The Morning: Two Trump scenarios

A guide to thinking about the F.B.I. raid.

Good morning. What should you make of the F.B.I.'s search of Donald Trump's home? We offer a guide.

Donald Trump in Las Vegas last month.Roger Kisby for The New York Times

Two scenarios

Perhaps the central question about the F.B.I.'s search of Donald Trump's Florida home is whether it is a relatively narrow attempt to recover classified documents — or much more than that.

Either scenario is plausible at this point. The Justice Department has long been aggressive about investigating former officials whom it suspects of improperly handling classified material, including Hillary Clinton and David Petraeus. If the F.B.I. search merely leads to a legalistic debate about what's classified, it probably will not damage Trump's political future.

But it also seems possible that the search is a sign of a major new legal problem for him. People familiar with the search told The Times that it was not related to the Justice Department's investigation into the Jan. 6 attack and Trump's role in it. And it's unlikely that Merrick Garland, the attorney general, would have allowed the search-warrant request — or that a federal judge would have approved it, as was required — unless it involved something important.

"I don't think you get a judge to sign off on a search warrant for an ex-president's house lightly," Charlie Savage, a Times reporter who has been covering legal issues since the George W. Bush administration. "I think the world looks pretty different today than it did 48 hours ago." (It's even possible that Trump could be prosecuted over classified documents alone, although that might not keep him from holding office again.)

Support for Trump outside Mar-a-Lago yesterday.Saul Martinez for The New York Times

As Charlie emphasizes, there is still much more that's unknown about the search than known. That probably won't change until the Justice Department gets much closer to making a decision about how to conclude its investigation. "A central tenet of the way in which the Justice Department investigates and a central tenet of the rule of law is that we do not do our investigations in public," Garland recently said.

But at least two big points seem clear. First, even though Garland has said that nobody is above the law, the Justice Department will not treat Trump like any other citizen. The bar for filing criminal charges against him will be higher, given that he is a former president who may run again — against the current president.

"The considerations when you're talking about a political leader are certainly different and harder," Andrew Goldstein, a former federal prosecutor who investigated Trump's ties to Russia, recently told The Times. "You have the very clear and important rule that the Department of Justice should try in every way possible not to interfere with elections, to not take steps using the criminal process that could end up affecting the political process."

Still, some legal experts who previously criticized Garland for moving too timidly in investigating Trump said they were encouraged by the Justice Department's recent signs of boldness, including the Mar-a-Lago search. Andrew Weissmann, another former prosecutor who previously investigated Trump, is one of those experts (as he explained in this New Yorker interview). Quinta Jurecic, a senior editor at Lawfare, is another. "At what point does not investigating and not prosecuting a former president itself indicate that the rule of law is being undermined because it sends a signal that this person is above the law?" Jurecic told us.

She added: "That doesn't mean that this is going to translate to an indictment of the president."

The second point is that Trump appears to be a subject of multiple criminal investigations — and prosecutors may decide that his violations of the law were so significant as to deserve prosecution. One of those investigations is by state prosecutors in Georgia, who may not be as cautious about charging a former president as Garland seems likely to be.

Either way, the answer will probably become clear well before November 2024. Prosecutors — especially at the Justice Department — generally try to avoid making announcements about investigations into political candidates during a campaign. (James Comey's decision to ignore that tradition and announce he had reopened an investigation into Clinton late in the 2016 campaign was a notable exception, and many experts believe he erred in doing so.)

The rest of today's newsletter summarizes the latest Times reporting about the F.B.I. search of Mar-a-Lago — and also gives you a quick overview of the multiple investigations Trump is facing.

The latest

  • Before the raid, Justice Department officials had grown concerned that Trump had kept some documents, despite returning others.
  • If convicted, could Trump be barred from holding office? A relevant law is untested.
  • The Justice Department did not give the White House advance notice of the search, President Biden's press secretary said.
  • Representative Scott Perry, a Pennsylvania Republican who pushed to overturn Trump's loss, said the F.B.I. had seized his cellphone.

