Trump Declares Biden’s Autopen Orders, Documents Null and Void
Trump Declares Biden’s Autopen Orders, Documents Null and Void

President Donald Trump announced that any document former President Joe Biden signed using the autopen has been “hereby terminated.” The Trump administration has repeatedly criticized the previous administration’s reliance on the device, which applies a signature to documents without the president physically signing them.
Critics of the former president argued that documents were signed without Biden’s knowledge, fueling claims that his cognitive ability declined during his time in the White House, Mediaite reported.
Biden has rejected those allegations and said he was personally responsible for every pardon issued in the final days of his presidency.
“Any document signed by Sleepy Joe Biden with the Autopen, which was approximately 92% of them, is hereby terminated, and of no further force or effect,” Trump wrote.
“The Autopen is not allowed to be used if approval is not specifically given by the President of the United States. The Radical Left Lunatics circling Biden around the beautiful Resolute Desk in the Oval Office took the Presidency away from him. I am hereby cancelling all Executive Orders, and anything else that was not directly signed by Crooked Joe Biden, because the people who operated the Autopen did so illegally. Joe Biden was not involved in the Autopen process and, if he says he was, he will be brought up on charges of perjury.”
Presidents are believed to have used versions of the autopen for more than 200 years, dating back to Thomas Jefferson, who obtained one after it was patented in 1803, according to the Shapell Manuscript Foundation.
Gerald Ford, Lyndon B. Johnson, George W. Bush, and Barack Obama are all known to have used the device.
Obama became the first president to use an autopen to sign legislation in 2011.
In 2005, during the Bush administration, the Justice Department concluded the autopen is legal.
“A person may sign a document by directing that his signature be affixed to it by another,” a DOJ memo said. Legal scholars have also noted that the Constitution does not require presidents to personally sign pardons.
Trump made similar allegations about Biden’s autopen use in June, at which time he called for an investigation.
On Oct. 28, the Republican led House Oversight Committee recommended the Justice Department investigate the issue.
The White House responded to questions about how Biden’s orders could be “terminated” by referring back to Trump’s Truth Social post.
Trump told reporters in March that he has used the autopen “only for very unimportant papers.”
“You know, we get thousands and thousands of letters, letters of support for young people, from people that aren’t feeling well, etcetera,” Trump said.
“But to sign pardons and all of the things that he signed with an autopen is disgraceful.”
In a July interview with The New York Times, Biden said Republicans are “liars” for claiming he was unaware of his own White House actions that were signed using the autopen.
“I made every decision,” Biden said.
President Trump announced Thursday that he plans to temporarily halt immigration from third-world countries following the shooting of two National Guard troops in Washington, D.C. In a post on Truth Social, the president said the nation has advanced technologically but “Immigration Policy has eroded those gains and living conditions for many,” RedState
He wrote that he will “permanently pause migration from all Third World Countries to allow the U.S. system to fully recover, terminate all of the millions of Biden illegal admissions, including those signed by Sleepy Joe Biden’s Autopen, and remove anyone who is not a net asset to the United States, or is incapable of loving our Country, end all Federal benefits and subsidies to noncitizens of our Country, denaturalize migrants who undermine domestic tranquility, and deport any Foreign National who is a public charge, security risk, or non-compatible with Western Civilization.”
1 After a weekend with her stepfather, the little girl wept in agony
After a weekend with her stepfather, the little girl wept in agony — and the moment the doctor looked at the ultrasound, they picked up the phone and called the police.

After a weekend with her stepfather, the little girl wept in agony — and the moment the doctor looked at the ultrasound, they picked up the phone and called the police.
The fluorescent lights in Dr. Hannah Miller’s clinic flickered slightly as a frail seven-year-old girl named Emily Carter sat trembling on the examination table. Her mother, Laura, stood nearby, clutching her purse with shaking hands. Emily hadn’t stopped crying since Sunday night — since she returned from her weekend with her stepfather, Mark Benson.
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Dr. Miller had seen bruises before. She’d seen fear before. But what made her skin crawl that morning was the way Emily flinched at every sound — every shadow. “Can you tell me where it hurts, sweetheart?” Hannah asked softly. Emily only whispered, “Inside.”
A few minutes later, the ultrasound probe glided over the child’s small abdomen. The screen lit up in shades of gray — organs, tissue, movement. But then, something stopped Hannah cold. There was internal trauma — serious, deliberate, and impossible to mistake. She froze, the air in the room thick as concrete. Her professional calm wavered just long enough for Laura to notice.
“What is it?” Laura asked, panic seeping into her voice.
Dr. Miller didn’t answer immediately. She turned to her nurse and, in a voice steady but urgent, said, “Call the police. Right now.”
Laura’s face went pale. Emily began to sob harder, clutching the doctor’s sleeve.
That moment shattered every illusion Laura had tried to maintain. For months, she had dismissed Emily’s withdrawn behavior as shyness — her reluctance to go to Mark’s house as childish stubbornness. But now, watching the doctor’s expression, she knew.
By the time the police arrived, Hannah had printed the ultrasound images, signed her medical report, and comforted the girl with quiet, measured words. “You’re safe now, Emily,” she whispered. But she also knew that safety was a fragile promise — one that would have to be fought for in courtrooms and therapy rooms in the months ahead.
Outside, sirens wailed faintly in the distance, growing louder. Inside, a mother wept for the innocence her child had lost — and for the guilt she would never escape.
The nightmare had only just begun.

