Five more pages of classified-marked documents were found Thursday at the president’s Delaware home, attorneys for Joe Biden said.
White House counsel Richard Sauber said in a statement Saturday that a total of six pages of classified documents were found during a search of the president’s private library.
Previously, the White House said it had found only one page.
Mr. Thorber said he traveled to Mr. Biden’s Wilmington home on Thursday to turn over classified-marked documents found there earlier to the Justice Department.
“When I handed it over to the Justice Department official who was accompanying me, five additional pages with classification marks were found in the material, for a total of six pages,” he said in a statement. The Justice Department official who was with me immediately Possess or they.”
Mr. Sauber’s statement did not say why the White House waited two days to provide an update on the number of classified records.
Earlier this week, Biden’s legal team admitted they found classified documents related to his time as vice president in the Obama administration at his home, some in his garage.
Aides previously found another trove of classified documents at his residence and at a Washington think tank with ties to him.
Former U.S. Attorney Robert Hur, who is investigating the Obama administration’s apparent mishandling of classified documents and official records, was named special counsel by Attorney General Merrick Garland on Thursday.
On Saturday, Sauber reiterated that the White House would cooperate with Hull’s investigation.
The findings have gradually emerged over the past week, prompting allies of the president to worry that his office will not be able to handle the growing scandal.
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Republicans sought to compare the investigation into Mr. Biden’s handling of classified documents to the ongoing investigation into how former President Donald Trump handled classified documents after he became president.
However, the White House said the two cases were distinct because Biden’s team cooperated with authorities in the investigation and turned over documents.
Mr. Trump refused to do so until the FBI conducted a search of his Florida home.
In cases involving the mishandling of classified information, the Justice Department has set a high legal bar before filing criminal charges, requiring someone to knowingly break the law, rather than just being careless or negligent.