Donald Trump's first wife, Ivana, was under an FBI counterintelligence inquiry into allegations about her connections in her home country of Czechoslovakia in the 1990s, according to excerpts from her FBI file obtained by Bloomberg News.
The inquiry spanned several countries, with U.S. legal attaches in Canada and Europe instructed to inquire about the circumstances of her emigration from then-Communist Czechoslovakia to Austria and later to Canada and to look into her association with individuals whose names are redacted from the release. The agency also dug through court records of her divorce from Donald Trump.
The files were classified as "secret." In one document dated Feb. 14, 1989, the FBI said it "recommended a preliminary inquiry be opened on Ivana Trump" based on information the bureau obtained from a confidential source. According to the document, "it is unknown if the allegations stem from jealousies of her wealth and fame. Investigation continuing." The FBI redacted the contents of that inquiry.
While the nature of the FBI's inquiry into Ivana Trump is unknown, it involved the bureau's counterintelligence division and was highly sensitive, according to the documents, and spanned at least two years.
Another file, from 1990, shows the FBI looking into a man connected to Czechoslovakian intelligence who arranged fictitious marriages and believed to have some connection to Ivana Trump, who was from Czechoslovakia. There's little information in the records on Donald Trump other than a Jan. 16, 1989, Time magazine article headlined, "Trump."
The documents also include a reference to Barrandov Film Industry, a Prague film studio and one of Europe's largest. It's unclear why it's mentioned, but it's connected to Vaclav Havel, who served as the last president of Czechoslovakia. A then-unknown Ivana Trump appeared in an episode of a show filmed there called "Pan Tau" in 1970.
The file goes on to say that a "highly confidential and reliable source" advised that Ivana Trump was in Czechoslovakia on June 4, 1990, where Havel gave her an autographed book.
The Prague Daily Monitor published a story after Donald Trump was elected president about Ivana not helping dissidents or exiles during the Communist regime. That may explain the FBI's interest in her visit to the country.