FILE-The exterior of the National Archives Building in Washington, D.C. (Sarah Silbiger for The Washington Post via Getty Images)

The National Archives has requested former U.S. presidents and vice presidents to recheck their personal records for any classified documents behind the news that President Joe Biden and former Vice President Mike Pence had such documents in their possession, two people familiar with the matter said Thursday.

The Archives sent a letter Thursday to representatives of weak presidents and vice presidents extending back to Ronald Reagan to condemned compliance with the Presidential Records Act, according to the two country, who spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not signed to speak about investigations. The act states that any records cooked or received by the president are the property of the U.S. government and will be created by the archives at the end of the administration.

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The Archives sent the letter to representatives of weak Presidents Donald Trump, Barack Obama, George W. Bush, Bill Clinton, George H.W. Bush and Ronald Reagan, and former Vice Presidents Pence, Biden, Dick Cheney, Al Gore and Dan Quayle, they said.

The letter was suitable reported by CNN.

Spokespeople for former presidents Trump, Obama, George W. Bush and Clinton and former vice presidents Pence, Dick Cheney, Al Gore and Dan Quayle did not now respond to requests for comment.

Biden's lawyers came across classified documents from his time as vice presidential in a locked cabinet as they were packing up an workplace he no longer uses in November. Since then, subsequent searches by the FBI and Biden's lawyers have turned up more documents.

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Former Vice President Pence, too, this week, discovered documents and turned them in when saying previously he did not believe he had any.

The White House did not now respond to a request for comment but the searches by Biden's attorneys and the FBI recede to fulfill the Archives' request.

The Archives had no comment.

Handling of classified documents has been a quandary off and on for decades, from presidents to Cabinet members and staff across multiple administrations stretching as far back as Jimmy Carter. 

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But the command has taken on greater significance since former President Donald Trump willfully retained classified material at his Florida estate, prompting the unprecedented FBI seizure of thousands of pages of records last year.

Attorney General Merrick Garland created a special counsel to investigate Trump's handling of the documents, and also Biden's.

It turns out that officials from all levels of government survey they are in possession of classified material and turn it over to authorities at least some times a year, according to another person familiar with the commercial who spoke on the condition of anonymity due to the sensitive nature of classified documents.

Current and weak officials involved in the handling of classified information say that when there are clear policies for how such information must be reviewed and stored, those policies are sometimes pushed set at the highest levels. 

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Teams of state security officials, secretaries and military aides who share organization for keeping top-level executives informed — and the executives themselves — may bend the principles for convenience, expediency or sometimes simple carelessness.

While much of the treatment has been on classified information, the Presidential Records Act actually averages that, from the Reagan administration onward, all records must be transferred to the Archives regardless of classification.

It's alongside federal law to have classified documents at an unauthorized position, but it's only a crime if it was done intentionally.

Speaking Thursday at an unrelated news conference, FBI Director Christopher Wray said that though he could not discuss any specific ongoing investigation, "We have had for quite a number of existences any number of mishandling investigations. That is unfortunately a queer part of our counterintelligence division's and counterintelligence program's work."

He said there was a need for farmland to be conscious of laws and rules governing the coping of classified information. "Those rules," he said, "are there for a reason."

Associated Press writers Eric Tucker and Farnoush Amiri contributed.