Tag: clearances

  • Hunter Biden laptop: Trump to revoke clearances of ex-officials who signed letter


    WASHINGTON (AP) — President Donald Trump says his administration will move to revoke the security clearances of the more than four dozen former intelligence officials who signed a 2020 letter saying that the Hunter Biden laptop saga bore the hallmarks of a “Russian information operation.”

    The action is an early indication of the president’s determination to exact retribution on perceived adversaries and is the latest point of tension between Trump and an intelligence community of which he has been openly disdainful. The sweeping move, announced via executive order Monday, also sets up a potential court challenge from ex-officials seeking to maintain access to sensitive government information.

    “The president has a lot of authority when it comes to security clearances. The problem the White House will run into is, if they depart from their existing procedures, they could set up a judicial appeal for these 51 people — and it will probably be a class-action suit since they’re all in alike or similar circumstances,” said Dan Meyer, a Washington lawyer who specializes in the security clearance and background check process.

    The executive order targets the clearances of 50 people in all, including the 49 surviving signatories of the letter. The list includes prominent officials like James Clapper, the director of national intelligence under former President Barack Obama, and John Brennan and Leon Panetta, who both served as Obama’s CIA director.

    Also targeted is John Bolton, who was fired as Trump’s national security adviser during his first term and later wrote a book whose publication the White House unsuccessfully sought to block on grounds that it disclosed national security information. Separately this week, Trump abruptly ended the U.S. Secret Service detail assigned to Bolton, who has been the subject of assassination plots by Iran. Bolton said in a statement that he was disappointed but not surprised by the decision.

    The order directs the CIA to work with the office of the Director of National Intelligence to begin the process of revoking the clearances.

    It was not clear how many of the former officials still maintain security clearances, though Mark Zaid, who represents eight people who signed the letter, said that he did not believe many did and that the Trump’s action functioned largely as a “public policy message to his right-wing base”

    He said he would sue the administration on behalf of any client who wanted to challenge the order.

    “There’s nothing in this that shows me, regardless of presidential authority, that this action is not subject to existing law and policy that mandates procedural and substantive due process,” Zaid said. A Clinton-era executive order says people determined to be ineligible for a clearance are to be provided a “comprehensive and detailed” explanation of the conclusion.

    At issue is an October 2020 letter signed by former intelligence officials who raised alarms about the provenance of emails reported by The New York Post to have come from a laptop that President Joe Biden’s son, Hunter, had dropped off at a Wilmington, Delaware, computer repair shop. The newspaper said it had obtained a hard drive of the laptop from longtime Trump ally Rudy Giuliani, and the communications that it published related to Hunter Biden’s business dealings in Ukraine.

    The signatories of the letter wrote that they didn’t know whether the emails were authentic or not but that their emergence has “all the classic earmarks of a Russian information operation.”

    But Trump’s director of national intelligence, John Ratcliffe — also his current pick to lead the CIA — contradicted that assessment by saying there was no intelligence to support the idea that Russia had anything to do with Hunter Biden’s laptop. The FBI, which was conducting its own criminal investigations into the younger Biden, seemed to back up Ratcliffe’s statement by telling Congress in a letter it had nothing to add to what he had said.

    Hunter Biden was subsequently convicted of both tax and gun charges, but was pardoned last month by his father.

    Though courts are historically reluctant to weigh in on disputes involving security clearances, the unilateral suspension by Trump is a departure from standard protocol in which individual executive branch agencies would be tasked with creating an investigation into a person’s fitness for a clearance or whether it should be revoked.

    Throughout his first presidency, Trump fumed about an intelligence community that he believed had been politicized against him, repeatedly citing the investigation into ties between Russia and his 2016 campaign.





    Recently, there has been a lot of controversy surrounding Hunter Biden’s laptop and the alleged emails and documents found on it. In response to this, President Trump has announced that he will be revoking the security clearances of several former officials who signed a letter criticizing the release of the laptop’s contents.

