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Former President Donald Trump filed a motion Monday demanding federal investigators stop going through material seized from his Mar-a-Lago mansion earlier this month until a neutralspecial master could be appointed to review the records.

The 27-page filing in Florida federal court also asked for the federal government to provide more detail about what was seized in the Aug. 8 raid on the 45th president’s Palm Beach estate and demanded the Justice Departmentreturn any item not covered by the search warrant.


  Former President Donald Trump filed a motion asking for a special master to be appointed to review the documents seized from Mar-a-Lago during the FBI raid. Photo by James Devaney/GC Images Former President Donald Trump filed a motion asking for a special master to be appointed to review the documents seized from Mar-a-Lago during the FBI raid. Photo by James Devaney/GC Images

“We are now demanding that the Department of ‘Justice’ be instructed to immediately STOP the review of documents illegally seized from my home. ALL documents have been previously declassified,” Trump said in a statement on his Truth Social platform soon after the motion was filed.

The former president went on to call the FBI’s raid an “unnecessary, unwarranted, and unAmerican break-in” that violated his Fourth Amendment rights against unreasonable searches and seizures.

The filing, which is the first by Trump’s side since the raid, suggests the FBI search was politically motivated – calling it a “shockingly aggressive move” that was undertaken with “no understanding of the distress that it would cause most Americans.”


  Trump’s filing also asked the federal investigators to detail what was taken and return anything unrelated. Photo by GIORGIO VIERA/AFP via Getty Images Trump’s filing also asked the federal investigators to detail what was taken and return anything unrelated. Photo by GIORGIO VIERA/AFP via Getty Images

“Law enforcement is a shield that protects Americans. It cannot be used as a weapon for political purposes,” the filing said. “Therefore, we seek judicial assistance in the aftermath of an unprecedented and unnecessary raid on President Trump’s home at Mar-a-Lago.”

The complaint notably described Trump as the “clear frontrunner” in the 2024 GOP presidential primary and general election “should he decide to run” – adding that “politics cannot be allowed to impact the administration of justice.”

Elsewhere, Trump’s attorneys argued that the more than two dozen boxes of documents seized in the raid were “presumptively” covered by executive privilege.

“This matter has captured the attention of the American public. Merely ‘adequate’ safeguards are not acceptable when the matter at hand involves not only the constitutional rights of President Trump, but also the presumption of executive privilege,” the filing said.

Trump’s complaint claims there was no reason for the FBI to raid Mar-a-Lago because the former president had already been cooperating for month as the feds scrutinized the presence of classified documents at his Florida home.  

According to his complaint, the raid came two months after Trump and his attorneys “voluntarily” cooperated with a May 11 grand jury subpoena to turn over additional documents.

Trump “invited the FBI to come to Mar-a-Lago” to retrieve the documents June 3 – and even greeted the agents in the dining room, the filing said. The FBI officials were then shown the basement storage room where boxes of documents and other memorabilia from Trump’s four years in the White House were kept.

The document claimed that after seeing the room, one FBI agent told the Trump team: “Thank you. You did not need to show us the storage room, but we appreciate it. Now it all makes sense.”


  Trump supporters standing near police after the raid at Mar-a-Lago on August 9, 2022. Nicholas Nehamas/Miami Herald/Tribune News Service via Getty Images Trump supporters standing near police after the raid at Mar-a-Lago on August 9, 2022. Nicholas Nehamas/Miami Herald/Tribune News Service via Getty Images

The filing also confirmed reports that DOJ counterintelligence chief Jay Bratt requested on June 8 that the storage room door be “secured” — as well as surveillance footage from the resort was subpoenaed two weeks later, on June 22.

Three days after the raid, on Aug. 11, the former president’s attorneys attempted to convey a message to Attorney General Merrick Garland from Trump during a conversation with Bratt. That message, according to the filing, was: “President Trump wants the Attorney General to know that he has been hearing from people all over the country about the raid. If there was one word to describe their mood, it is ‘angry.’ The heat is building up. The pressure is building up. Whatever I can do to take the heat down, to bring the pressure down, just let us know.”

The same day, Garland announced he had requested the unsealing of the search warrant and the list of what was taken. 

In his statement Monday, Trump said he would have handed the seized documents over without the “necessity of the despicable raid of my home” two months later.

He added that he wanted to give them to “the National Archives until they are required for the future Donald J. Trump Presidential Library and Museum.”

Trump’s motion was filed hours after US Magistrate Judge Bruce Reinhart formally denied the Justice Department’s motion to keep the affidavit underpinning the search to be completely sealed.

The Justice Department argued at a court hearing last week that the affidavit’s release would provide people with a “road map” of its probe and possibly chill witness cooperation.

Reinhart acknowledged in his Monday filing, which largely repeated what he said in court last week, that redactions to the affidavit could be so extensive that the document would be rendered “meaningless.”

Still, the judge said he believed the document shouldn’t remain entirely sealed given the “intense” public interest in the probe.  

Reinhart gave the DOJ until Thursday 12 p.m. to provide him a redacted copy of the affidavit that he could then potentially release to the public. 

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