Detective Alan Rodriguez had seen countless cases of child abuse, but something about Emily’s file made his jaw tighten. The ultrasound images, the bruising patterns, the forensic notes — everything pointed to one horrifying conclusion. This wasn’t neglect. It was systematic violation.
He and his partner, Detective Maria Nguyen, drove to the suburban home of Mark Benson that evening. The house was spotless, the lawn freshly mowed — a picture of normalcy that only deepened Alan’s unease. Mark opened the door with feigned confusion. “Officers? Is something wrong?”
Maria’s tone was clipped. “We need to ask you a few questions about your stepdaughter, Emily Carter.”
Mark’s eyes darted — just for a second. But to trained detectives, that second was everything.
Inside, the conversation turned tense. Mark denied everything, claimed Emily “made up stories,” insisted Laura was “poisoning her mind.” But Alan had already seen too many similar scripts. He asked permission to search the house. When Mark refused, they obtained a warrant. Within hours, the truth began to surface — blood traces, a hidden memory card, and items that would later serve as damning evidence in court.
Meanwhile, Emily stayed at the hospital under protective care. A child psychologist sat with her daily, gently guiding her to speak. One afternoon, Emily whispered the words that broke every heart in the room: “He said if I told anyone, Mom would go away forever.”
That sentence became the turning point. It wasn’t just about justice now — it was about dismantling the fear that had silenced Emily for so long.
When the case went to trial, Dr. Miller testified with calm precision. The forensic experts confirmed her findings. Laura sat behind her daughter every day, hands clasped tight, praying.
Mark Benson’s mask of control cracked on the third day of testimony. When confronted with the recovered evidence, his silence spoke volumes. The verdict came swiftly: guilty on all counts.
As the gavel struck, Laura exhaled for the first time in months. Emily looked up at her mother with eyes still shadowed but no longer empty. Justice couldn’t erase what had happened — but it could begin to heal.
Months later, spring sunlight filtered through the hospital’s rehabilitation wing as Emily traced pictures in her coloring book. Her therapist, Dr. Sarah Lane, sat beside her, encouraging each small step toward recovery.
Emily still had nightmares — flashes of that dark past. But she was learning to draw again, to smile again. Her laughter was fragile, but real.
Laura attended every therapy session. She had moved to a new apartment, changed jobs, and joined a support group for parents of abused children. The guilt didn’t disappear, but it transformed — into fierce determination. She volunteered at a local child protection nonprofit, helping other parents recognize the signs she once ignored.
Dr. Miller visited occasionally. She never forgot that morning, nor the ultrasound that changed everything. “You’re doing amazing, sweetheart,” she told Emily during one visit. “You’re the bravest girl I know.”
Emily beamed — a small, genuine smile that carried more weight than words.
In court, Mark Benson received a lengthy sentence. He would never again walk free. But for Emily, true justice came in quieter moments — in the arms of her mother, in the calm of her drawings, in the soft assurance that monsters could be defeated.
One afternoon, Laura and Emily planted a small cherry tree outside their new home. “This is our fresh start,” Laura said. Emily nodded, burying her tiny hands in the soil.
Years later, that tree would bloom — a living symbol of resilience, of innocence reclaimed.
Dr. Miller, Detective Rodriguez, and countless others who fought for Emily’s safety moved on to new cases, new lives — but they carried her story with them. Because in every hospital, every police station, every courtroom, another child’s voice was waiting to be heard.
And maybe that’s the real message here — that one act of courage, one doctor’s decision to speak up, can change everything.
If this story moved you, share it. Talk about it. Remind others that vigilance saves lives, and silence costs them. Somewhere, a child like Emily is still waiting for someone to notice. Be that someone.