Heather Cox Richardson reflects on the latest mystery of the chaotic Trump administration. A top-secret file is missing. It was not at Mar-a-Lago. Where did it go? Who took it? Meanwhile, in Florida, Federal Judge Aileen Cannon is slow-walking the trial about the numerous classified documents that Trump refused to relinquish to the National Archives.
She writes:
CNN reporters today pulled together evidence from a number of sources to explain how “a binder containing highly classified information related to Russian election interference went missing at the end of Donald Trump’s presidency.” The missing collection of documents was ten inches thick and contained 2,700 pages of information from U.S. intelligence and that of North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) allies about Russian efforts to help Trump win the 2016 presidential election.
The binder went missing in the last days of the Trump presidency and has not been recovered. Its disappearance has raised “alarms among intelligence officials that some of the most closely guarded national security secrets from the US and its allies could be exposed.”
Reporters Jeremy Herb, Katie Bo Lillis, Natasha Bertrand, Evan Perez, and Zachary Cohen have pieced together the story of how in his last days in office, Trump tried to declassify most of the information in the binder in order to distribute copies to Republican members of Congress and right-wing media outlets. According to an affidavit by reporter John Solomon, who was shown a copy of the binder, the plan was to begin releasing information from it on the morning of January 20, 2021, so that it would hit the news after President Joe Biden had been sworn in.
But late on January 19, while Solomon was copying the documents, White House lawyers recalled the copies to black out, or redact, sensitive information, worrying that while most of the facts in the binder were apparently already public, the methods of collection and persons involved were not. At some point in that process, an unredacted copy of the binder disappeared.
A former aide to Trump chief of staff Mark Meadows, Cassidy Hutchinson, told the House Select Committee to Investigate the January 6th Attack on the U.S. Capitol last year that she thought Meadows took the unredacted binder with him.
Today, in statements that seemed very carefully worded, Meadows’s lawyer, George Terwilliger, told CNN: “Mr. Meadows was keenly aware of and adhered to requirements for the proper handling of classified material, any such material that he handled or was in his possession has been treated accordingly and any suggestion that he is responsible for any missing binder or other classified information is flat wrong.” Terwilliger told the New York Times: “Mark never took any copy of that binder home at any time.”
The missing binder was not among the material the Federal Bureau of Investigation recovered from Mar-a-Lago last year, and intelligence officials briefed the Senate Intelligence Committee about the missing information (the CNN story does not say that the House Intelligence Committee has been briefed). In April 2021, Trump allegedly offered to let the author of a book about him see the binder, saying “I would let you look at them if you wanted…. It’s a treasure trove…it would be sort of a cool book for you to look at.”
The story of yet more missing classified information highlights that Judge Aileen Cannon, who was confirmed to her position after Trump lost the 2020 election, has permitted Trump to slow down United States of America v. Donald J. Trump, Waltine Nauta, and Carlos De Oliveira, the pending criminal case in which he and two aides are accused of mishandling classified documents under the Espionage Act as well as making false statements and engaging in a conspiracy to obstruct justice.
Perhaps even more strongly, at a time when House Republicans have declined to fund Ukraine’s war against Russia’s 2022 invasion, the story serves as a reminder of the role Russia played in Trump’s 2016 election and how, during Trump’s time in office, he continued to cultivate a relationship with Russia’s authoritarian president Vladimir Putin and to turn his back on America’s traditional democratic allies, including those in NATO. (At one point, he told National Security Advisor John Bolton, “I don’t give a sh*t about NATO.”)
Indeed, Trump has suggested he would take the U.S. out of NATO if he returns to office, breaking the coalition that held first the Soviet Union and then Russia at bay since World War II. Such a betrayal would weaken all of the security alliances of the United States, according to Eastern European specialist Anne Applebaum, exposing the U.S. as an unreliable ally. As democracies ceased to work together, they would have to work with authoritarian governments, and after American political influence declined, so would the economic influence that has protected our economy. Authoritarian leaders like Putin would be the winners.
News about the missing binder also highlights just how hard Trump worked to convince his loyalists that that connection was a hoax. Although all U.S. intelligence services and the Republican-dominated Senate Intelligence Committee assessed that, in fact, Russia didintervene in the election to get Trump into the White House, many Trump loyalists continue to believe Trump’s lie that such interference did not happen.
Trump’s determination to convince his followers that “Russia, Russia, Russia” was a hoax was in part an attempt to get out from under the legal implications of working with a foreign country to win an election but also, perhaps more profoundly, an attempt to make his followers believe his lies over reality. If he could make them believe him, rather than the conclusions of the U.S. intelligence community and the Senate, they would be his to command.
Russia, Russia, Russia was an important precursor to the Big Lie that Trump, rather than Joe Biden, won the 2020 presidential election. The Big Lie has failed at every test of evidence, and yet Trump loyalists still say they believe it.
Today, former Trump ally Rudy Giuliani continued to defend the idea that the 2020 election had been stolen, even after a jury of eight Americans said he must pay the eye-popping sum of $148,169,000 to Georgia election workers Shaye Moss and Ruby Freeman for defaming them by saying they had participated in election fraud—he made that up—and for emotional distress. Freeman and Moss had asked for $24 million each.
Of that verdict, $75,000,000 was for punitive damages, illustrating that spreading Trump’s lies so that they hurt individuals comes at a whopper of a cost. Giuliani had refused to cooperate in the case, although he admitted to the truth of the underlying facts, and he had continued to attack Moss and Freeman to reporters during the trial.
Trump’s election lies that hurt companies are also costly, as the Fox News Corporation found when it settled with Dominion Voting Systems for $787 million over the media company’s lies about the 2020 election.
