Monday, news broke that Biden’s personal attorney had confirmed that classified documents had been located and seized in a Biden think tank office. Now, more have been found. Aides to the President have discovered another batch of documents in another location. As NBC News reported, there was an “additional batch of classified documents in a location separate from the Washington office.” This comes three months after the first documents, which weren’t reported on until Monday, had been found in the Penn Biden Center in Washington D.C. Now aides are reportedly looking for more documents in other locations. Though we have yet to see an FBI raid.
According to NBC News:
Since November, after the discovery of documents with classified markings in his former office, Biden aides have been searching for any additional classified materials that might be in other locations he used, said the source, who spoke on the condition of anonymity to provide details about the ongoing inquiry.
The White House did not return a request for comment. The Justice Department had no comment.
The initial discovery of classified documents in an office used by Biden after his vice presidency was first reported on Monday by CBS News.
The classification level, number and precise location of the additional documents was not immediately clear. It also was not immediately clear when the additional documents were discovered and if the search for any other classified materials Biden may have from the Obama administration is complete.
Biden aides have been sifting through documents stored at locations beyond his former Washington office to determine if there are any other classified documents that need to be turned over to the National Archives and reviewed by the Justice Department, the person familiar with the matter said.
The search was described as exhaustive, with the goal of getting a full accounting of all classified documents that may have inadvertently been packed in boxes when Biden cleared out of the vice president’s office space in January 2017.