https://ift.tt/50zIq96 by a recent court ruling, the Justice Department investigation into whether former president Donald Trump illegally kept classified government documents at his Florida residence is back on track.
In a victory for the Justice Department, a federal appeals court in Atlanta ruled on Wednesday that investigators could resume examining roughly 100 classified documents seized during an FBI search of Trump’s Mar-a-Lago property on August 8.
The investigation, one of several dogging the former president, ground to a halt earlier this month after a federal judge ordered the appointment of a special master to review the seized records, barring the Justice Department from using the documents and requiring it to turn them over to the independent reviewer.
The Justice Department appealed the judge’s order.
The appellate court’s ruling means that both the criminal investigation and a separate intelligence community assessment of the risk of storing the documents at Mar-a-Lago can now proceed again, said Jordan Strauss, a former federal prosecutor now with Kroll, a risk and technology firm.
The ruling also means that the recently appointed special master, Judge Raymond Dearie, can review only the unclassified documents taken from Mar-a-Lago to determine whether any are protected by attorney-client privilege or executive privilege.
“With respect to what it means for the FBI, it means that one, the FBI will be able to continue playing the role it normally plays in national security damage assessments, and number two, that prosecutors can continue to try to use at least the classified documents,” Strauss said.
During its search of Trump’s Florida residence, the FBI removed about 11,000 documents and 1,800 other items. About 100 of the documents are classified, some bearing the highest classification markings.