


The historic federal indictment of Donald Trump on seven charges related to the mishandling of government documents has raised many questions about the legal repercussions for the embattled former president as he tries to regain the White House.
The Post looks at the case against the 76-year-old and what happens now.
What is an indictment?
An indictment is a formal charge of a serious crime. When a person is indicted, they are given a formal notice signaling that a grand jury — an impartial group of 23 citizens — believe that they had committed an offense. Trump announced the news of his indictment Thursday night, after federal prosecutors informed his lawyers of the charges.
What is in Trump’s indictment?
The Justice Department has yet to release the seven-count indictment, but ABC News, citing sources familiar with the matter, reported the charges include willful retention of national defense information; conspiracy to obstruct justice; withholding a document or record; corruptly concealing a document or record; concealing a document in a federal investigation; scheme to conceal; and false statements and representations.
How did the case come about?
Officials with the National Archives and Records Administration contacted Trump’s representatives in the spring of 2021 when they realized that important material from his time in office was missing from their collection.
A Trump flack told the Archives in December 2021 that records responsive to their request had been found at his Mar-a-Lago estate. In January 2022, the National Archives collected 15 boxes of documents, including “classified national security information”, from the Palm Beach home.
That May, the FBI and the DOJ issued a subpoena for all remaining classified records in Trump’s possession, 38 of which were picked up on June 3. According to CNN, officials who arrived at Mar-a-Lago were shown a basement storage room where additional boxes containing White House documents and other materials were kept.
On Aug. 8, FBI agents searched Mar-a-Lago in accordance with a warrant approved three days earlier by US Magistrate Judge Bruce Reinhart. Investigators retrieved thousands of documents, about 100 of which had classification markings.
Do presidents often keep classified material after leaving office?
They’re not supposed to, but they do. Under the post-Watergate Presidential Records Act, any records handled by the president or vice president as part of their official duties revert to the federal government in the form of the National Archives upon the conclusion of each administration.
However, Archives COO William Bosanko told lawmakers in March that every presidential administration covered by the act has stored “classified information in unclassified boxes.” Bosanko explained that sensitive records become easily lost or mingled with regular documents because the White House treats its various offices as “open storage,” to which multiple individuals have access and the ability to move papers in and out.
So why is Trump being charged?
An aggravating factor appears to be the former president’s reluctance to cooperate with the National Archives, the FBI and DOJ.
Two weeks after the Aug. 8 search, the New York Times reported that Trump had resisted requests to return boxes of documents from his presidency, saying the material was “mine.”
More worryingly for Trump from a legal perspective, the former president’s attorneys handed over a letter to federal investigators June 3, 2022 avowing that a “diligent search was conducted of the boxes” taken to Mar-a-Lago from the White House as Trump departed office and that “any and all responsive documents accompany this certification.”
The letter was signed by Christina Bobb, the designated custodian of Trump’s records. Bobb was interviewed by the FBI in early October.
Will Trump be arrested?
Trump said in a social media post that he had been summoned to appear in federal court in Miami next Tuesday at 3 p.m. He is expected to be taken into custody after his surrender, fingerprinted and booked before facing a judge, but it is extremely unlikely that he will be jailed after his arraignment.
What happens next?
During next week’s arraignment, Trump may be asked to enter a plea, and a judge will set conditions for his release after hearing from prosecutors and Trump’s lawyers. The judge may choose to impose travel restrictions on the ex-president and order him to appear in court for future hearings.
The next weeks and months will likely be devoted to discovery — the thorny process of turning over evidence in the case, which in this instance involves a trove of classified records — and the preparation of pretrial motions by both sides.
Can Trump still run for president?
Yes. Neither the federal indictment itself nor a conviction would prevent Trump from running for or winning the presidency in 2024. The 76-year-old former commander-in-chief has made no indication that he plans to drop out of the race.
Could a trial happen before the 2024 election?
It will be up to the judge presiding over the case whether it would be resolved before November 2024. Trump and his legal team will likely try to delay the verdict until after the election, while the DOJ might try to wrap up the proceedings before the Republican nominating convention next summer.
Could Trump go to prison?
If convicted on all seven charges against him, which carry sentences ranging from 5 to 20 years, Trump could face up to 75 years in federal prison. But Trump’s conviction is far from being a forgone conclusion, with many legal experts opining that prosecutors will face an uphill battle proving that he committed a criminal offense.
What are Trump’s other legal problems?
Trump’s legal woes are not limited to the federal indictment in the classified documents case. The billionaire businessman faces a kaleidoscope of criminal and civil investigations in various states and on various levels of the criminal justice system.
He’s already pleaded not guilty to 34 New York state counts of falsifying business records related to the Stormy Daniels hush money case. Trump is due back in Manhattan Criminal Court on Dec. 4.
In Georgia, Trump faces a state investigation related to illegal meddling in the 2020 election. Fulton County District Attorney Fani Willis is expected to announce charges in that case sometime in August.
On the federal level, Trump and his allies are being probed for their efforts to overturn the 2020 election results by putting forward a slate of “fake” presidential electors in battleground states, who falsely declared for Trump instead of President Biden.
Separately, New York Attorney General Letitia James has sued Trump and the Trump Organization, accusing them of misleading banks and tax authorities about the value of holdings including golf courses and skyscrapers to get loans and tax breaks.
James, a Democrat, is seeking a $250 million fine and a ban that would prevent Trump from ever doing business in New York. A civil trial is set for October.
Manhattan prosecutors investigated the same allegations but did not bring criminal charges.
In May, Trump was found liable for sexual abuse and defamation of former magazine columnist E. Jean Carroll in the mid-1990s. A federal jury ordered Trump to pay $5 million to Carroll. He has filed an appeal.