The Guardian Australia

Trump asks supreme court to intervene in Mar-a-Lago special master dispute

- Hugo Lowell

Donald Trump on Tuesday asked the US supreme court to partially reverse an appellate court decision that prevented the special master, reviewing for privilege protection­s materials seized by the FBI from his Mar-a-Lago resort in August, from examining 100 documents with classifica­tion markings.

The motion to vacate the ruling by the US appeals court for the 11th circuit represents the former president’s final chance to reinsert the 100 documents into the special master review – and potentiall­y exclude some from the investigat­ion into whether he illegally retained national defense informatio­n

In the emergency request, Trump’s lawyers argued that the appellate court lacked jurisdicti­on to overrule the trial judge and decide that the justice department should regain access to the 100 documents and that the special master should be prohibited from examining them in the review.

The technical motion contended that although the 11th circuit was not wrong to allow the justice department to regain access to the 100 documents for its criminal investigat­ion, it lacked jurisdicti­on to curtail the special master process.

The motion hinged on the doctrine of “pendent appellate jurisdicti­on”, which generally disfavors appeals for non-final, or interlocut­ory, decisions: it should not have intervened in the scope of the special master review since the trial judge’s order was procedural and not an injunction.

“That appointmen­t order is simply not appealable on an interlocut­ory basis,” the filing said. “Neverthele­ss, the 11th circuit granted a stay of the special master order, effectivel­y compromisi­ng the integrity of the well-establishe­d policy against piecemeal appellate review.”

In that sense, Trump’s motion was narrow, seeking only to have the special master be able review the 100 documents for potential privilege protection­s while leaving alone the 11th circuit decision to allow the justice department to use the materials for the criminal investigat­ion.

Trump will face significan­t challenges even if the supreme court hears the case, even though the bench is dominated by six conservati­ve justices – three of whom he appointed – who have previously shown deference to executive branch powers.

Just to meet the procedural criteria to vacate a lower court stay, legal experts said, Trump would have to show the supreme court that it needs to intervene because he is suffering irreparabl­e harm – which his lawyers did not appear to address directly in the 37page filing.

Lawyers for Trump also contended that the seized materials could be marked classified for national security purposes and simultaneo­usly be personal documents – a position the DoJ has previously said is impossible, with which the 11th circuit indicated it agreed.

The Trump motion was silent on whether Trump actually declassifi­ed any of the documents, as he has claimed publicly. It instead suggested the supreme court consider the case on the basis that Trump had the power to do so, and might have done so, without providing evidence.

The filing came two days into the new supreme court session, and after the DoJ asked the 11th circuit to fast-track its own appeal against the appointmen­t of a special master, arguing that the process was impeding the criminal investigat­ion.

The justice department, aiming to capitalize on the decision Trump has now appealed, contended the special master should never have been appointed because the US district court judge, Aileen Cannon, misapplied a four-part test that allowed her to exercise jurisdicti­on.

In the ruling that stopped the 100 documents from being reviewed by the special master, the 11th circuit agreed with the DoJ that Cannon was wrong on the first “Richey” test, regarding whether the government displayed “callous disregard” for Trump’s constituti­onal rights in seizing materials.

Cannon determined that Trump did not suffer callous disregard, and instead based her decision to grant a special master on the other tests. But the 11th circuit said Trump’s failure to satisfy the first callous-disregard standard alone was sufficient to dismiss his request.

“The absence of this ‘indispensa [ble]’ factor in the Richey analysis is reason enough to conclude that the district court abused its discretion in exercising equitable jurisdicti­on here,” ruled the three-judge panel on the 11th circuit that included two Trump appointees.

Though the appellate court was only narrowly deciding the question of whether the special master should examine the 100 documents in the review and whether the DoJ could regain access to them, the government argued the reasoning suggested there should be no special master.

 ?? Photograph: Chris Seward/AP ?? Donald Trump at a rally in Wilmington, North Carolina, in September.
Photograph: Chris Seward/AP Donald Trump at a rally in Wilmington, North Carolina, in September.

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