The Trump investigations

  • Prosecutors in Georgia are investigating efforts by Trump and his allies to overturn his 2020 election loss there, including a phone call in which Trump asked an election official to "find" additional votes. The Times's Annie Karni explains the possible charges.
  • The Justice Department is also questioning witnesses before a grand jury about Trump's efforts to reverse his election loss. And federal prosecutors are examining his allies' plan to submit fake electors from key states to disrupt certification of Biden's win.
  • Trump faces a few other investigations, some of which could result in civil but not criminal penalties. The main exception is a criminal inquiry into his business by the Manhattan district attorney, but that seems to have unraveled.
  • Trump will face questioning under oath today by the New York attorney general's office, which is investigating his business practices.

THE LATEST NEWS

Primary Night
Tim Michels at his election party.Jamie Kelter Davis for The New York Times
War in Ukraine
Smoke near a Russian air base in Crimea.Reuters
  • Explosions at a Russian air base in Crimea were evidently the result of a Ukrainian strike. Ukraine has rarely hit so deep in Russian-occupied territory.
  • Russia controls large sections of eastern and southern Ukraine. It also occupies some of the cyberspace.
Serena Williams
Serena Williams at the 2018 U.S. Open.Karsten Moran for The New York Times
Other Big Stories
Opinions

For Naomi Jackson, carrying cash is a safeguard against the dangers of being a Black woman.

"Yellowstone" is a conservative fantasy that liberals should watch, Tressie McMillan Cottom writes.

The Democrats' climate bill is a profound accomplishment, Paul Krugman says.

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MORNING READS

Olivia Newton-John in the "Physical" music video.Everett Collection

An appraisal: Olivia Newton-John's transformation "unlocked something new that shot her to the top of pop's Olympus."

A preppy classic: Customized L.L. Bean tote bags have become blank canvases.

A Times classic: Don't let perfect be the enemy of good.

Advice from Wirecutter: Swimsuit-washing tips.

Lives Lived: Clients of Bert Fields, the entertainment lawyer and master dealmaker, included Tom Cruise, Madonna and the Beatles. Fields died at 93.

SPORTS NEWS FROM THE ATHLETIC

Roger Goodell makes his case: Yesterday, the N.F.L. commissioner said the league appealed Cleveland Browns quarterback Deshaun Watson's proposed six-game suspension because evidence clearly showed Watson engaged in "predatory behavior." If the suspension lands closer to a full season, as Goodell prefers, there's a case for Cleveland to bring in Jimmy Garoppolo.

LIV golfers take an L: A judge upheld a ban for three PGA Tour defectors to LIV Golf who were seeking to compete in the FedEx Cup playoffs — which start today — in part, because they have been compensated so well by the rebel series. Whoops.

Kevin Durant's lack of leverage: The 33-year-old N.B.A. superstar might not have strong enough cards to force his way off the Brooklyn Nets in the wake of his latest demands. This is getting interesting.

ARTS AND IDEAS

The role of L.G.B.T.Q. museums

When putting together Queer Britain, England's first L.G.B.T.Q. museum, organizers grappled with a question: Should they focus on celebrating history, aimed at a mainstream audience, or on reckoning with debates within the community?

It's a choice all L.G.B.T.Q. museums must make, Tom Faber writes in The Times. Berlin's Schwules Museum, which opened in 1985, is overtly political; its latest exhibits address biases in the museum's own history. Queer Britain has opted for a more mainstream approach, spotlighting artifacts from history — such as notes from the first parliamentary AIDS meeting — and notable Britons like Ian McKellen, Elton John and Virginia Woolf.

PLAY, WATCH, EAT

What to Cook
Ryan Liebe for The New York Times

Fish sticks and green peas are childhood classics.

What to Read

In "Retail Gangster," Gary Weiss explores the sketchy business practices of Eddie Antar.

Comedy

The standup Jo Koy's film "Easter Sunday" focuses on Filipino family themes dear to him.

Now Time to Play

The pangram from yesterday's Spelling Bee was viaduct. Here is today's puzzle.

Here's today's Mini Crossword, and a clue: Hair braid (five letters).

And here's today's Wordle. After, use our bot to get better.

Thanks for spending part of your morning with The Times. See you tomorrow.

P.S. "I let them talk": Rick Rojas, a Times national correspondent, on how he covered the devastation of Kentucky's floods.

"The Daily" is about the F.B.I. search on Mar-a-Lago. On "The Argument," state legislatures are remaking America.

Claire Moses, Ian Prasad Philbrick, Tom Wright-Piersanti and Ashley Wu contributed to The Morning. You can reach the team at themorning@nytimes.com.

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