U.S. District Judge Aileen Cannon on Friday released a detailed inventory from the Mar-a-Lago investigation that the Justice Department had previously sealed in court. The search warrant released showed that classified documents had been mixed with personal items and other materials in the boxes in which they were stored. Federal investigators also retrieved more than 11,000 unclassified government documents. A box containing documents marked with confidential, secret and top secret classification identifiers also contained “99 magazines/newspapers/press articles,” according to the list from last month’s search filed in federal court in Florida. Several other boxes detailed in the inventory contained documents marked as classified stored with press clippings, as well as clothing and gifts. The court filing also provided a breakdown of the type of markings on classified material obtained from Mar-a-Lago, including 18 documents classified top secret, 54 documents marked secret and 31 documents marked confidential. Several other boxes detailed in the inventory contained documents marked as classified stored with press clippings, as well as clothing and gifts. The court filing also provided a breakdown of the type of markings on classified material obtained from Mar-a-Lago, including 18 documents classified top secret, 54 documents marked secret and 31 documents marked confidential. In addition, federal investigators collected more than 48 blank envelopes with a “classified flag” and 42 blank envelopes marked for return to the staff secretary or military assistant. The judge also released a status report the department filed under seal on its investigative team’s review of the evidence so far.