FBI agents search Trump critic Bolton's home in latest move against rival

Police officers stand outside the home of the former White House national security adviser John Bolton as it is searched by FBI members, in Bethesda, Maryland, U.S., August 22, 2025. REUTERS/Tasos Katopodis

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FBI agents searched the home of John Bolton, a former
adviser to U.S. President Donald Trump turned persistent critic, on
Friday in what a source familiar with the matter said was part of a national
security probe.
The investigation is focused on the potential criminal
release of classified information, the source added. An FBI spokesperson
confirmed "court authorized activity" in the area of Bolton's home in
the Washington suburb of Bethesda, Maryland.
An FBI spokesperson has also confirmed law enforcement
activity at Bolton's Washington D.C. office.
Bolton, who served as the U.S. ambassador to the United
Nations and as the White House national security adviser during Trump's
first term in office, did not immediately respond to a request for comment. CNN
reported that he said he was unaware of the law enforcement activity and was
looking into it further.
The search marks the latest instance of the Trump
administration moving to wield the levers of government power against
Trump's perceived enemies since taking office in January.
Trump has long complained that the Justice Department was
wrongly used against him during his four years out of office, when he faced two
federal criminal prosecutions for attempting to overturn his 2020 election
defeat and for retaining classified documents after leaving the White House.
The special counsel behind those cases dropped them after Trump's
election, citing Justice Department policy against prosecuting a sitting
president.
Democratic former President Joe Biden also faced
a federal investigation for mishandling classified documents, though the
special counsel in that case declined to bring charges, saying Biden would have
been hard to convict.
A federal magistrate judge would have to approve a search
warrant, indicating that there is "at least some objective and
legitimate" evidence of a potential crime, according to Bradley Moss, an
attorney who specializes in national security.
"This is going to be political no matter what. This is
a frequent, very public critic of the president," Moss said. "The question
is, did he actually do something that warrants and justifies this or is this
pure political retribution?"
Trump vowed during his presidential campaign to use the
criminal justice system against his rivals, and since returning to power his
administration has arrested the Democratic mayor of a New Jersey city,
filed criminal charges against a Democratic U.S. representative and
started federal investigations into a Democratic U.S. senator, a
Democratic state attorney general and just this week a governor
of the Federal Reserve.
When asked about the raid, Trump said on Friday, "No, I
don't know about it. I saw it on television this morning. I'm not a fan of John
Bolton. He's a real sort of a low life.
"He could be a very unpatriotic guy. We're going to
find out."
FBI agents began searching the house at 7 a.m. as part of a
probe ordered by FBI Director Kash Patel, according to the New York Post. An
investigation does not necessarily lead to criminal charges.
"NO ONE is above the law… @FBI agents on mission,"
Patel wrote, without mentioning Bolton, in an X post shortly after 7 a.m.
Reuters video footage from the scene showed multiple people
in FBI jackets walking in and out the front door of the home.
The Justice Department during Trump's first term sued Bolton
and started a criminal investigation into him over allegations his 2020 book,
"The Room Where It Happened: A White House Memoir," contained
classified information. The book painted a scathing picture of Trump's first
administration.
A judge rejected the administration's bid to block
publication of the book in 2020. Both the criminal investigation and lawsuit
were dropped in 2021 during the Biden administration.
Bolton denied the allegations and accused White House
officials of acting improperly to block a critical account.
The president previously stripped Bolton of
protective Secret Service detail that had been assigned after the U.S. Justice
Department said Iran had threatened his life.
Bolton has continued his criticism of Trump since he
returned to office. After Trump's meeting with Russian President Vladimir
Putin in Alaska last week, Bolton told CNN that Putin
"clearly won" the summit and while Trump "did not lose" he
looked "very tired" and there was no meaningful progress on ending
the war in Ukraine.
Bolton has also been critical of Patel, the Trump-nominated
FBI director, telling NBC's "Meet The Press" in December that the
Senate should reject his nomination "100-0." Patel was later
confirmed.
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