that star spangled banner yet wave. o er the land of the free and the home of the brave. we re learning more at the moment about what fbi seized from the unprecedented raid at former president trump s mar-a-lago home on monday. after the search warrant was unsealed yesterday. the warrant giving agents authority to seize more than two dozen boxes of documents, which trump said were all declassified. kevin is live? washington with the latest. good morning, guys. friday s search warrant and property receipt was a rare step in a federal investigation. while that s true, it s also important to point out that a supporting affidavit, which would certainly explain why investigators believe the former president to be in violation of federal law by keeping the documents over at mar-a-lago, that remained under seal. the items recovered includes 27 boxes, 11 of which contain so-called classified documents. four sets marked top secret, which is the highest level classification tha
it says yes, it s illegal to cob anoinformation obtain information, capture photographs or take information related to national defense with the intent for that information to be used against the united states or for the gain of any foreign nation. good luck with that. however, vp kamala harris seems content with what the doj did. well, as a former prosecutor, i will tell you i don t speak about anybody else s case, but i have full confidence that the department of justice will do what the action of law requires. as for the former president, he issued a statement friday that read in part, number one it was all declassified. number two, they didn t need to seize anything. they could have had it any time they wanted without playing politics and breaking into mar-a-lago. it was in secured storage with an additional lock put on as per
classification that the government can offer. three were marked secret, which is the second highest level and another three marked confidential. that s the lowest classification level. there had been suggestions that the feds are considering using the espionage act of 1917 and it makes it illegal to obtain information, capture photographs, or copy descriptions of any information related to national defense. here s the key, with the intent for that information to be used against the united states or for the gain of any foreign nation. good luck with that. as for the raid itself, the vice president said she s good with it. well, as a former prosecutor, i ll tell you i don t speak about anybody else s case, but i have full confidence that the department of justice will do what the facts of the law require. how about the former