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Donald Trump's former national security adviser John Bolton indicted on national defence charges

Sarah N. Lynch
Reuters
Ex-Trump advisor John Bolton was charged with transmission and retention of defence information.
Ex-Trump advisor John Bolton was charged with transmission and retention of defence information. Credit: AAP

John Bolton, Donald Trump’s former national security adviser, has been indicted on charges of retaining and transmitting national defence information, marking the third time in recent weeks the US Justice Department has secured criminal charges against one of the Republican president’s critics.

Mr Bolton’s lawyer did not immediately respond to a request for comment. His lawyer had previously denied that Mr Bolton engaged in wrongdoing.

Thursday’s indictment, according to court records, comes after court documents made public in September revealed Mr Bolton was under federal investigation for potential mishandling of classified information.

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Mr Trump, who campaigned for the presidency on a vow of retribution after facing a slew of legal woes once his first term in the White House ended in 2021, has dispensed with decades-long norms designed to insulate federal law enforcement from political pressures.

In recent months, he has actively pushed Attorney-General Pam Bondi’s Justice Department to bring charges against his perceived adversaries, even driving out a prosecutor he deemed to be moving too slowly in doing so.

Ex-Trump advisor John Bolton was charged with transmission and retention of defence information.
Ex-Trump advisor John Bolton was charged with transmission and retention of defence information. Credit: AAP

Mr Bolton served as US ambassador to the United Nations as well as White House national security adviser during Mr Trump’s first term before emerging as one of the president’s most vocal critics. He described Mr Trump as unfit to be president in a memoir he released in 2024.

The charges against Mr Bolton come shortly after the Justice Department indicted former FBI director James Comey, who investigated Mr Trump’s 2016 presidential campaign, and New York Attorney-General Letitia James, who previously brought a civil fraud case against Mr Trump and his family real estate company.

Mr Comey, whom Mr Trump fired in 2017, is facing charges of making false statements to Congress and obstruction of Congress. He has pleaded not guilty.

Ms James is facing charges of bank fraud and making false statements to a financial institution. She has denied wrongdoing and is slated to appear in federal court later this month.

Senior leaders at the US Justice Department had been pushing for swift charges against Mr Bolton, despite initial concern from some line prosecutors in Maryland, as well as Lawyers in the National Security Division who felt more investigation was needed and feared the case was being rushed, two people familiar with the matter previously told Reuters.

Prosecutors more recently concluded they were comfortable proceeding after taking more time to review the evidence and working over the weekend to prepare the case, one of those sources added.

FBI agents conducted a search of Mr Bolton’s home and office in August, seeking evidence of possible violations of the Espionage Act, which makes it a crime to remove, retain or transmit national defence records, according to partially unsealed search warrants filed in federal court.

In his Maryland home, agents seized two mobile phones, documents in folders labelled “Trump I-IV” and a binder labelled “statements and reflections to Allied Strikes,” according to court documents.

They also found records labelled “confidential,” including documents that referenced weapons of mass destruction, the US mission to the UN, and other materials related to the US government’s strategic communications inside his office in Washington, DC, according to court records.

Court records also show that a foreign entity hacked Mr Bolton’s email account, though details of the hack are redacted. Mr Bolton’s lawyer has previously said that the records the FBI seized were ordinary documents for a former government official to possess.

A video posted to X on Thursday shows Mr Trump responding to news of the indictment, saying he was unaware of the charges.

“I didn’t know that. You’re telling me for the first time,” Mr Trump said. “But I think he’s a bad person.”

Mr Trump himself was previously indicted on Espionage Act violations for allegedly transporting classified records to his Florida home after departing the White House in 2021 and refusing repeated requests by the government to return them. Mr Trump had pleaded not guilty, and that case was dropped after he won reelection in November 2024.

The case against Mr Bolton is being led by the US Attorney’s office in Maryland. That office is separately investigating Mr Trump’s long-time critic, Democratic US Senator Adam Schiff of California, for possible mortgage fraud.

Mr Schiff has denied wrongdoing and has not been charged with a crime.

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