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WORLD | 10-08-2022 22:45

FBI raid on ex-US president Donald Trump's home ignites political firestorm

Leading Republicans rally around the former president after an extraordinary FBI raid on his palatial Florida residence.

Top Republican leaders in the United States flung their support behind former US president Donald Trump this week after an extraordinary FBI raid on his palatial Florida residence sparked a political firestorm in an already bitterly divided country.

The FBI move marked a stunning escalation of legal probes into the 45th president and comes as he is weighing another White House run. Several former advisors to the 76-year-old Trump urged him to immediately confirm that he would be a presidential candidate in 2024.

"Nothing like this has ever happened to a President of the United States before," Trump said of the FBI operation at his Mar-a-Lago resort in West Palm Beach.

He denounced the FBI raid as a "weaponisation of the Justice System" by "Radical Left Democrats who desperately don't want me to run for President in 2024."

At the White House, Press Secretary Karine Jean-Pierre said US President Joe Biden did not have any advance notice about the raid and respected the independence of the Justice Department.

Asked about the potential for civil unrest in reaction to Trump's legal problems, Jean-Pierre said "there's no place for political violence in this country."

The Federal Bureau of Investigation, which is led by Christopher Wray, a Trump appointee, declined to provide a reason for the raid.

But US media outlets said agents were conducting a court-authorised search related to the potential mishandling of classified documents that had been sent to Mar-a-Lago after Trump left the White House in January 2021.

Trump has also faced intense legal scrutiny for his efforts to overturn the results of the 2020 election and over the January 6 attack on the US Capitol by his supporters.

Since leaving office, Trump has remained the country's most divisive figure, continuing to sow falsehoods that he actually won the 2020 vote.

A day after the raid on Mar-A-Lago, US Representative Scott Perry – a Trump ally – said that FBI agents had confiscated his mobile phone, but did not specify why it was taken.

"This morning, while travelling with my family, three FBI agents visited me and seized my cell phone," Perry told FOX News, condemning "these kinds of banana republic tactics."

 

Allies rally round

Leading Republicans rallied around the former president, who was not present at Mar-a-Lago when the raid took place.

Trump's former vice-president Mike Pence, a potential 2024 rival, expressed "deep concern" and said the raid smacked of "partisanship" by the Justice Department.

Kevin McCarthy, who is seeking to become speaker of the House of Representatives if Republicans win November's midterm elections, accused the Justice Department of "weaponized politicisation."

Republican Senator Lindsey Graham, a Trump ally, said "launching an investigation of a former president this close to an election is beyond problematic."

Representative Elise Stefanik, the third-ranking House Republican, called it a "dark day in American history."

"If the FBI can raid a US President, imagine what they can do to you," Stefanik tweeted, to which Democratic Representative Ted Lieu replied: "Why can't the FBI investigate a US President? We're not Russia, where the law doesn't apply to the head of state and his cronies."

Nancy Pelosi, the Democratic speaker of the House, told NBC that "no person is above the law."

 

Presidential paperwork

In his statement, Trump did not give any indication about why the FBI raided his home but said: "They even broke into my safe!"

Andrew McCabe, a former FBI deputy director, told CNN that agents may have been looking for "something specific" related to the probe into the handling of classified information.

The National Archives said in February that it had recovered 15 boxes of documents from Mar-a-Lago and asked the Justice Department to look into Trump's handling of classified material.

The recovery of the boxes raised questions about Trump's adherence to presidential records laws enacted after the 1970s Watergate scandal that require Oval Office occupants to preserve records.

Trump's former communications director Alyssa Farah Griffin told CNN the raid could fire up his supporters, a small number of whom rallied outside Mar-a-Lago on Tuesday.

"If it's seen as some sort of massive overreach and not something incredibly serious, this is a very good day for Donald Trump," Farah Griffin said.

For weeks, Washington has been riveted by hearings in Congress about the January 6 storming of the Capitol and Trump's attempts to overturn the 2020 election.

Attorney General Merrick Garland has been repeatedly pushed over whether the Justice Department is building a case against Trump over the Capitol riot.

Trump is also being investigated for his efforts to alter the 2020 voting results in the state of Georgia, while his business practices are being probed in New York in separate cases.

 

Investigations against ex-US president

 

Capitol assault

A series of explosive hearings by the House of Representatives panel probing the attack on the US Capitol by Trump supporters on January 6, 2021, offered a roadmap for potentially charging the ex-president with a crime. The House committee's work is separate from the criminal probe that the US Justice Department has launched into hundreds of people involved in the attack and US Attorney Merrick Garland has not said if his prosecutors are investigating Trump.

 

'Find' the votes

Trump allegedly pressured election officials in Georgia to "find" the votes he needed to win in 2020, prompting a prosecutor in the southern state to investigate. Fulton County District Attorney Fani Willis has impanelled a special grand jury and investigators have already interviewed dozens of witnesses.

 

Trump Organization

Authorities in New York state have been looking into the business practices of the Trump Organization, including whether the firm misled lenders and tax authorities on the value of the firm's real-estate holdings. On Wednesday, he declined to answer questions under oath about alleged fraud at his family business.

 

'Raid' on Florida residence

The FBI search on Monday of Trump's Florida residence was reportedly related to the potential mishandling of classified documents that had been sent to Mar-a-Lago after he left the White House in January 2021. US Justice Department authorities declined to provide a reason for the unprecedented move.

 

– TIMES/AFP

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