U.S. Justice Dept asks appeals court to allow review of classified docs
in Trump probe
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[September 19, 2022]
By Jacqueline Thomsen
WASHINGTON (Reuters) -The U.S. Justice
Department on Friday asked a federal appeals court to let it resume
reviewing classified materials seized in an FBI search of former
President Donald Trump's Florida estate.
In the filing before the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 11th Circuit, the
Justice Department said the circuit court should halt part of the lower
court decision that prevents prosecutors from relying on the classified
documents in their criminal investigation into the retention of
government records at Trump's Mar-a-Lago residence in Palm Beach after
his presidency ended.
The department also asked that a third party appointed to examine all
the records taken in the federal raid at Trump's part, Senior U.S. Judge
Raymond Dearie, not be permitted to review the classified materials.
The government asked the appeals court to rule on the request "as soon
as practicable."
Trump's attorneys did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
In the unprecedented search of the former president's property, the
Justice Department has said it is investigating the retention of
government records - some marked as highly classified, including "top
secret" - as well as obstruction of a federal probe.
The Justice Department must now convince the Atlanta-based appeals
court, with a conservative majority, to take its side in litigation over
the records probe. Trump appointees make up six of the 11 active judges
on the 11th Circuit.
The government's motion comes after U.S. District Judge Aileen Cannon on
Thursday rejected the same requests from the Justice Department.
Cannon, whom Trump appointed to the bench in 2020, had said she would
tell Dearie, who is filling the role of a "special master" in the case,
to prioritize the classified records in his review, which she set a Nov.
30 deadline to complete.
There were roughly 100 classified documents among the 11,000 records
gathered in the FBI's court-approved Aug. 8 search at the former
president's Mar-a-Lago resort.
If Cannon's ruling stands, experts said, it would likely stall the
Justice Department investigation involving the government records.
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An American flag waves outside the U.S.
Department of Justice Building in Washington, U.S., December 15,
2020. REUTERS/Al Drago/File Photo
The government's Friday filing at times directly took issue with
Cannon's prior decisions in the case. Prosecutors said the judge
cited court papers from Trump's lawyers that suggested the former
president could have declassified the documents marked as
classified, but those legal briefs stopped short of claiming Trump
did so.
"The court erred in granting extraordinary relief based on
unsubstantiated possibilities," the government lawyers wrote.
The Justice Department also criticized Cannon's direction that
classified records be disclosed to Dearie and Trump's lawyers as
part of an outside review of all records taken in the search, and
described the former president's attorneys as potentially being
witnesses to "relevant events" in the criminal probe.
The department is also looking into possible obstruction of the
probe after it found evidence that records may have been removed or
concealed from the FBI when it sent agents to Mar-a-Lago in June to
try to recover all classified documents through a grand jury
subpoena.
Trump's lawyers had opposed the government's latest requests to
Cannon, telling the judge in a Monday filing they dispute the
government's claim that all the records are classified, and that a
special master is needed to help keep prosecutors in check.
Trump's attorneys instigated the litigation over the records
investigation last month, seeking a third party to go over the
materials taken by federal agents and determine if any should be
shielded from investigators. The former president's legal team
argued that some materials could be covered by attorney-client
privilege or executive privilege - a legal doctrine that can shield
some presidential records from disclosure.
Cannon granted that request in a Sept. 5 ruling, rejecting Justice
Department arguments that the records belong to the government and
that because Trump is no longer president he cannot claim executive
privilege.
Dearie said earlier on Friday he will hold his first hearing on the
privilege review for the seized documents on Tuesday, at the federal
courthouse in Brooklyn.
(Reporting by Jacqueline Thomsen; Editing by Tim Ahmann and William
Mallard)
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