The Washington Post reported that Donald Trump refused to give the Washington Post reporter the letters he sent to Kim when he asked for them in 2020.
During a December interview, Trump warned Woodward not to say that he gave the letters to him.
The contents of the letters were dictated into a tape recorder by Woodward, but there were no markings indicating they were classified.
The letters between Trump and Kim were among the records in 15 boxes of documents the National Archives recovered from Trump's Mar-A-Lago resort.
The love letters between Trump and Kim have become known as "love letters".
It's not clear if any of the letters were part of the classified documents the FBI seized from Mar-A-Lago.
The White House records were sent to Mar-A-Lago by Trump, but he denied any wrongdoing. There is no evidence to support Trump's claims that he could declassify records just by thinking about it. The ex-president tried to limit which seized documents the Justice Department could see as part of a criminal investigation, but he hasn't succeeded so far. A federal judge appointed a special master to review documents to see if they should be shielded from prosecutors. The Supreme Court turned down his request for access to review classified records. If Dearie doesn't finish his review by November 12 he will lose his job.
The beef is not located. In a call with prosecutors and Trump's attorneys Tuesday, Dearie suggested that he had not been given enough information to properly determine privilege claims.
A new audiobook called "The Trump Tapes: Bob Woodward's Twenty Interviews with President Trump" will include audio of the conversations between Woodward and Trump.
Trump knew Kim letters were classified, according to a new audiobook.
The judge gave the special master to review the documents.
The Supreme Court ruled against Trump on Mar-a-Lago classified documents.
Dearie is unhappy with the progress of the document. I need something to eat.
The records from Mar-A-Lago should have never been there.