Brad Sallows
Army.ca Legend
- Reaction score
- 8,739
- Points
- 1,040
"Intent" doesn't matter in the classified documents cases, with respect to criminal charges for possessing stuff that isn't permitted. Intent and cooperation (with investigators) might be mitigating factors for sentencing. People keep referring to Biden's cooperation as if it matters to his guilt. The case against Biden is clear cut - he has the stuff, he's had some of it for a long time, he was not entitled to have any of it, he never had any power to declassify it, his intentions for retaining it are irrelevant. The prosecution decision hinged on the state of his mind now and how that would play out in court. All that can be said about "intent" is that it certainly isn't "oh crap" as in "I made a mistake"; the material that was provided to his ghostwriter didn't get there by itself or by accident or carelessness.You’re struggling with the key concept of ‘intent’. The vast legal distinction between the two cases has been gone over repeatedly. “Of crap we found some stuff we need to give back” is very different from “Deny we have this stuff, lie to investigators, hide what we can, and then when they search and find it pretend it’s personal property I’m entitled to”. The two fact sets are, uh… pretty dissimilar.
Smith's case is not the fanciful one. The untried legal theories are on the defence side, particularly as to whether the president has the authority to declassify documents and retain them on what amounts to his say-so.