The Department of Justice (DOJ) on Friday filed a motion requesting a federal appeals court to fast-track its appeal of the appointment of a special master to review documents the FBI seized at former President Donald Trump’s Mar-a-Lago estate in Palm Beach.
The DOJ on Friday proposed that the Atlanta-based 11th Circuit Court of Appeals orders all written briefs be filed in the case by Nov. 11, and hold any necessary hearing in the case as soon as that briefing is completed. Currently, the deadline for the briefs is scheduled for about a month later—Dec. 9—and oral arguments have not been scheduled.
Trump’s lawyers oppose the request, the government said.
The DOJ seeks to halt the special master review. In its filing, it noted another outcome it would deem favorable: If the appeals court ultimately rules that the special master review can continue but that Trump cannot assert executive privilege over any of the documents—meaning he could only assert attorney-client privilege—such a ruling would still “substantially narrow the special master proceedings.”
But those non-classified records “may shed light on, for example, how the materials bearing classification markings were transferred to [Trump’s] residence, how they were stored, and who may have accessed them,” the DOJ said. The non-classified records may also constitute evidence of potential violations of federal statutes on obstruction and concealment or removal of government records, it added.
Background
The FBI on Aug. 8 seized thousands of documents without warning from Mar-a-Lago as part of a DOJ investigation into whether Trump mishandled government records, and whether he tried to obstruct the DOJ investigation. Christina Bobb, a Trump lawyer, previously told The Epoch Times that the FBI agents were “looking for presidential records, what they deemed to be presidential records and anything that could potentially be classified.”The panel’s ruling was in response to a motion for a partial stay from the government. The panel determined that Cannon “likely erred” in her order to temporarily block the DOJ from using classified records in its criminal investigation and to require it to submit the documents marked classified to a special master for review. Its ruling meant that the DOJ can now rely on the materials marked classified taken in the FBI raid as part of its investigation; including in referring to the materials for witness interviews, or in presenting charges to a grand jury.