Monday, I blogged the government’s argument against unsealing the affidavit, and said I’d blog the reply to it when it was filed; here is the bulk of the principal reply:
The government and the Media Intervenors agree that the public has a “clear and powerful interest” in understanding the unprecedented investigation into former President Donald J. Trump’s handling of classified records. They also agree that the common-law right of access applies to the search warrant materials currently under seal. They further agree that the law required release of the search warrant and property receipt, which the Court has now done, and that the cover sheets for the search warrant application, the government’s motion to seal, and the Court’s sealing order should be unsealed immediately as well, all with only minor redactions. And they agree that the government may be able to make a sufficient showing of a compelling interest authorizing it to maintain under seal some details of the investigation while it remains ongoing.
The government, however, has taken the position that the affidavit of probable cause must remain under seal in its entirety, despite the presumption of access, with little explanation as to how release would harm the ongoing investigation, and even though many details of the investigation are already public. In the government’s view, the necessary redactions “would be so extensive as to render the document devoid of content that would meaningfully enhance the public’s understanding of these events.” This runs counter to the presumption of public access, which requires the disclosure of as much information as possible. The affidavit of probable cause should be released to the public, with only those redactions that are necessary to protect a compelling interest articulated by the government.
THE PUBLIC’S “CLEAR AND POWERFUL INTEREST” IN THE SEARCH WARRANT RECORDS EXTENDS TO THE AFFIDAVIT OF PROBABLE CAUSE.
As Attorney General Merrick Garland aptly wrote when he was Chief Judge of the D.C. Circuit:
The common-law right of public access to judicial records is a fundamental element of the rule of law, important to maintaining the integrity and legitimacy of an independent Judicial Branch. At bottom, it reflects the antipathy of a democratic country to the notion of ‘secret law,’ inaccessible to those who are governed by that law.”
Leopold v. United States (D.C. Cir. 2020) (citation omitted); see also MetLife, Inc. v. Fin. Stability Oversight Council (D.C. Cir. 2017) (Garland, J.) (right of access “serves to produce an informed and enlightened public opinion,” to “safeguard against any attempt to employ our courts as instruments of persecution, to promote the search for truth, and to assure confidence in judicial remedies” (internal marks omitted)).
Separately, as the government notes, there is a First Amendment right of access to certain criminal proceedings. While the Eleventh Circuit has not considered whether the First Amendment right of access attaches to search warrant materials, the Eighth Circuit has recognized a First Amendment right, as has at least one court within this District. Although some courts have reached different conclusions, the Eighth Circuit’s view is more consistent with Supreme Court precedent.
Consistent with the presumption of access, the Department of Justice, under the Attorney General’s leadership, has joined the Media Intervenors in recognizing that the public has a “clear and powerful interest in understanding what occurred in” the search of Trump’s Mar-a-Lago residence, which “weighs heavily in favor of unsealing.” In recognition of that public interest, this Court acted promptly and diligently to ensure public access to redacted versions of the search warrant and property receipt.
That same public interest extends to the affidavit of probable cause in this matter, which outlines the government’s basis for the extraordinary step of seeking the warrant to search a former President’s home. See In re Four Search Warrants (N.D. Ga. 1996) (recognizing “the public’s right to understand the legal process, the preservation of the integrity of the fact-finding process, and the furtherance of the appearance of fairness” as interests favoring unsealing of search warrants). The unsealed search warrant and property receipt revealed that Trump is under investigation for potentially violating the Espionage Act, mishandling top secret documents, and obstruction of justice. In these circumstances, it is not merely a recitation of hornbook law to say that the public has a right to learn as much as possible, and as soon as possible, about this “historically significant event,” including the details of the investigation. Newman v. Graddick (11th Cir. 1983); see also Globe Newspaper Co. v. Super. Ct. (1982) (right of access “ensure[s] that th[e] constitutionally protected discussion of governmental affairs is an informed one” (internal marks omitted)). Notably, the former President has made no objection to the release of any warrant materials, and in fact has … call[ed] for “the immediate release of the completely Unredacted Affidavit” on social media.
