U.S. judge signals willingness to appoint special master in Trump search
case
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[September 02, 2022]
By Francisco Alvarado and Sarah N. Lynch
WEST PALM BEACH, Fla. (Reuters) -A federal
judge on Thursday appeared sympathetic to former President Donald
Trump's request to appoint a special master to review the documents the
FBI seized from his home in August, though she declined to issue a
ruling immediately on the matter.
At a hearing in West Palm Beach, U.S. District Judge Aileen Cannon
pressed the Justice Department on why it opposes the appointment of a
special master - an independent third party sometimes appointed by a
court in sensitive cases to review materials potentially covered by
attorney-client privilege to ensure investigators do not improperly view
them.
"Ultimately, what is the harm of appointing a special master to review
these materials?" asked Cannon, a Trump appointee. "What I'm wondering
from the government - what is the harm beyond delaying the
investigation?"
She also suggested that she could feasibly carve out an exception which
would permit U.S. intelligence officials to continue conducting their
national security damage assessment pending the appointment of the
special master before the criminal probe can continue.
"Would your position change if the special master were allowed to
proceed without affecting the [Office of the Director of National
Intelligence] review for intelligence purposes, but pausing any use of
the documents in a criminal investigation?" she asked federal
prosecutors.
"It would not change," said Julie Edelstein, the department's deputy
head of counterintelligence. "There is no role for the special master."
Thursday's hearing came less than two days after prosecutors laid out
fresh details about their ongoing criminal investigation into whether
Trump illegally retained government records and sought to obstruct the
government's probe by concealing some of them from the FBI.
In their filing, prosecutors revealed that Trump's representatives
falsely certified that a thorough search had been conducted and all
government records had been returned to the government.
The certification was made on June 3, when three FBI agents and a top
Justice Department official traveled to Mar-a-Lago following the
issuance of a grand jury subpoena to retrieve all remaining records.
During that visit, prosecutors said Trump's lawyers never claimed he had
declassified any of the materials, and they handed over 38 pages marked
as classified inside a double-taped envelope.
However, his attorney at the same time also prohibited government
investigators from opening or looking inside some of the boxes that
Trump kept inside one of his storage rooms, they said.
The department ultimately decided to seek court approval for a search
warrant, after the FBI developed evidence of possible obstruction.
"The government developed evidence that a search limited to the storage
room would not have uncovered all the classified documents at the
premises," prosecutors said.
"The government also developed evidence that government records were
likely concealed and removed from the storage room and that efforts were
likely taken to obstruct the government’s investigation."
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Pages of entirely redacted information
are seen in the released version of an affidavit from the U.S.
Justice Department that was submitted to a federal judge to support
the execution of a search warrant by the FBI at former President
Donald Trump's Mar-a-Lago estate after the affidavit was released to
the public by the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of
Florida with more than half the information in the document redacted
in West Palm Beach, Florida, U.S. August 26, 2022. REUTERS/Jim Bourg
The FBI ultimately searched Trump's home on Aug. 8, and recovered
more than 33 boxes and other items, including more than 100 pages
marked as classified.
Cannon said on Thursday she would unseal a more detailed inventory
of the property the FBI seized from Trump's home following its
unprecedented search, after media outlets filed a motion with the
court to make it public.
EXECUTIVE PRIVILIGE
Trump's newest attorney, former Florida Solicitor General Chris Kise,
made his first appearance in the case on Thursday and presented some
of Trump's arguments to the judge.
On Thursday, he told Cannon that the former president wants to
protect materials that were subject to a legal doctrine known as
executive privilege, which can shield some presidential
communications.
"The problem is, we haven't had access to the actual materials,"
Kise told her.
But the Justice Department has argued that such a claim is
illogical, and that no special master is needed in the case.
"He is no longer the president," said Jay Bratt, the department's
head of counterintelligence.
"And because he is no longer president, he did not have a right to
take those documents. He was unlawfully in possession of them."
Typically, a special master is appointed in cases involving the
searches of the homes or offices of attorneys, where some of the
materials could be covered by attorney-client privilege.
A special master was appointed, for instance, after the FBI searched
the homes and offices of Trump's former lawyers Rudy Giuliani and
Michael Cohen.
But some legal experts, along with the Justice Department, have
argued a special master makes no sense here because a former
president cannot shield executive branch records from the executive
branch itself, as Trump is attempting.
In addition, Trump waited so long to make his request that the
department's filter team, a group of agents who are not part of the
investigation, have already reviewed the materials, and determined
only a limited number may be covered by attorney-client privilege.
At Thursday's hearing, Edelstein told Cannon that any ruling to
appoint a special master would be unprecedented, noting it has never
been used in this way.
"Well, there has never been a seizure of this magnitude with a
former president," Cannon replied. "I am not sure it is as cut and
dry as you suggest."
(Reporting by Francisco Alvarado in West Palm Beach, Fla., and Sarah
N. Lynch in Washington; Editing by Chizu Nomiyama, Matthew Lewis and
Richard Pullin)
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