White House Press Secretary ERUPTS as Trump's "damning" documents scandal explodes back into spotlight The panic is setting in. After Rep. Jamie Raskin revealed explosive new details from a memo tied to Donald Trump's classified documents scandal, the White House didn't respond with facts - it responded with a full-blown meltdown. Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt lashed out, calling Raskin "not credible" and dismissing the revelations as a "cheap political stunt." But here's what's telling: instead of addressing the substance of the allegations, she went straight to attacking the messenger. Why? Because the details are hard to explain away. We're talking about allegations that Trump held highly sensitive classified material, possibly tied to personal interests, and even showed it off outside secure channels. Serious issues. National security issues. And the response? Blame the media. Blame Democrats. Blame the prosecutor. Anyone but Trump. Leavitt doubled down on the familiar playbook - calling Special Counsel Jack Smith a "liar" and the investigation a "witch hunt" - even though the memo at the center of this controversy reportedly came from within the investigation itself. In other words, instead of answering the questions, they're trying to bury them under outrage and deflection. That's not transparency. That's damage control. And maybe the most revealing moment of all? The attempt to pressure journalists not to even report on the story - while simultaneously attacking outlets that did. When a White House starts telling the press what's "too ridiculous" to cover, it's not about protecting the truth. It's about controlling it. The bottom line is simple: if these allegations are truly "unverified" and meaningless, then there should be no problem releasing the full records and letting the public see for themselves. But instead, we get anger. Deflection. And a desperate attempt to discredit anyone asking questions. Because the more this story comes into the light, the harder it becomes to spin.