Some classified documents were in those storage areas, according to a U.S. official.
— Federal investigators are now looking closely at video evidence they've obtained, which shows people at Mar-a-Lago with access to storage areas where former President Donald Trump's papers from his residence were being held — including some classified documents, according to a U.S. official.
At this point, the question of whether there will be a public release of the evidence that prompted the FBI's search at Trump's Florida residence remains undecided. The judge who authorized the warrant reiterated Monday that Justice Department prosecutors must bring him a proposed redacted version of the evidence by Thursday.
Multiple news organizations, including CBS News, have petitioned the court to unseal the affidavit, but the Justice Department countered that there is a need to"protect the integrity of an ongoing law enforcement investigation that implicates national security." Like the media organizations, Trump has called for the public disclosure of the unredacted affidavit, though his lawyers have not been entered as interested parties in any of the court proceedings, which Reinhart also noted in his Monday order.last weekDespite opposition from the Justice Department, Reinhard said he was"not prepared to find the affidavit should be fully sealed."