By ERIC TUCKER
WASHINGTON (AP) — The Justice Division on Tuesday challenged a court docket order that sophisticated efforts to hunt a brand new indictment in opposition to former FBI Director James Comey by making a trove of proof off-limits to prosecutors.
An order issued over the weekend by a federal decide in Washington barred the Justice Division a minimum of quickly from accessing laptop recordsdata belonging to Daniel Richman, an in depth Comey pal and Columbia College regulation professor who prosecutors see as a central participant in any potential case in opposition to the previous FBI director.
Prosecutors moved Tuesday to quash that order, calling Richman’s request for the return of his recordsdata a “strategic instrument to impede the investigation and potential prosecution.” They stated the decide had overstepped her bounds by ordering Richman’s property returned to him and stated the ruling had impeded their potential to proceed with a case in opposition to Comey.
The Justice Division alleges that Comey used Richman to share data with the information media about his decision-making throughout the FBI’s investigation into Hillary Clinton’s use of a non-public e-mail server. Prosecutors charged the previous FBI director in September with mendacity to Congress by denying that he had approved an affiliate to function an nameless supply for the media.
That indictment was dismissed final month after a federal decide in Virginia dominated that the prosecutor who introduced the case, Lindsey Halligan, was unlawfully appointed by the Trump administration. However the ruling left open the chance that the federal government may attempt once more to hunt expenses in opposition to Comey, a longtime foe of President Donald Trump. Comey has pleaded not responsible, denied having made a false assertion and accused the Justice Division of a vindictive prosecution.
After the case was thrown out, Richman filed a movement that sought the return of his laptop data, which the Justice Division obtained via search warrants in 2019 and 2020 as a part of a media leak investigation that was later closed with out expenses.
Richman and his attorneys say that even after that investigation ended, the Justice Division continued for years to carry onto all of the supplies it had collected from Richman’s laptop, e-mail and iCloud accounts regardless of these recordsdata containing a “vital quantum of privileged data.”
Justice Division officers searched the recordsdata this yr for communications between Comey and Richman that may very well be used to construct a case in opposition to Comey. However Richman and his attorneys say prosecutors carried out new, warrantless searches that went past the scope of the warrants and retained his recordsdata for years with none respectable objective.
U.S. District Decide Colleen Kollar-Kotelly sided with Richman’s attorneys and issued a short lived restraining order that required the Justice Division to return the recordsdata and to now not entry them. The Justice Division challenged that order ruling, calling Richman’s request for his supplies “a clear effort to suppress proof within the Comey matter.”
Prosecutors stated Richman’s movement had “successfully enjoined the federal government from investigating and probably prosecuting Comey.
“However federal courts can’t enjoin federal legal prosecutions; a civil plaintiff can’t circumvent bedrock federal legal process by way of an equitable continuing like this one,” they stated. “So the Court docket ought to dissolve its momentary restraining order and deny Petitioner’s movement.”
In response to the Justice Division’s objections, Kollar-Kotelly didn’t instantly raise her order however did permit for additional filings from either side. She signaled her place that Richman ought to be given an opportunity to evaluation the supplies and assert any attorney-client privilege claims he thinks are vital.
