WASHINGTON – The FBI searched President Joe Biden’s former Washington, D.C. office after the president’s lawyers initially alerted the National Archives about the discovery of classified documents at the location, a person familiar with the matter said Tuesday.
No search warrant was issued in connection with the previously undisclosed action, which involved the consent of the president’s legal team, said the source who is not authorized to comment publicly on the investigation.
The search was conducted in November, after lawyers discovered an initial batch of documents Nov. 2, at the think tank office that Biden used after serving as vice president.
The search was first reported by CBS News.
The White House and Biden’s lawyers did not immediately respond to requests for comment. The FBI declined comment.
It was not clear whether additional documents were recovered at the time of the FBI office search.
Earlier this month, the president’s lawyers disclosed that the FBI had searched the Biden family home in Wilmington, Delaware, recovering classified material related to six items dating to Biden’s time as vice president and as a U.S. senator.
The home search, which also did not require a search warrant, followed the discovery of a separate batch of classified documents by Biden’s lawyers at the home.
Attorney General Merrick Garland has appointed a special counsel to examine Biden’s handling of classified documents. In addition, the Republican-led House Committee on Oversight and Accountability launched its own investigation.
Garland appointed a separate special counsel in November to investigate former President Donald Trump’s retention of documents after leaving the White House.
While both cases involve the handling of sensitive government documents, the Trump inquiry also is examining Trump’s alleged attempts to obstruct the government’s repeated efforts to retrieve the records from his Florida estate.
When those recovery efforts proved unsuccessful, the FBI obtained a search warrant and scoured Trump’s Mar-a-Lago resort on Aug. 8, when agents seized more than 100 additional classified documents among thousands of government records.
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