The government has told the Court, in arguing to keep the affidavit under seal, that if it were to release the document, certain unspecified redactions would be “necessary to mitigate harms to the integrity of the investigation.” While the government characterizes those necessary redactions as “extensive” in making this argument, it admits that some portions of the document, if released, would not harm the investigation. Yet the government thus far appears to have made no effort to identify the particular portions of the affidavit that it believes pose a risk and explain the basis for that belief, instead asserting that the Court is already “familiar with the highly sensitive contents of the affidavit and the specific harms that would result from its unsealing.” To overcome the presumption of access, this Court must make findings of fact on the record supporting closure. See, e.g., Press-Enterprise Co. (“The interest is to be articulated along with findings specific enough that a reviewing court can determine whether the closure order was properly entered.”). The government has offered the Court little assistance in this regard, given the high level of abstraction in its response.
Any proposed redactions must be narrow, the government must explain to the Court why each redaction is necessary “to mitigate harms to the integrity of the investigation,” and only those redactions determined to meet a compelling need articulated by the government after the Court conducts an in camera review can be justified. The Media Intervenors request the opportunity to be further heard by the Court should they wish to challenge any redactions in the affidavit as publicly filed.
[I.] THERE IS NO COMPELLING INTEREST IN CONTINUED SEALING OF INFORMATION ALREADY PUBLICLY DISCLOSED.
As the government also recognized in its Motion to Unseal Limited Warrant Materials, the interest in maintaining secrecy is greatly diminished once the information contained in a judicial record has already been disclosed to the public through other sources. The government rightfully noted that the law required unsealing the warrant and property receipt because “the occurrence of the search and indications of the subject matter involved [were] already public.”
Indeed, the press has already widely reported significant details about the events leading up to the search and the investigation, including that:
- Some of the materials sought in the Mar-a-Lago search related to nuclear weapons and/or “special access programs”;
- The National Archives referred the matter to the Justice Department after it retrieved 15 boxes of materials from Mar-a-Lago in January7;
- Some of the materials recovered by the National Archives were classified, including signals intelligence;
- Some of the recovered materials were torn up and needed to be taped back together;
- The Department of Justice launched an investigation and convened a grand jury;
- This spring, the Department of Justice served a subpoena on Trump seeking additional classified materials in his possession;
- Department of Justice officials, including Jay Bratt, the department’s chief of counterintelligence and export control, met at Mar-a-Lago in June with Trump attorneys Christina Bobb and Evan Corcoran;
- During the June meeting, Trump briefly stopped by but did not answer any questions;
- Also during the June visit, the group toured storage facilities at Mar-a-Lago and reviewed some materials there;
- Bratt subsequently sent an email to Corcoran instructing him to further secure the area where the documents were kept;
- One of Trump’s attorneys signed a letter to the Department of Justice stating that all materials marked as classified and held in storage at Mar-a-Lago had been turned over;
- The Department of Justice also subpoenaed surveillance footage from Mar-a- Lago, which showed that boxes were moved in and out the storage room where the records at issue were kept; and
- Justice Department officials interviewed many current and former Trump employees, at least one of whom indicated there may have been additional classified materials remaining at Mar-a-Lago.
To the extent that the affidavit of probable cause contains any of this information, or other details about the investigation already reported in the press, there is no compelling interest in maintaining it under seal. Instead, those portions of the affidavit should be made public even if the Court finds a compelling interest to maintain other discrete portions under seal. See In re Four Search Warrants (releasing redacted search warrant affidavits where “much of the information” they contained had “already been made widely available to the public” through news reports).
The government’s position that any redactions would “render the document devoid of content that would meaningfully enhance the public’s understanding of these events beyond the information already now in the public record,” turns the presumption of public access to judicial records on its head. The public is entitled to review judicial records unless there is a compelling interest to deny access, not if there is a sufficient reason to grant access to a redacted record, as the government has suggested. And it is the public itself, not the government, that should have the opportunity to determine whether the information available enhances its understanding of this historic event.
The media intervenors did, however, agree with the government’s request for “the temporary continued sealing of the … names [of additional prosecutors referenced in those documents] at this time.”
The post Media Intervenors' Argument Supporting Unsealing Mar-A-Lago Search Warrant Affidavit appeared first on Reason.com.
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