5 Oct 2022

Trump asks US Supreme Court to intervene over seized classified records

1:43 pm on 5 October 2022
Former US president Donald Trump speaks to supporters at a rally on 3 September 2022 in Wilkes-Barre, Pennsylvania.

Donald Trump has filed an emergency request over some of the records seized from his home. Photo: AFP / Getty Images

Former president Donald Trump is asking the US Supreme Court to intervene in his fight with the Justice Department over classified documents seized from his Florida home as part of a criminal investigation into his handling of government records.

Trump filed an emergency request on Tuesday asking the justices to block part of a lower court's ruling that prevented an independent arbiter requested by Trump, known as a special master, from vetting more than 100 documents marked as classified.

The documents were among 11,000 records seized by FBI agents at the Mar-a-Lago estate in Palm Beach on 8 August.

The Atlanta-based 11th US Circuit Court of Appeals on 21 September repudiated a decision by US District Judge Aileen Cannon, who had temporarily barred the department from examining the seized classified documents until the special master had weeded out any that could be deemed privileged and withheld from investigators.

Justice Clarence Thomas, who is assigned to assess emergency appeals from the 11th Circuit, late on Tuesday requested a response from the Justice Department by 11 October. Thomas is one of six conservatives on the nine-member Supreme Court.

The 11th Circuit also prevented the special master, Judge Raymond Dearie, from having access to the documents with classified markings, noting the importance of limiting access to classified information.

A photo attached as evidence to a court filing by the US District Court Southern District of Florida, of documents allegedly seized at Mar-a-Lago spread over a carpet.

A photo attached as evidence to a court filing by the US District Court Southern District of Florida, of documents allegedly seized at Mar-a-Lago spread over a carpet. Photo: AFP / US Department of Justice

Trump's lawyers in Tuesday's filing said Dearie should have access to "determine whether documents bearing classification markings are in fact classified, and regardless of classification, whether those records are personal records or presidential records".

The Justice Department has "attempted to criminalise a document management dispute and now vehemently objects to a transparent process that provides much-needed oversight", Trump's lawyers added.

The court-approved Mar-a-Lago search was conducted as part of a federal investigation into whether Trump illegally retained documents from the White House when he left office in January 2021 after his failed 2020 re-election bid and whether Trump tried to obstruct the probe.

The residence of former US President Donald Trump at Mar-A-Lago in Palm Beach, Florida, on August 9, 2022.

Donald Trump's Mar-a-Lago estate which was raided by FBI agents in August. Photo: Giorgio Viera / AFP

The investigation seeks to determine who accessed classified materials, whether they were compromised and if any remain unaccounted for. At issue in the 11th Circuit ruling were documents bearing classified markings of confidential, secret or top secret.

Cannon, presiding over Trump's lawsuit seeking to restrict Justice Department access to the seized documents, barred review of all of the materials and named Dearie to review the records, impeding the investigation.

On 15 September, Cannon, who was appointed to the bench by Trump, rejected the Justice Department's request that she partially lift her order on the classified materials as it impeded the government's effort to mitigate potential national security risks from their possible unauthorised disclosure.

The three-judge 11th Circuit panel included two judges appointed by Trump and one by former President Barack Obama.

Noting that classified records belong to the US government, the 11th Circuit doubted Trump has any "individual interest" in them and that he "has not even attempted to show that he has a need to know the information contained in the classified documents".

The 11th Circuit also rejected any suggestion that Trump had declassified the documents - as the former president has claimed - saying there was "no evidence" of such action and that the argument was a "red herring because declassifying an official document would not change its content or render it personal".

In Tuesday's filing, Trump's attorneys said he had "broad authority governing classification of, and access to, classified documents". In an interview on Fox News last month, Trump again asserted without evidence that he declassified the documents and claimed he had the power to do it "even by thinking about it".

The three statutes underpinning the search warrant used by the FBI at Mar-a-Lago make it a crime to mishandle government records, regardless of their classification status.

Cannon had tasked Dearie to review all of the seized materials, including classified ones, to identify anything subject to attorney-client confidentiality or executive privilege - a legal doctrine that shields some White House communications from disclosure.

The document investigation is one of several legal woes Trump is facing as he considers whether to run again for president in 2024.

New York state's attorney general last month filed a civil lawsuit accusing Trump and three of his adult children of fraud and misrepresentation in preparing financial statements from the family real estate company. The Trump Organisation also is set to go on trial on 24 October on New York state criminal tax fraud charges.

-Reuters

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