Overseas Network, September 1. According to the "New York Post" report on August 31, a new poll found that half of Americans believe that former US President Trump should be because of the storage of confidential documents at Mar-a-Lago. With criminal charges, nearly 6 in 10 believe Trump has acted inappropriately.

  The Quinnipiac University poll surveyed 1,584 U.S. adults between Aug. 25 and 29, with a margin of error of plus/minus 2.5 percentage points.

The survey showed that 59% of Americans believe Trump's behavior in keeping the classified file box is inappropriate, and 50% believe that Trump should face criminal charges.

76% of Americans say they are closely monitoring developments.

When asked how serious they thought the allegations against Trump were, 49% said "very serious," 15% said "somewhat serious," while 13% chose "not very serious," and 19% said of people called it "not serious at all".

  On August 8, local time, Trump’s Mar-a-Lago estate was raided by the FBI.

The FBI is investigating Trump on three federal charges, according to a search warrant and a list of items searched.

The U.S. Department of Justice released part of the FBI's written testimony to the court on August 26, showing that officials seized 184 classified files, of which 25 belonged to "top secret documents."

After the written testimony was released, Dershowitz, who had represented Trump in the impeachment trial, said the document implied "enough to bring a case against Trump."

  Trump is currently under federal and multiple state criminal investigations.

In addition to the investigations involving Mar-a-Lago, the investigations include the Justice Department's investigation into congressional riots, Georgia's investigation into Trump's alleged election interference, and New York's investigation into alleged financial fraud at Trump's business establishment.

According to US media analysis, the investigation results of the first three cases are likely to be that Trump was indicted and convicted.

(Overseas Network Hou Xingchuan)