Senators Tim Kaine (D-VA) and Marco Rubio (R-FL) tried to address Trump’s attack on our democracy when this week they inserted into the National Defense Authorization Act a provision saying that no president can withdraw from NATO without approval from the Senate or from Congress as a whole.
“NATO has held strong in response to Putin’s war in Ukraine and rising challenges around the world,” Kaine said. He added that the legislation “to prevent any U.S. President from unilaterally withdrawing from NATO reaffirms U.S. support for this crucial alliance that is foundational for our national security. It also sends a strong message to authoritarians around the world that the free world remains united.”
Rubio added, “The Senate should maintain oversight on whether or not our nation withdraws from NATO. We must ensure we are protecting our national interests and protecting the security of our democratic allies.”

The CIA doesn’t make copies?
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The big issue is in whose hands is this sensitive information now. Given the fact a reporter recently spoke to a Russian official who said that Putin would like to see a “more constructive President with whom he could have dialogue” lead the US is a major concern to national security. His trolls will be working their misinformation machine to put the GOP in power. https://www.politico.eu/article/vladimir-putin-wants-a-us-president-who-is-more-constructive-toward-russia-the-kremlin-says/
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Still, Trump’s pet judge may be slow walking that one case, but it hasn’t slowed down his current lost court cases and others still in the works.
The jury in a NY civil case that found the traitor guilty of rape, costing Trump $5,000,000.
Or the judge in the NY fraud case for finding the Trump crime family guilty. The penalty phase of that one isn’t done yet. The winning prosecution is asking the judge for $250,000,000. The judge may agree, or rule higher or lower. And that final ruling may include jail time for the Trump crime family, Don the Con Sr., Eric, and Don the Con Jr.
I wonder when/if the two election workers that recently won an almost $150 million case against Giuliani are going to take Trump to court for spreading the same lies against them.
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I wonder when anyone will collect these court judgments.
Trump is running for President not only for his ego but to be able to pardon himself, his family, and all January 6 convicts.
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I want to see the Rubles trail.
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yup
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It isn’t easy to keep up with The Trump Trials. Donald Trump was found liable for sexual assault, not rape, in the Jean Carroll case. He was fined $5 m. A second trial in this case will begin in January. In the NY fraud case, Trump and multiple defendants have already been found guilty of fraud. We are now waiting for Judge Engoron to rule on the second bench trial. There will be no jail time in either of these cases. However, the Classified Documents, January 6, and Fulton County election interference cases could result in jail time. I’ve summarized all of the trials here: https://jackhassard.org/the-trials-of-donald-trump/.
Here in Georgia, we are glad that justice prevailed for Shaye Moss and Ruby Freeman, who were doing their official duties only to have Rudi Giuliani destroy their lives. Shaye worked full-time in the election office and hoped to be promoted after the 2020 election. She was called into her supervisor’s office, thinking she would be promoted, only to find out she was charged with election crimes. She and her mother had to escape Atlanta and move hundreds of miles away to south Georgia. They still disguise their appearances.
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Jack, the judge in his defamation case issued a statement saying that a factual finding of the trial was that Donald Trump had committed rape as that term is generally understood.
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Bob, I stand corrected. Jack
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Jack, I am delighted to have discovered your wonderful blog. So much great stuff there. Thank you!
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Thank you, Bob.
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https://www.washingtonpost.com/politics/2023/07/19/trump-carroll-judge-rape/
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From the article:
“The finding that Ms. Carroll failed to prove that she was ‘raped’ within the meaning of the New York Penal Law does not mean that she failed to prove that Mr. Trump ‘raped’ her as many people commonly understand the word ‘rape,’ ” Kaplan wrote.
He added: “Indeed, as the evidence at trial recounted below makes clear, the jury found that Mr. Trump in fact did exactly that.”
Kaplan said New York’s legal definition of “rape” is “far narrower” than the word is understood in “common modern parlance.”
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In April 2021, Trump allegedly offered to let the author of a book about him see the binder, saying “I would let you look at them if you wanted. . . . It’s a treasure trove. . . . it would be sort of a cool book for you to look at.”
If anyone else had done this, he or she would be immediately arrested. Why is Trump allowed to continue walking around given this and so much else? When is the Department of Justice going to start doing its freaking job?
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You are exactly right. If someone on the military had done half the things Trump has done with classified documents then they would have been courtmartialed quickly and be setting in a cell at Fort Leavenworth.
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Don and Rudy’s Road Trip
To the Tune of “Normandy,” from the musical Once Upon a Mattress
[Dialogue to cue song:]
RUDE-OAF THE BROWN-NOSED REIGN DEAR: Wow. 148 million. I’ve lost this racist harassment of election workers thing big league. And I’m gonna lose the voting machine thing. Same for the, you know, the sexual harassment thing. I had to sell my apartment in the city. Soon, I’ll be living on the street. You gotta help me, Donald!
DON THE CON: Don’t worry, Rudy old pal. You know that the Queen Bee wouldn’t leave her best lady in waiting in distress and not come to the rescue.
RUDE-OAF: But, actually, Don, you would, you know.
DON THE CON: True (beat), but just hold on. Listen for a minute. I have an idea.
DON (sings while doing his weird little waddle dance with his fists up):
Sochi in Russia is fine and fair.
So Sochi in Russia’s where we’ll go.
I can show you a beach
Where the models all go.
And I know how to reach
A man who knows a man who knows
RUDE: Tsar Vladimir the Short?
DON: You betcha.
DON (continues singing):
An overbuilt dacha,
A real showy place
With hookers and fixtures made of gold.
This time of year, the grift I hear
Is easy, clear, and free
In old Sochi!
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