Penticton Herald

Judge appears open to special master

- By The Associated Press

WEST PALM BEACH, Fla. — A federal judge Thursday appeared to give a boost to former President Donald Trump’s hopes for appointing an outside legal expert to review government records seized by the FBI, questionin­g the Justice Department’s arguments that Trump couldn’t make the request and that it would needlessly delay its investigat­ion.

“Ultimately, what is the harm” in such an appointmen­t, U.S. District Judge Aileen Cannon asked department lawyers. But she did not rule on the request, saying she would do so later.

Lawyers for Trump say the appointmen­t of a special master is necessary to ensure an independen­t inspection of the documents seized by the FBI during the Aug. 8 search of Mar-a-Lago.

This kind of review, they say, would allow for “highly personal informatio­n” such as diaries or journals to be separated from the investigat­ion and returned to Trump, along with any other documents that may be protected by claims of attorney-client privilege or executive privilege.

Chris Kise, a Trump lawyer and former Florida solicitor general, told Cannon that appointing a neutral party would restore public faith in the investigat­ion.

“This is an unpreceden­ted situation. We need to lower the temperatur­e,” Kise said. “We need to take a deep breath.”

The Justice Department has said an appointmen­t is unwarrante­d because investigat­ors have completed their review of potentiall­y privileged records and identified “a limited set of materials that potentiall­y contain attorney-client privileged informatio­n.” The government also says Trump lacks legal grounds to demand the return of presidenti­al documents because they do not belong to him since he no longer occupies the White House.

“He is no longer president, said Jay Bratt, the head of the Justice Department’s counterint­elligence section. He is unlawfully in possession of them.”

The department has also expressed concerns that the appointmen­t could delay the investigat­ion, in part because a special master probably would need to obtain a security clearance to review the records and special authorizat­ion from intelligen­ce agencies.

Cannon had said on Saturday, before the latest arguments in the matter, that her “preliminar­y intent” was to appoint a special master.

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