San Diego Union-Tribune

TRUMP CLAIMS OWNERSHIP OF SOME SEIZED RECORDS

Ex-president says 9 documents are personal property

- BY CHARLIE SAVAGE Savage writes for The New York Times.

Former President Donald Trump is claiming that nine documents seized by the FBI from his Florida residence are his personal property — but the Justice Department says they are official records that should be deposited with the National Archives, according to a new letter to the special master who is overseeing a review of the materials.

The letter, filed Thursday by the Justice Department, describes disputes over ownership and executive privilege claims involving a batch of 15 records that have undergone early review. It likely foreshadow­s larger fights to come over the main bulk of roughly 13,000 documents and other materials FBI agents took from Mar-a-Lago, Trump’s club and residence, in a courtautho­rized search in August.

The materials from the initial tranche that Trump maintains belong to him include six packages submitted to him when he was president supporting requests that he grant clemency to pardonseek­ers; two documents related to his administra­tion’s immigratio­n policies; and an email addressed to him from a person at a military academy, the letter said.

But the Justice Department, in its letter, scoffed at the notion that any of those materials belong to Trump. It cited the Presidenti­al Records Act, which says all documentar­y materials created or received by a president, his staff or his office in the course of official activities are government property that should go to the National Archives when a president leaves office.

Of the pardon packages, for example, the Justice Department wrote: “Those requests were received by plaintiff in his capacity as the official with authority to grant reprieves and pardons, not in his personal capacity.”

The dispute stems from a decision by Judge Aileen Cannon in Florida’s Southern District to grant Trump’s request that she intervene in the Justice Department’s inquiry into whether he had unlawfully kept classified records at his estate and obstructed the government’s repeated efforts to retrieve them.

Surprising legal experts, Cannon, a Trump appointee, imposed an injunction temporaril­y blocking criminal investigat­ors from using any of the documents. She also appointed the special master, Judge Raymond Dearie of the U.S. District Court in Brooklyn, to review any claims that they were Trump’s personal property or protected by attorney-client or executive privilege.

The letter, addressed to Dearie, described the documents in broad strokes because the list is technicall­y still sealed. However, because the list was mistakenly filed on the public docket before being taken down and copies were posted online, it is possible to see with greater detail what files are in dispute.

The letter said that Trump is also claiming that four of the 15 documents should be withheld from investigat­ors under executive privilege. They include the two immigratio­n policy documents, which Trump’s team said were predecisio­nal materials, and two documents about meetings he was to approve and certain questions he had been asked.

The Justice Department argued that Trump “cannot logically assert” executive privilege over the two immigratio­n policy documents at the same time he claims they are personal property, saying “only official records are subject to assertions of executive privilege.”

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