There are no visitor logs available for President Joe Biden's private Delaware home where six classified documents were found, the White House said on Monday.
The White House Counsel's Office emphasized that the president's home in Wilmington is 'personal' and as such no recordings of who comes in-and-out would be available.
House Oversight Committee Chairman James Comer (R-Ky.) sent a letter to Biden's Chief of Staff Ron Klain on Sunday demanding access to any visitor logs kept for the Delaware home.
In the letter Comer accused Biden of 'mishandling of classified materials raises the issue of whether he has jeopardized our national security.'
'Without a list of individuals who have visited his residence, the American people will never know who had access to these highly sensitive documents,' the Kentucky Republican wrote.
President Joe Biden's White House revealed that no public visitor logs were kept at his Wilmington, Delaware residence
The Penn-Biden Center was used by Biden as a personal office from about 2017 through when he launched his 2020 campaign.
Ten top secret pages were reportedly found there by Biden's personal lawyers while cleaning out the office. Six so far have been found in his Wilmington-area home.
'Like every President in decades of modern history, his personal residence is personal,' the White House Counsel's Office told Fox News.
'But upon taking office, President Biden restored the norm and tradition of keeping White House visitors logs, including publishing them regularly, after the previous administration ended them.'
DailyMail.com has reached out to the White House for confirmation.
At least six classified documents were found at Biden's private residence in the upscale neighborhood of Greenville, a wealthy section of Wilmington, Delaware
The office building housing the Penn-Biden Center for Diplomacy and Global Engagement in Washington, D.C where President Joe Biden's personal lawyers handed over documents, which date from Biden's time as the vice president to the Justice Department.
Timeline of events leading up to Attorney General Merrick Garland appointing Special Counsel Robert Hur to oversee investigation as to the potential mishandling of classified documents
Former President Donald Trump crows after the Department of Justice appoints Special Counsel to investigate President Joe Biden's handling of classified information
Biden's political nemesis Donald Trump reacted to the news with gleeful schadenfreude on Monday.
'The White House just announced that there are no LOGS or information of any kind on visitors to the Wilmington house and flimsy, unlocked, and unsecured, but now very famous, garage. Maybe they are smarter than we think!' Trump wrote on his Truth Social app.
'This is one of seemingly many places where HIGHLY CLASSIFIED documents are stored (in a big pile on the damp floor).'
He added of his Florida estate, where dozens of classified documents were recovered during an August FBI raid: 'Mar-a-Lago is a highly secured facility, with Security Cameras all over the place, and watched over by staff & our great Secret Service. I have INFO on everyone!'
Attorney General Merrick Garland appointed a special counsel to oversee Biden's handling of classified documents after the papers dated from his vice presidency were first discovered on November 2, 2022 at the Penn Biden Center.
The initial 10 had been found among Biden's personal possessions in a closet when private lawyers were cleaning out the president's old office.
Subsequent searches revealed first one more page found at Biden's Delaware home, and then on Saturday officials admitted five additional ones were recovered from there as well.
The president has pledged to take the matter 'seriously' and cooperate with the National Archives and Justice Department every step of the way.
But questions are still mounting over what took the White House so long to admit the documents' existence - which it did after CBS News first broke the story regarding the Penn-Biden Center - and who could have had access to the papers in Biden's home.
Whether anyone with 'foreign connections' had access to the documents, likely in reference to the president's son Hunter Biden. Hunter's foreign business dealings in China and Ukraine have been the subject of scrutiny for years, and he's also under investigation by the U.S attorney in Delaware for possible financial fraud.
White House press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre refused to say whether visitor logs for the Greenville home exist during a news briefing last week.
She instead pointed out that the Biden administration had expanded transparency with regards to White House visitor logs that had been severely curtailed under Trump.
Under the President Records Act, all documents and files from the White House to be stored at the National Archives