The U.S. government classifies tens of millions of documents a year. Experts say the practice is excessive. By German Lopez Classified documents keep turning up in the homes of former presidents and ...
Decades from now, when the government belatedly releases the Trump and Biden purloined records, Americans may well wonder what all the fuss was about. The document cases tied to the president and his ...
The U.S. Department of Justice is reviewing the discovery of classified documents found in an office no longer used by President Joe Biden at a think tank in Washington, D.C. Classified information is ...
NPR's Ailsa Chang talks to Oona Hathaway, law professor and former special counsel at the Pentagon, about overclassification of government documents. President Biden says he is cooperating fully and ...
The national intelligence director did not mince words: the government has an over-classification problem. “Over-classification undermines critical democratic objectives, such as increasing ...
FIRST ON FOX: Republicans in the Senate weighed in on the batch of classified documents found in former Vice President Mike Pence’s Carmel, Indiana home. Several GOP senators shared their thoughts on ...
The rate of classification has increased 75% since the start of the Bush Administration and topped 16 million classification decisions in 2004, according to the head of the government’s classification ...