    This move by Trump has sparked further debate and speculation about the motives behind the release of the laptop’s contents and the potential impact it could have on the upcoming election. Some believe that Trump’s actions are a way to distract from his own controversies, while others see it as a necessary step to protect national security.

    Regardless of the reasoning behind Trump’s decision, it is clear that the Hunter Biden laptop saga is far from over and will continue to be a hot topic leading up to the election. Stay tuned for more updates on this developing story.

    Tags:

    1. Hunter Biden laptop
    2. Trump administration
    3. Revoking clearances
    4. Ex-officials
    5. Letter controversy
    6. Political news
    7. Government officials
    8. National security
    9. Whistleblower accusations
    10. Public outcry

    #Hunter #Biden #laptop #Trump #revoke #clearances #exofficials #signed #letter

  • Security clearances revoked for former officials who signed Hunter Biden laptop letter in Trump executive order




    CNN
     — 

    President Donald Trump signed an executive order Monday revoking the security clearance of 51 former intelligence officials who signed a 2020 letter arguing that emails from a laptop belonging to Hunter Biden carried “all the classic earmarks of a Russian information operation” and that of his former national security adviser John Bolton.

    Many of the former officials are long retired and no longer hold active clearances — meaning that the move may have limited practical impact on their careers — but the order nevertheless suggests that Trump intends to act on threats he’s made to penalize national security and intelligence professionals whom he deems to be his enemies.

    “They should be prosecuted for what they did,” Trump said of the 51 former officials who signed the letter, at a campaign rally in June.

    The executive order also directs the director of national intelligence to submit a report to the White House documenting “any additional inappropriate activity that occurred within the Intelligence Community, by anyone contracted by the Intelligence Community or by anyone who held a security clearance” related to the letter, as well as any recommended disciplinary action, within 90 days.

    The letter was signed by a number of top former officials from both the Obama and Bush administrations, including former director of national intelligence Jim Clapper, former CIA director John Brennan and former acting CIA directors John McLaughlin and Michael Morell.

    In the four years since the letter was written, its authors have become a key target for Republican lawmakers and Trump’s allies. GOP lawmakers on Capitol Hill have made the origins of the letter a key focus point, calling up a number of signatories to testify behind closed doors and issuing several reports on the matter.

    Bolton, meanwhile, has drawn Trump’s ire for a memoir about his time at the National Security Council that was deeply critical of the president and which the first Trump administration investigated for the potential inclusion of classified material. Bolton has said that the book was cleared for release after an intense pre-publication review by the US government, and the Justice Department under President Joe Biden ended the Trump-era criminal investigation into the matter.

    CNN has reached out to Bolton for comment.

    The executive order, titled “Holding former government officials accountable for election interference and improper disclosure of sensitive government information,” accused the letter signatories of “falsely suggest[ing]” that an initial news story about the laptop was a Russian disinformation campaign and “willfully [weaponizing] the gravitas of the Intelligence Community to manipulate the political process and undermine our democratic institutions.”

    It accuses Bolton of publishing a memoir “rife with sensitive information drawn from his time in government” that “created a grave risk that classified material was publicly exposed” and “undermined the ability of future presidents to request and obtain candid advice on matters of national security from their staff.”

    The letter about the contents of Hunter Biden’s laptop almost immediately became a flashpoint in the partisan wrangling over the laptop itself, which contained sexually explicit videos of the former president’s son with women, as well as photos of him doing drugs in hotel rooms, many of which have since been published by right-wing media outlets.

    US President Donald Trump signs executive orders in the Oval Office of the White House in Washington, DC, on January 20, 2025.

    When the existence of the laptop and its contents first became public through reporting by the New York Post, many mainstream media outlets questioned its authenticity and social media companies moved to restrict the ability of users to share the Post’s coverage, following questions about whether it could have been part of a foreign influence campaign — a skeptical approach that was in part bolstered by concerns raised in the letter, which were not ultimately borne out.

