U.S. Justice Dept, Trump team deeply divided over special master
appointment
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[September 10, 2022]
By Sarah N. Lynch
WASHINGTON (Reuters) -The U.S. Justice
Department and Donald Trump's attorneys said on Friday they are deeply
divided over whether classified records seized by the FBI from the
former president's Florida estate should be reviewed by a special
master, and they each put forth a separate list of candidates for the
job.
In a joint filing on Friday evening, the U.S. Justice Department told
U.S. District Judge Aileen Cannon that Trump's legal team is insisting
that the special master should be allowed to review "all seized
materials, including documents with classification markings."
Trump's lawyers also want the special master, an independent
third-party, to review the records for possible executive privilege
claims - a mandate the department opposes.
Both sides also each proposed two different sets of possible candidates
for the job, though they said they intend to inform the court about
their views on each others' candidate list by Monday.
A special master is an independent third-party sometimes appointed by a
federal court to weed through sensitive records that could be privileged
and segregate them so they are not viewed by prosecutors and do not
taint a criminal investigation.
The Justice Department said it is proposing two candidates for special
master: Retired judge Barbara Jones, who previously served as a special
master in cases involving Trump's former lawyers Rudy Giuliani and
Michael Cohen, or retired judge Thomas Griffith, an appointee of
Republican President George W. Bush who served on the D.C. appeals court
from 2005-2020.
Trump's team proposed Raymond Dearie, a judge on senior status in the
U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of New York and former U.S.
Attorney who served on the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court, and
Paul Huck, Florida's former Deputy Attorney General and a former partner
with Jones Day, a law firm that previously represented Trump's campaign.
Both sides also said they disagree on whether the special master should
be required to consult with the U.S. National Archives and Records
Administration, which is tasked with preserving executive branch
documents.
In addition, neither side could agree on who should pay for the special
master, with Trump's team proposing to split the costs and the Justice
Department saying Trump should pay since he requested it in the first
place.
JUDGE HAD ORDERED ARBITER
Trump is under investigation for retaining government records, some of
which were marked as highly classified, at his Palm Beach, Florida, home
after leaving office in January 2021. The government is also
investigating possible obstruction of the probe.
The documents probe is one of several federal and state investigations
Trump is facing from his time in office and in private business. He has
suggested he might run for the White House again in 2024, but has not
made any commitment.
The joint filing came after Cannon, a Trump appointee in Fort Pierce,
Florida, ordered the appointment of a special master arbiter on Monday,
granting a request by Trump.
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Former U.S. President Donald Trump speaks during a rally in
Wilkes-Barre, Pennsylvania, U.S., September 3, 2022. REUTERS/Andrew
Kelly/File Photo
After the Justice Department warned on Thursday that doing so could
slow the government's effort to determine whether classified
documents were still missing, Cannon said in a court filing she was
willing to consider limiting the special master's role so that
person would not review classified documents.
Cannon on Monday barred federal prosecutors from continuing to use
any of the seized records for their ongoing criminal probe until a
special master could review them, though she carved out a narrow
exemption allowing U.S. intelligence officials to continue their
intelligence risk assessment.
The Justice Department on Thursday asked her to reconsider, saying
it opposes giving a special master access to classified records, and
needs to continue reviewing them both for the criminal probe and the
national security assessment.
They also said the criminal probe and intelligence assessment are
inextricably linked, and that the government was forced to pause its
intelligence review amid the legal uncertainty ruling her order has
created.
Prosecutors gave Cannon until Sept. 15 to decide. If she rules
against them, they threatened to appeal to the U.S. Court of Appeals
for the 11th Circuit.
Trump, for his part, has said on social media that he declassified
all the records - a claim his lawyers have avoided repeating in
legal filings to the court.
The government "wrongly assumes that if a document has a
classification marking, it remains classified in perpetuity," they
said on Friday.
Now that Trump's team has voiced its opposition to the department's
request, it remains to be seen whether Cannon will agree to exclude
the classified materials from the special master's mandate.
Of the more than 11,000 seized records, there are only about 100
documents with classification markings.
Trump's team has until Monday to formally spell out its position on
the Justice Department's request.
Cannon has also faced criticism for previously ruling that the
special master will be tasked with reviewing records not just
covered by attorney-client privilege, but also by executive
privilege as well.
The Justice Department has questioned the logic of her decision,
noting the government records are not Trump's personal property and
he is no longer president.
The U.S. Supreme Court last year side-stepped the question of how
far a former president's privilege claims can go in rejecting
Trump's bid to keep White House records from a congressional panel
investigating the Jan. 6, 2021, U.S. Capitol riot by his supporters.
However, the U.S. National Archives, after conferring with the
Justice Department, told Trump's lawyers earlier this year that he
cannot assert privilege against the executive branch to shield the
records from the FBI.
(Reporting by Sarah N. Lynch; additional reporting by Eric Beech and
Caitlin Webber; Editing by Scott Malone and Alistair Bell)
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