Trump appears to concede he illegally retained
official documents in filing
A motion submitted by the ex-president’s lawyers
argues some materials seized by the FBI could be subject to executive privilege
Hugo Lowell
in Washington DC
Wed 24 Aug
2022 07.00 BST
https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2022/aug/23/trump-illegal-documents-fbi-mar-a-lago
Donald
Trump appeared to concede in his court filing surrounding the seizure of
materials from his Florida resort that he unlawfully retained official
government documents, as the former president argued that some of the documents
collected by the FBI could be subject to executive privilege.
The motion
submitted on Monday by the former president’s lawyers argued that a court
should appoint a so-called special master to separate out and determine what
materials the justice department can review as evidence due to privilege
issues.
But the
argument from Trump that some of the documents are subject to executive
privilege protections indicates that those documents are official records that
he is not authorized to keep and should have turned over to the National
Archives at the end of the administration.
The motion,
in that regard, appeared to concede that Trump violated one of the criminal
statutes listed on the warrant used by the FBI to search the former president’s
Mar-a-Lago resort – 18 USC 2071 – concerning the unlawful removal of government
records.
“If he’s
acknowledging that he’s in possession of documents that would have any
colorable claim of executive privilege, those are by definition presidential
records and belong at the National Archives,” said Asha Rangappa, a former FBI
agent and former associate dean at Yale Law School.
“And so
it’s not clear that executive privilege would even be relevant to the
particular crime he’s being investigated for and yet in this filing, he
basically admits that he is in possession of them, which is what the government
is trying to establish,” Rangappa said.
Trump
remains able to make the case that a special master should be appointed to
review the seized documents, seek a more detailed receipt for what the FBI
retrieved from Mar-a-Lago and restrain the justice department from further
reviewing the materials until the process is complete.
The
reasoning, former US attorneys say, is that there could be communications
seized by the FBI that are privileged, but not used in furtherance of a crime,
and even if the justice department wanted to use them in its investigation, it
should be precluded from doing so.
A person
directly involved in Trump’s legal defense noted – repeating parts in the
filing – that the Presidential Records Act had no enforcement mechanism, even
as they conceded that the justice department might pursue the privilege
argument as a tacit admission.
Potential obstruction
But Trump’s
motion could throw up additional challenges for the former president, with
additional passages in the filing laying out a months-long battle by the
justice department to recover certain records in a pattern of interactions that
could be construed as obstruction of justice.
The search
warrant for Mar-a-Lago listed obstruction for the statutes potentially
violated, though it was not clear whether that was obstruction of the
investigation into the very retrieval of government documents from Mar-a-Lago
or for another, separate investigation.
Yet the
section in Trump’s motion titled “President Donald J Trump’s Voluntary
Assistance” detailed the multiple steps the justice department took to
initially retrieve 15 boxes in January, additional materials in June, and then
26 boxes when the FBI conducted its search.
The filing
discussed how Trump returned the 15 boxes to the National Archives, and then –
one day after the National Archives told Trump’s lawyers that those boxes
contained classified documents – “accepted service of a grand jury subpoena”
for additional documents with classification markings.
But despite
taking custody of documents responsive to the subpoena, the justice department
learned there may have been additional documents marked as classified, and
issued a subpoena on 22 June demanding security camera footage of the hallway
outside where the materials were being stored.
That
subpoena for security tapes, as well as a subsequent subpoena for CCTV footage
of that area from just before the FBI search on 8 August, suggests the justice
department did not think Trump was being entirely truthful or forthcoming in
his interactions with the investigation.
Those
suspicions were well-founded: when the government retrieved materials from
Mar-a-Lago on that second collection in June, Trump’s custodian of records
attested they had given back documents responsive to the subpoena – only for
the FBI to retrieve more boxes of classified materials.
Separately,
apart from late filing of the motion two weeks after the FBI search took place,
the brief itself appears to be procedurally problematic.
The motion
was not filed in West Palm Beach, Florida, where the warrant was approved.
Instead, it was filed in Ft Pierce, where the judge has no knowledge of the
underlying affidavit – and could rule in such a way to reveal to Trump if he or
his lawyers are suspects for obstruction.
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