Garland and Haines SSCI 02FEB23
Garland and Haines SSCI 02FEB23
Garland and Haines SSCI 02FEB23
In a letter dated August 14, 2022, we wrote to you to request that you provide, in a
manner compliant with the need to protect an ongoing investigation, all classified
documents that were seized in the search of former President Donald Trump’s Mar-a-Lago
residence, as well as an assessment of the risk to national security if those classified
documents were to be exposed in public or to a foreign adversary. In a subsequent letter to
Director Haines, dated January 11, 2023, we made a similar request with respect to the
classified documents that were discovered at the Penn Biden Center for Diplomacy and
Global Engagement.
As of this writing, neither of you have complied with these requests, citing the
Department of Justice’s ongoing investigations of both matters. In a letter dated January
28, 2023, the Department of Justice cited its “longstanding policy . . . to maintain the
confidentiality of information regarding open matters” and explained that “[t]he
Committee’s interest in overseeing the nation’s intelligence activities must be carefully
balanced to protect the conduct and integrity of law enforcement investigations.” We
agree, but the Department alone does not decide this balance. In fact, our letters explicitly
recognized the need to protect the Department’s ongoing investigations. Mindful of the
Department’s interests, the letters were narrowly tailored and only requested access to the
relevant classified documents and an assessment of the risk to national security if the
documents were to be exposed in public or to a foreign adversary. This information does
not implicate any of the concerns cited in the Department’s January 28, 2023 letter.
As outlined in our prior letters, the Senate Select Committee on Intelligence is
charged with overseeing counterintelligence matters, including the handling and
mishandling of classified information. Our jurisdiction is clear, as are our responsibilities.
Without access to the relevant classified documents we cannot effectively oversee the
efforts of the Intelligence Community to address potential risks to national security arising
from the mishandling of this classified information.
As we expressed previously, in light of the substantial public interest, the need for
bipartisan and responsible oversight of these matters is at its highest. We urge your
immediate compliance with our previous requests, which we now extend to those
classified materials subsequently discovered at President Biden’s home and the home of
former Vice President Pence. These matters are the highest priority of the Committee and
our oversight and authorization efforts will align accordingly.
Sincerely,