President Donald Trump’s former national security adviser John Bolton walked into federal court with a very stern expression before admitting to stealing national security secrets.
He pleaded guilty on Friday to a single charge of retaining classified information – a significant update in his criminal case, and one that may help him avoid a lengthy jail sentence.
Under the terms of the deal, Bolton could serve up to 60 months, or 5 years, in prison in exchange for his guilty plea. He may also be required to pay a fine of up to $2.25 million and serve 100 hours of community service.
Prosecutors said Friday that Bolton ‘abused his position of trust’ as former White House national security adviser by sharing roughly 1,000 pages of classified information in the form of ‘diaries’ with his wife and daughter.
Bolton then retained the documents related to national defense at his home in Montgomery County, Maryland, after leaving the White House.
Asked if agreed with that version of events, Bolton asked to have a moment with his counsel before responding: ‘Yes, your honor, the summary is accurate.’
Bolton pleaded guilty to Count 12 of his federal criminal indictment, which accused him of retaining national intelligence information.
The plea deal is a significant reduction from the maximum penalty he could have faced if his case went to trial. Bolton was indicted last fall on 18 counts and, if convicted, could have faced decades behind bars.
He is accused of sending more than 1,000 ‘diary-like’ entries to his wife and daughter during a period between 2018 and 2019, including classified information and information from intelligence briefings and meetings with foreign officials.

Bolton is accused of sending more than 1,000 ‘diary-like’ entries to his wife and daughter during a period between 2018 and 2019. He appeared in court in Maryland on Friday alongside his attorneys

Bolton pleaded guilty on Friday to a single charge of retaining classified information
The re-arraignment comes after Bolton entered a ‘not guilty’ plea on all charges last fall, saying in a statement at the time that he was the ‘latest target’ of political weaponization at the Justice Department.
Since taking office for a second term, Trump’s administration has opened federal criminal investigations into some of his most outspoken political foes, including former FBI Director James Comey, New York Attorney General Letitia James, and former Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell.
But the investigation into Bolton’s actions differed significantly from other cases the administration has brought against the President’s perceived political foes.
The investigation into Bolton’s handling of classified materials moved forward in part during the Biden administration, and career prosecutors in the US attorney’s office signed off on the charges – a contrast to the cases against Comey and James, which were brought by Trump’s former attorney, Lindsey Halligan.
As part of the plea, Bolton agreed to participate in a debrief with the national security community and the Justice Department, which he confirmed Friday.
Speaking to reporters after the arraignment, US Attorney for the District of Maryland Kelly Hayes, stressed the seriousness of the case. The information Bolton pleaded guilty to storing, she said, was at the ‘highest classification levels.’
‘As Mr. Bolton admitted, he shared more than 1,000 pages of information about his day-to-day activities as the National Security Advisor, including information related to the national defense, with two individuals who neither had the security clearances nor the need to know that information,’ Hayes said.
‘The document in Count 12, for example, revealed intelligence about an adversary’s plans for an attack conducted against US forces in another country,’ she added.
‘It contained human intelligence using sensitive sources and methods, and it discussed a covert action program.’

The plea deal is a significant reduction from the maximum penalty he could have faced if his case went to trial

The Friday morning FBI raid on the home of ex-National Security Advisor John Bolton was linked to allegations he used a private email server to send sensitive, classified documents

Bolton, who has since turned against Donald Trump after being fired from the White House in his first term, was home at the time of the 7:00 a.m. raid on his D.C.-area house in August, according to a source familiar
Bolton appeared in court last year for his original arraignment and was ordered released by a magistrate judge on the condition that he remain in the continental United States and surrender his passport.
Trump has slammed his former aide as a ‘lowlife’ and ‘not a smart guy.’
‘He doesn’t talk, he’s like a very quiet person except on television and then he can say something bad about Trump. He’ll always do that. But he doesn’t talk, he’s very quiet,’ Trump told reporters.

