FBI raids home of John Bolton, Trump’s ex-national security adviser Bolton’s home reportedly part of investigation into classified documents as FBI director warns ‘no one is above law’ The FBI raided the home of Donald Trump’s former national security adviser turned critic John Bolton on Friday morning. The federal search of Bolton’s house in the Washington DC area was as part of an investigation involving the handling of classified documents, the Associated Press reported, citing an unnamed source. The FBI director, Kash Patel, posted a cryptic message on X on Friday morning, saying: “NO ONE is above the law… @FBI agents on mission.” Dan Bongino, the deputy director of the FBI, reposted Patel’s message, adding: “Public corruption will not be tolerated.” No details have been released of any allegations underlying the federal court warrant that would have been needed to conduct such a search. The raid began around 7am ET and was first reported by the New York Post. CNN also reported the news, saying its reporters had observed FBI officers near Bolton’s residence in Maryland and further reporting that Bolton, when reached, said he was not aware of the law enforcement activity. Bolton was not at home during the raid, CNN reported. He told the news channel he was not aware of the FBI search and was looking into it further. Associated Press reported that as the search was ongoing, Bolton could be seen standing inside in the lobby of the Washington building where he keeps an office. He was talking to two people with “FBI” visible on their vests. John Bolton speaks to media at the White House in Washington DC in July 2019. Photograph: Carolyn Kaster/AP The FBI and Department of Justice did not immediately respond to requests from the Guardian for comment. A spokesperson for the FBI told the New York Times agents were “conducting court-authorized activity in the area”. Bolton was not detained or charged with any crimes during the raid, the Associated Press said, citing a confidential source. Bolton served as Trump’s third national security adviser for 17 months and clashed with him over Iran, Afghanistan and North Korea. The first Trump administration had unsuccessfully sought to block the publication of a Bolton book that it said contained classified information. On his first day back in office this year, Trump, a Republican, revoked the security clearances of more than four dozen former intelligence officials, including Bolton. Bolton was also among a trio of former Trump officials whose security details were canceled by Trump earlier this year. Meghan Hays, who was a White House special adviser to Joe Biden, told CNN in an interview that the raid “seems extremely political, extremely petty” and said it smacks of “pure revenge” on the part of Trump and “poor use of FBI resources”. Roger Stone, a longtime political operative who was prosecuted during the Russia investigation and later pardoned by Trump, posted on social media: “Good morning. John Bolton. How does it feel to have your home raided at 6 o’clock in the morning?”
Another example of the Dems weaponizing the DOJ. Excerpts below: FBI believes Bolton should face charges over alleged emailed classified docs to family — and questions why Biden shelved case The alleged crime was first identified in 2020 through a “very specific intelligence capacity” that helped produce damning intelligence that Bolton had “transferred” classified documents to his wife and daughter from his White House desk before Trump fired him in September 2019, the senior sources told The Post. Investigators opened the case — entirely separate from a different investigation into Bolton’s alleged inclusion of national security secrets in his 2020 book, “The Room Where it Happened” — at the time, which carried into the Biden administration, but was “shelved,” officials said. “The [Biden administration] had probable cause to know that he had taken material that was detrimental to the national security of the United States, and they made no effort to retrieve it,” a senior FBI official told The Post on Saturday. The case — described as “air-tight” by some investigators — was so buried that FBI Director Kash Patel did not find out about it until about a month after his February confirmation, when he asked agents for a briefing on sensitive cases, the sources said.