanor that carries a maximum sentence of a year in prison and up to a $100,000 fine.

However, under a plea agreement that Robinson must accept, instead of jail, Berger would pay a $10,000 fine, surrender his security clearance for three years and cooperate with investigators. Security clearance allows access to classified government materials.

Berger was released and sentencing was set for July 8.

After his court appearance, Berger told reporters that he “excerised poor judgement” and “deeply regretted it.” He said his motivation was to help himself and others prepare for their appearance before the commission probing the events surrounding the Sept. 11, 2001 attacks.

The U.S. District Court appearance was the culmination of a bizarre episode in which the man who once had access to the government’s most sensitive intelligence was accused of sneaking documents out of the Archives, which houses the Constitution, Declaration of Independence and other cherished and top-secret documents.

The Bush administration disclosed the investigation in July, just days before the Sept. 11 commission issued its final report. Democrats claimed the White House was using Berger to deflect attention from the harsh findings, with their potential for damaging President Bush’s re-election prospects.

After news of the probe surfaced, Berger admitted that twice during 2003, he knowingly removed classified documents regarding the government’s anti-terror efforts and notes from the National Archives Annex in College Park, Md., by putting the papers in his jacket, his pants and in a leather case. That’s a misdemeanor that can bring a maximum sentence of a year in prison and a $100,000 fine.

He said he was reviewing the materials to help determine which Clinton administration documents to provide to the independent commission investigating the Sept. 11 terror attacks. He called the episode “an honest mistake” and said he “deeply regrets” taking the material.

According to a statement released by the Justice Department on Friday, Berger took the documents to his office in Washington, where he destroyed three of the copies. Soon after he visited the Archives in October 2003, building officials discovered that documents were missing and, two days later, contacted Berger.

Initially, Berger did not tell the Archives staff that he had taken the documents but later that night told Archives staff that he had “accidentally misfiled” two of them, according to the Justice Department. The next day, he returned to Archives staff the two remaining copies of the five documents he had taken during the September and October visits. Each of the five copies of the document was then given to the Sept. 11 commission.

“In his plea, Berger also admitted that he concealed and removed his handwritten notes from the Archives prior to a classification review, in violation of Archives rules and procedures,” reads the DOJ statement. “Those notes have been returned to the government.”

But still missing are drafts of a sensitive after-action report on the Clinton administration’s response to a failed terror plot to blow up the Los Angeles International Airport during December 1999, otherwise known as “the Millennium plot.”

One source told FOX News that the report was critical of how the Clinton administration handled Al Qaeda threats to the U.S. homeland and that the missing report made security recommendations that were never implemented.

The Associated Press first reported in July that the Justice Department was investigating Berger for incidents at the Archives the previous fall. The disclosure prompted Berger to step down as an adviser to the campaign of Democratic presidential candidate John Kerry.

Clinton was among Democrats who questioned the timing of the disclosure of the Berger probe, three days before the release of the final Sept. 11 commission report. The commission, writing three months before the 2004 presidential election, detailed failures of both the Clinton and Bush administrations.

Clinton was among the Democrats who questioned the timing of the disclosure of the Berger probe three days before the release of the Sept. 11 report. Leaders of the Sept. 11 commission (search) said they were able to get every key document needed to complete their report.

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12 Comments
onymous
onymous
August 10, 2022 7:00 am

Merely DS shenanigans that we were unaware of then but realize now…….just another doobie in the ashtray for the cops…….

TN Patriot
TN Patriot
August 10, 2022 8:11 am

Another example of the Dept of Just Us protecting the home team while the Dept of Justice persecuted its enemies.

Iska Waran
Iska Waran
  TN Patriot
August 10, 2022 10:33 am

That’s it. The federal bureaucracy targets anyone who threatens its goals. While that might have included JFK (I suspect the Allen Dulles faction after JFK fired him) and probably included William Colby, in recent decades only Trump threatened to upset their applecart. The fact that he was ineffective and surrounded himself with people who opposed his stated goals didn’t keep the Deep State from being scared that he actually would do things like pull the US out of NATO.

Trump failed on so many levels I’d sworn off ever voting for him again, although seeing this level of banana republic bullshit being pulled solely to tar him with “crimes” that pale beside those of most of his predecessors is making me rethink that. Enemy of my enemy thing.

TN Patriot
TN Patriot
  Iska Waran
August 10, 2022 11:29 am

Listening to Bannon’s speech and he laid out a solid plan for Trump to really go after the DS. Could that have set off alarm bells?

Token Whitey
Token Whitey
  Iska Waran
August 10, 2022 1:24 pm

You just perfectly demonstrated what yesterday was about — to shake the dirt of the scamdemic off of Trump and resurrect him as a victimized hero. Obviously it’s still a game plan that works.

Fleabaggs
Fleabaggs
  Iska Waran
August 11, 2022 7:21 am

“Trump failed on so many levels I’d sworn off ever voting for him again, although seeing this level of banana republic bullshit being pulled solely to tar him with “crimes” that pale beside those of most of his predecessors is making me rethink that. Enemy of my enemy thing.”

Iska, That’s exactly what it’s supposed to do, like Whitey said, “perfectly demonstrates”.

keann
keann
August 10, 2022 10:34 am

Sandy Burglar –

overthecliff
overthecliff
August 10, 2022 10:54 am

Why did they confiscate the congressman’s phone? NSA know who he talked to and what he said. It was just to intimidate the opposition.

TN Patriot
TN Patriot
  overthecliff
August 10, 2022 11:30 am

They let him know he could be the next serious target.

Boogieman
Boogieman
August 10, 2022 11:48 am

Because they like stepping on their own dicks.

Toujours Pret
Toujours Pret
August 10, 2022 1:08 pm

Why is the FBI raiding Trump over a misdemeanor?
Slow day at the office.

73amxman
73amxman
August 11, 2022 3:21 am

Could it have been an “inside” job where someone within the White House intentionally planted classified documents amongst others as sort of an insurance policy. Later on information is mysteriously leaked to the DOJ & FBI that Trump took classified documents with him. In other words he was set up by the “Swamp” as payback and to discredit any chances he has for running as President again.