Bob Bauer, the president’s personal lawyer, said the search of the premises lasted nearly 13 hours. The documents with classification markings spanned Biden’s time in the Senate and the vice presidency, while the notes dated to his time as vice president.
The search came more than a week after Biden’s attorneys found six other classified documents in his home library from his time as vice president and nearly three months after lawyers found a small number of classified records at his former offices at the Penn Biden Center in Washington.
Biden on Thursday maintained that “there’s no there there” on the document discoveries, which have become a political headache for him and have complicated the Justice Department’s probe into former President Trump’s retention of classified documents and official records after he left office.
“We found a handful of documents were filed in the wrong place,” Biden told reporters who questioned him during a tour of the damage from storms in California. “We immediately turned them over to the Archives and the Justice Department.”
Biden said he was “fully cooperating and looking forward to getting this resolved quickly.”
The president and First Lady Jill Biden were not at the home when it was searched. They were spending the weekend at their home in Rehoboth Beach, Del.
Bauer said the FBI requested that the White House not comment on the search before it was conducted and that Biden’s personal and White House attorneys be present. The FBI, he added, “had full access to the president’s home, including personally handwritten notes, files, papers, binders, memorabilia, to-do lists, schedules and reminders going back decades.”
The Justice Department, he said, “took possession of materials it deemed within the scope of its inquiry, including six items consisting of documents with classification markings and surrounding materials, some of which were from the president’s service in the Senate and some of which were from his tenure as vice president.”
Atty. Gen. Merrick Garland has appointed former Maryland U.S. Atty. Robert Hur as a special counsel to investigate any potential wrongdoing surrounding the Biden documents.
“Since the beginning, the president has been committed to handling this responsibly, because he takes this seriously,” White House lawyer Richard Sauber said Saturday. “The president’s lawyers and White House counsel’s office will continue to cooperate with DOJ and the special counsel to help ensure this process is conducted swiftly and efficiently.”
The Biden documents and the investigation into Trump, which is in the hands of special counsel Jack Smith, are significantly different. The Justice Department says Trump took with him hundreds of records marked classified upon leaving the White House in early 2021 and resisted months of requests to return them to the government. Biden has made a point of cooperating with the DOJ probe at every turn, though questions about his transparency with the public remain.