The FBI on Friday morning searched the Maryland home of John Bolton, former national security adviser under President Donald Trump, as part of a criminal probe involving classified documents.
The FBI told The Epoch Times in a statement that it is “conducting court authorized activity in the area,” adding that “there is no threat to public safety,” while declining further comment on the specifics of its investigation.
President Donald Trump, when asked about the operation during a visit to the White House Historical Association Museum, said he had not yet been briefed on the matter, but that the investigation should be allowed to run its course.
Trump added that he was “not a fan” of Bolton, who became a vocal critic of the president after being fired from his role as national security adviser during the first Trump administration.
“We’re in the very early stages of an ongoing investigation into John Bolton. I will say we’re going to let that investigation proceed,” Vance said, saying that the law enforcement agencies involved “are going to be driven by law and not by politics.”
Vance said that if the investigation points to criminal activity on the part of Bolton, “eventually prosecutions will come.” He added that the search was about “gathering evidence, trying to understand something that we’re worried about.”
Welker asked whether Bolton was being targeted for his criticism of Trump, noting that the president had already revoked Bolton’s security clearance and Secret Service protection.
“No, not at all,” Vance replied. “And in fact, if we were trying to do that, we would just throw out prosecutions willy-nilly like the Biden administration DOJ did, prosecutions that later got thrown out in court.”
Vance denied that “retribution” was a motive, adding that the administration will let the law drive any determinations as to whether to press charges.
“NO ONE is above the law ... @FBI agents on mission,” he wrote.
Speaking to reporters at the White House Historical Association Museum, Trump said he had no knowledge of the raid and remarked on his experience of working with Bolton years ago.
The president said that when he first hired Bolton during his first term in office, Bolton “served a good purpose” because of what Trump described as his hawkish posture.
“I’d walk into a room with him with a foreign country and the foreign country would give me everything because they said, ‘Oh no, they’re going to get blown up because John Bolton is there,’” Trump said.
Trump added that he believes Bolton “could be unpatriotic” and that “we’re going to find out,” referring to the FBI investigation.
“The FBI appears to be conducting a search warrant—I assume it is not an arrest—but if there is FBI activity at a house that I believe to be John Bolton’s house in Bethesda and ... I assume this is related to the investigation of Bolton’s book and the classified information investigation that took place and I had thought was closed,” Wittes said.

Bolton was asked in an ABC interview earlier this month whether he was concerned that the Trump administration could take action against him. He said Trump had “already come after” him by revoking his security detail.
The Epoch Times has contacted Bolton’s representatives at Bolton PAC for comment on the raid.
Bolton, who played a key role in the administration’s 2018 withdrawal from the Iran nuclear deal, has since become one of Trump’s most vocal critics.
He opposed Trump’s 2024 presidential bid, writing a new foreword to his book in which he said Trump was unfit to be president. The former adviser said there was a risk Trump would pursue a policy of isolationism, withdraw from NATO, curb support for Ukraine in its fight against Russia’s invasion, and embolden China to take control of Taiwan.
During his time in the Trump administration, Bolton was a critic of the Iranian regime and influenced a hawkish posture toward Iran that included the 2018 U.S. withdrawal from the Iran nuclear deal.
Bolton had also expressed skepticism about the president’s strategy of engagement with North Korean leader Kim Jong Un and other Trump moves.
Trump fired Bolton in 2019, saying he “disagreed strongly” with many of his suggestions.






