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Hearings Underway on Opening Trump FBI Investigative Affidavit

A federal court hearing in South Florida was held on Thursday to release the affidavits that underpinned the FBI's raid on former President Trump's Mar Arago residence last week.

West Palm Beach magistrate Judge Bruce Reinhart, who authorized the search of the 45th president's home, released an affidavit despite opposition from the Justice Department. We were going to hear arguments from several news outlets trying to persuade him to go public.

The Associated Press, The New York Times, The Washington Post, The Wall Street Journal, CNN, and others have used documents to help the public determine whether there was a good reason behind the August 8 raid. is one of the media that claims the publication of

A hearing in South Florida federal court will be heard to decide if the documents found at Trumps Mar-a-Lago estate should be made public.
Robert Miller

Trump and his allies say house raids are Biden regime's revenge Trump himself called for the "immediate release" of theaffidavit,against the former president, who claimed it was part of

Christina Bobb, the Trump attorney who was present when federal agents searched her Mar-a-Lag, appeared in court on Thursday, but only as an observer.

The Federal Bureau of Investigation, according to an inventory unsealed on August 12, contains 11 sets of classified documents of his, labeled Top Secret, Confidential, or Top Secret. Twenty-seven of his boxes were seized from Trump's palace grounds.

Judge Reinhart signed the warrant as part of a federal investigation into whether Trump allegedly mishandled classified material taken from the White House.

Justice Department attorneys argued that the investigation was still ongoing and that the affidavits should remain sealed because they contained sensitive information about the witnesses.

"The affidavit, if disclosed, would serve as a roadmap to the government's ongoing investigation, and would likely undermine its direction and potential in a way that would very likely undermine future investigative procedures." I will provide specific details about a course." South Florida U.S. Attorney Juan Antonio Gonzalez and Jay Blatt, head of the DOJ's counterintelligence division, filed documents opposing their release. 35}.

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