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regular-article-logo Friday, 26 April 2024

Judge allows Trump bid for review of files

The decision by US district judge Aileen Cannon came despite the objections of the justice department

AP/PTI Washington Published 06.09.22, 12:57 AM
Donald Trump

Donald Trump File picture

A federal judge on Monday granted a request by former President Donald Trump’s legal team to appoint a special master to review documents seized by the FBI from his Florida home last month and also temporarily halted the justice department’s use of the records for investigative purposes.

The decision by US district judge Aileen Cannon came despite the objections of the justice department, which said an outside legal expert was not necessary in part because officials had already completed their review of potentially privileged documents.

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The judge had previously signalled her inclination to approve a special master, asking a department lawyer during arguments this month, “What is the harm?”

The appointment is likely to slow the pace of the department’s investigation into the presence of top-secret information at Mar-a-Lago given the judge’s directive that the justice department may not for the moment use any of the seized materials for investigative purposes. But it is not clear that it will have any significant effect on any investigative decisions or the ultimate outcome of the probe.

Cannon, who was nominated to the bench by Trump in 2020, said she would permit the continuation of a risk assessment of the documents being conducted by the US intelligence community.

Trump’s lawyers had argued that a special master —usually an outside lawyer or former judge — was necessary to ensure an independent review of records taken during the August 8 search.

Such a review was necessary, they have said, so that any personal information or documents recovered by the FBI could be filtered out and returned to Trump and so that any documents protected by the attorney-client privilege or executive privilege could also be segregated from the rest of the investigation.

The justice department had argued against the appointment, saying it was unnecessary since it had already reviewed potentially privileged documents.

Kabul raid kills Russia diplomats

A suicide bombing outside the Russian embassy in the Afghan capital Kabul on Monday killed two members of the embassy staff and at least one Afghan civilian in a rare attack on a foreign diplomatic mission in Afghanistan.

The blast went off at the entrance to the embassy’s consular section, where Afghans were waiting for news about their visas, according to the Russian foreign ministry and the state news agency RIA Novosti.

The agency said that a Russian diplomat had emerged from the building to call out the names of candidates for visas when the explosion occurred.

There was no immediate claim of responsibility for the blast, the latest in a series of bombings since the Taliban seized power a year ago, deposing a western-backed government and capping their 20-year insurgency.

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