I haven’t been bothering to post updates, but essentially DOJ asked the 11th circuit to stay the part of Judge Cannon’s order that prevented investigators from using the classified documents for investigative purposes. The 11th very quickly agreed with DOJ and stayed that part of her order, which she then modified to remove. The 11th Circuit opinion was, to put it nicely, not kind to Judge Cannon’s legal reasoning in granting the stay in the first place.
DOJ has since appealed Judge Cannon’s special master order in its entirety, and is asking for an expedited hearing through the 11th circuit court- their argument is essentially that she had no business ordering it in the first place. The same legal reasoning that informed the 11th Circuit’s partial stay of her order should likely also prevail on appeal. Legally, it appears she was basically making shit up in granting herself authority, in the case at bar, to appoint a special master.
Notably, eight weeks after the search, Trump’s lawyers have still refused to assert in any court filing that any of the classified material was declassified. They have refused to assert in any court filing what he has alleged on social media, namely that the FBI planted documents. Trump has still refused to say why he retained over a hundred classified documents and thousands of government records that were not legally his to possess.
So two appeals are happening right now. The Department of Justice is appealing the district court special master appointment. That appeal is before the 11th Circuit Court of Appeals, who so far have sided with DOJ in ordering a stay. The new appeal, by Trump, to the Supreme Court is to vacate that stay. But even if he wins, the lower court judge already amended her order anyway.
SCOTUS has given DOJ until next Tuesday to rely to this application motion. So, meanwhile, the use of the classified documents in the criminal investigation continues unhindered.
It’s a silly, interwoven legal mess that has at its core the effort by Trump to delay and obstruct a criminal investigation. None of the ongoing matters ultimately speak to the actual criminal offences alleged, and none should accomplish anything greater than delaying use of evidence by DOJ. None of the matters currently being considered have the power to quash the criminal investigation, nor are they challenging the actual validity of the Mar-a-Lago search warrant.