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January 5— Lausch briefs Garland on the results of his initial investigation and advises that the appointment of a special prosecutor is warranted.
January 9th— The White House counsel’s office confirms publicly for the first time that classified documents were found at the Penn Biden Center, after media reports on the find.
January 11— Biden’s personal lawyers search the president’s homes in Wilmington and Rehoboth Beach for additional records. They locate a potential record with classified markings in a room adjacent to the garage. They leave it where they found it and call off their search. They leave Wilmington for Rehoboth, where they search Biden’s house. No records are found in Rehoboth and the lawyers return to Washington.
January 11— Media reports that additional classified documents were found at a location other than the Penn Biden Center.
12th of January— The White House counsel’s office confirms that a “small number” of additional classified documents were located in two locations at Biden’s Wilmington home, mostly in the garage. They say that “a document consisting of one page” was found in a room adjacent to the garage.
12th of January— Biden’s lawyers inform Lausch of what they found in the Wilmington home in the room adjacent to the garage and begin the process of arranging for it to be turned over to the Justice Department. White House counsel Richard Sauber travels to Wilmington to facilitate the transfer of documents, he is authorized to do so. As the documents are transferred, an additional five pages marked as classified are discovered.
12th of January— Garland appoints Robert Hur as special prosecutor to conduct an investigation into the matter.
January 14— The White House counsel’s office publicly reveals that five additional pages of classified material were found in Wilmington.
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