'Really smart': Legal experts praise DOJ move in M
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Bob Brigham
September 08, 2022
'Really smart': Legal experts praise DOJ move in Mar-a-Lago investigation
The U.S. Department of Justice responded on Thursday to a controversial Monday ruling by Trump-appointed Judge Aileen Cannon who ordered a special master to oversee the documents seized at Mar-a-Lago.
"DOJ files notice of appeal in case where judge effectively froze the Trump documents investigation and imposed a special master to filter material for executive privilege," New York Times correspondent Charlie Savage reported. "DOJ is asking judge to stay the part of her order that halted the investigation and would require showing classified docs to special master, and says will appeal if she doesn't do that."
The filing noted an urgency to investigate what was in the empty folders with classification headers.
"The same is true of the empty folders with ''classified’ banners' that were among the seized materials here," the DOJ argued. "The FBI would be chiefly responsible for investigating what materials may have once been stored in these folders and whether they may have been lost or compromised—steps that, again, may require the use of grand jury subpoenas, search warrants, and other criminal investigative tools and could lead to evidence that would also be highly relevant to advancing the criminal investigation.
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The filing said Trump had "never disputed" that he "has no property, possessory, or other legal interest in classified records."
Alan Kohler, Jr., the assistant director of the FBI for counterintelligence, also filed a six-page affidavit in support of the DOJ's motion.
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Legal experts quickly took to social media to analyze the prosecutors' move.
Former Department of Justice spokesperson Matt Miller said, "DOJ firing its biggest bullets here: Cannon's order has already forced [Office of Director of National Intelligence] to stop its risk assessment, and further delay will further harm national security.
National security lawyer Bradley Moss wrote, "This DOJ motion reiterates over and over what I have been stating on CNN and MSNBC for three day now: there is nothing for a Special Master to do with the documents containing classification markings. They are government property. They don’t belong to Trump."
Former acting Solicitor General Neal Katyal said, "this is really smart."
"This is a savvy move by DOJ," wrote former federal prosecutor Renato Mariotti. "This gives Judge Cannon an opening to back down from the most problematic parts of her ruling, avoid appeal, and keep the investigation moving."