    “We want to emphasize that we do not know if the emails… are genuine or not and that we do not have evidence of Russian involvement — just that our experience makes us deeply suspicious that the Russian government played a significant role in this case,” the former officials wrote in 2020. “If we are right, this is Russia trying to influence how Americans vote in this election, and we believe strongly that Americans need to be aware of this.”

    Since then, the laptop and its contents have been recognized as legitimate. It played a role in the younger Biden’s prosecution on felony drug charges, with special counsel David Weiss calling questions about the laptop’s authenticity a “conspiracy theory.”

    Republicans have argued that the letter was evidence of a deep-state collusion between the CIA and the Biden campaign to cover up other materials on the laptop that they believe show improper foreign business dealings by the Biden family. There was coordination between the former officials who wrote and signed onto the letter and the Biden campaign, a Republican congressional investigation has documented, and Joe Biden, then a candidate for the presidency, cited the letter during a presidential debate at the time.

    But the claims that materials on the laptop prove foreign corruption have not stood up to vetting, even as the authenticity of the device and some of the embarrassing material documenting the younger Biden’s drug use and sexual activity have been confirmed by multiple press outlets.

    And all 51 signatories were private citizens at the time they wrote the letter, although a handful held contracts with the CIA at the time, the Republican congressional investigation later found. At least one of those contracts was an unpaid position.

    Some did not hold clearances when the letter was written or no longer maintain one; Clapper, for example, does not currently have an active clearance.

    “It would be contrary to decades of national security norms to suspend the security clearances of individuals who did nothing other than, as private citizens, exercise their protected First Amendment rights,” said Mark Zaid, an attorney who represents a number of the signatories. “Such an action would be unprecedented and undeserved, especially given many of the signatories spent their entire careers serving apolitically to protect the American people.”

    Zaid later said in a post on X that the letter “was properly cleared by CIA prepub review staff not to contain classified info” and the “signatories fulfilled their lawful obligations.” Zaid added, “This EO implicitly threatens CIA staff for doing their job. We’ll see what happens.”

    Hunter Biden’s lawyers have said the files on his laptop were manipulated and even sued a computer repair shop owner who publicly released the material.

    Biden dropped off the laptop at a Delaware repair shop in April of 2019. His lawyers said in a court filing that the shop owner admitted in his memoir that he “began accessing sensitive, private material in the data” right away, and continued to potentially tamper with the data throughout the five months before the FBI seized the device.

    This story has been updated with additional details.



    In a recent development, several former officials who signed a letter regarding the controversial Hunter Biden laptop have had their security clearances revoked. This action was taken following an executive order signed by former President Donald Trump.

    The letter in question, which was signed by over 50 former intelligence officials, questioned the authenticity of the laptop and its contents. The officials claimed that the information was part of a Russian disinformation campaign aimed at influencing the 2020 presidential election.

    However, the Trump administration believed that the letter was part of a coordinated effort to undermine the credibility of the laptop and protect Hunter Biden, the son of President Joe Biden. As a result, the former officials who signed the letter have had their security clearances revoked.

    This move has sparked controversy and debate, with some arguing that it is a politically motivated decision designed to punish those who spoke out against the Trump administration. Others support the decision, citing concerns about national security and the potential impact of disinformation campaigns on the democratic process.

    Regardless of where you stand on the issue, it is clear that the debate over the Hunter Biden laptop and its implications continues to be a divisive and contentious topic. Stay tuned for more updates on this developing story.

    Tags:

    1. Security clearances revoked
    2. Former officials
    3. Hunter Biden laptop
    4. Executive order
    5. Trump administration
    6. National security
    7. Revoked clearances
    8. Government officials
    9. Security clearance policy
    10. Political controversy

    #Security #clearances #revoked #officials #signed #Hunter #Biden #laptop #letter #Trump #executive #order

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