Miami Herald

Florida judge officially dumps Trump lawsuit over Mar-a-Lago document seizure

- BY JAY WEAVER jweaver@miamiheral­d.com Jay Weaver: 305-376-3446, @jayhweaver

Former President Donald Trump’s legal effort to thwart a Justice Department investigat­ion into classified documents seized from his palatial Palm Beach estate was officially tossed out Monday.

U.S. District Judge Aileen Cannon, after being rebuked by a federal appellate court for allowing Trump’s lawsuit to move forward, brought his controvers­ial lawsuit to a halt after the court had ordered her to end it.

“This case is dismissed for lack of jurisdicti­on,” Cannon wrote in a onepage order released Monday. “The Clerk of Court shall close this case.”

At the beginning of the month, the 11th Circuit Court of Appeals in Atlanta ruled that Cannon had no authority to grant Trump’s request for an independen­t expert to evaluate thousands of documents that FBI agents took from his Mar-a-Lago residence on Aug. 8 to determine if any were off limits to the feds because of potential attorneyor executive-privilege protection­s.

The special master, a federal judge in New York, was supposed to report back to Cannon soon with his assessment of the documents as the Justice Department continued its probe of the classified documents that Trump took from the White House to his Palm Beach estate after losing the presidency in 2020. Trump is under investigat­ion by a federal grand jury that is in Washington,

D.C. and is considerin­g allegation­s of mishandlin­g classified government documents, violating national-security laws and obstructin­g justice.

But a three-judge panel of the 11th Circuit Court threw out her Sept. 5 order allowing the special master to review the seized documents for potential privilege issues. The panel found that Cannon, who was nominated by Trump to the federal bench, had no authority to appoint the independen­t expert or even get involved in the former president’s suit after a West Palm Beach magistrate judge had properly approved a lawful warrant for the FBI’s search of Mar-a-Lago.

The Dec. 1 ruling overturnin­g Cannon’s decision was blistering and came from three judges who were also Republican­appointed, two of them also by Trump.

In a 21-page opinion, the judges — Chief Judge William H. Pryor, Britt Grant and Andrew L. Brasher — described the Trump legal team’s arguments as a “sideshow,” highlighti­ng that his lawyers never made the fundamenta­l point that FBI agents showed a “callous disregard” for the ex-president’s constituti­onal rights. The appellate panel found that the “callous disregard standard has not been met here, and no one argues otherwise” — including the presiding judge, Cannon.

“There is no record evidence that the government exceeded the scope of the warrant — which, it bears repeating, was authorized by a magistrate judge’s finding of probable cause [of a crime],” the panel wrote. “And yet again, [Trump’s] argument would apply universall­y; presumably any subject of a search warrant would like all of his property back before the government has a chance to use it.”

In her Sept. 5 order, Cannon noted she agreed with Justice Department lawyers’ stance that FBI agents carrying a search warrant for Trump’s Mar-aLago estate had not shown a “callous disregard for

[his] constituti­onal rights,” concluding that “this factor cuts against the exercise of equitable jurisdicti­on.”

But rather than follow her own analysis, Cannon extended Trump protection­s not provided to ordinary citizens by appointing the special master to review the FBI’s evidence, citing the “unpreceden­ted circumstan­ces” of the U.S. government raiding a former president’s home.

Cannon assumed jurisdicti­on in the Justice Department’s investigat­ion by appointing New York federal Judge Raymond Dearie to view about 100 classified records and thousands of other personal and presidenti­al records taken from Trump’s home and private club to determine if any contained privileged correspond­ence with lawyers. Cannon refused to let a Justice Department “filter team” of agents and prosecutor­s do the job.

 ?? AP file ?? Former President Donald Trump wanted an independen­t expert to evaluate thousands of documents that FBI agents took from his Mar-a-Lago residence on Aug. 8.
AP file Former President Donald Trump wanted an independen­t expert to evaluate thousands of documents that FBI agents took from his Mar-a-Lago residence on Aug. 8.

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