Trump’s attempts to delay Mar-a-Lago inquiry
largely fail as legal woes mount
Justice department gains access to about 100 documents
with classified markings that the FBI seized from the resort
Hugo Lowell
Sat 24 Sep
2022 10.00 BST
https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2022/sep/24/donald-trump-investigation-mar-a-lago-legal-woes
Attempts by
Donald Trump to delay the criminal investigation into his unlawful retention of
government secrets have been largely thwarted after the Department of Justice
regained access to about 100 documents with classified markings that the FBI
seized from the former US president’s Mar-a-Lago resort in Florida.
The US
appeals court for the 11th circuit this week set aside key parts of an order by
a federal judge that barred the department from using the documents in its
investigation, and additionally ruled that Trump’s lawyers need not review the documents
over potential privilege concerns.
The 29-page
decision amounted to a sharp rebuke of the rulings by US district court judge
Aileen Cannon, who is overseeing the case in Florida, but it also brought an
end to Trump’s attempt to slow down the investigation that his advisers feared
was moving perilously fast.
The justice
department, according to the search warrant affidavit, is investigating
potential violations of at least three criminal statutes, including the
Espionage Act concerning national defense information, obstruction of justice
and the removal of government documents more generally.
Being
allowed to examine the roughly 100 documents marked classified means justice
department investigators can now resume the investigation into the most serious
lines of inquiry – the willful retention of national defense information and
obstruction – with the primary evidence itself.
The fact
that the appeals court also ruled that Trump’s lawyers – as well as the special
master recently appointed to review the seized materials for potential
privilege protections – do not need to review the 100 documents closes off
additional opportunities to delay the process further.
Trump’s
goal in requesting a special master was multi-pronged from the start, according
to sources familiar with the matter, and the principal – though publicly
unstated – aim was to apply the brakes on the criminal investigation, after the
FBI search of Mar-a-Lago took Trump’s lawyers by surprise.
A second
major aim, the sources said, was to use the special master motion as a vehicle
to get more insight into what documents the FBI retrieved from the property
because they were initially in the dark about the extent of Trump’s, as well as
their own, potential exposure.
Before the
appeals court ruling, Trump’s legal team considered that the special master,
senior US district court judge Raymond Dearie, might need time to evaluate
whether a president, current or former, could use executive privilege to block
the department from seeing executive branch materials.
The former
president’s lawyers also suggested in court filings that there may be
additional time-consuming deliberations about privilege if Trump had scribbled
handwritten notes about his deliberative thinking with advisors and lawyers on
otherwise classified or non-privileged documents.
But
although Trump could still drag out the special master process – and so the
third line of inquiry concerning the general removal of government records –
over the 11,000 other documents seized by the FBI, the anticipated delays over
classified documents are no longer at issue.
Trump
effectively secured a two-and-a-half week pause in the criminal investigation
from the time that Cannon enjoined the department on Labor Day to the appeals
court ruling on Wednesday – a delay that former US attorneys said would not
have materially affected the case.
In criminal
investigations that rely on witness testimony, they said, extended delays might
become problematic should the department be unable to make headway for more
than a couple of months since memories fade and witnesses might start to
struggle to recall specific details.
The justice
department being barred from using the 100 documents marked classified, the
most important evidence of potential violations of the Espionage Act and
obstruction, for around three weeks would probably represent little more than
an inconvenience, the former US attorneys said.
Still, the
temporary delay showed the Trump legal team’s ambition and ability to accrue
small procedural wins that they hope can cumulatively become significant.
Without the defeat before the 11th circuit, Trump might have expected to stymie
the criminal investigation into December and beyond.
.webp)
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