Multiple mainstream news outlets that criticized President Joe Biden over his retention of records that ought to have been in federal custody, including several classified documents, were quick to accept the claim from former Vice President Mike Pence’s team that he “inadvertently” misplaced several classified documents as well.
CNN first reported Tuesday that one of Pence’s lawyers discovered about a dozen documents with classified markings stored among boxes of other records at Pence’s Indiana home during a voluntary search last week. Pence’s team then contacted the National Archives and FBI, and arranged for the classified documents to be picked up that evening while a Pence staffer physically returned the remaining boxes of material to the National Archives in Washington, D.C. The search was conducted in the wake of the discovery of classified documents from Biden’s own time as vice president. The Biden documents were found at the president’s Delaware home and a D.C. office affiliated with the University of Pennsylvania.
In previous media interviews, Pence had claimed he was confident that he did not have any classified documents and criticized an alleged double standard between the Department of Justice’s handling of the Biden case and the August 2022 search of disgraced ex-President Donald Trump’s Mar-a-Lago estate. Pence’s criticism had ignored key details relating to Trump’s long pattern of obstruction in the government’s efforts to regain the records, in contrast to Biden’s cooperation now.
When CNN broke the Pence story, the outlet’s first article was highly deferential in accepting the explanation from his legal team that the documents were “inadvertently” moved to his home. CNN also cited sources attesting to the “rigorous” document retention practices of Pence’s vice presidential office: