Federal prosecutors told U.S. District Judge Aileen Cannon in the filing that a so-called Privilege Review Team, which is reviewing some of the documents seized from the former president to identify those that may contain privileged information, found “a limited set of materials that may contain privileged attorney-client information.” The team has completed its review of the materials, the filing said. The group is also in the process of following through on procedures outlined in an affidavit detailing the justification for the FBI’s investigation of Mar-a-Lago this month to “address potential privilege differences, if any,” Juan Antonio Gonzalez wrote , the U.S. attorney in Miami, and Jay Bratt, the top counterintelligence official at the Justice Department. The Justice Department and the Office of the Director of National Intelligence (ODNI) are also undertaking a declassification of materials recovered by the FBI from Mar-a-Lago, they said. “As the Director of National Intelligence has informed Congress, ODNI is also leading an intelligence community assessment of the potential risk to national security that would result from disclosure of these materials,” Gonzalez and Bratt told the court. A federal judge on Friday unsealed a redacted version of the 38-page affidavit used to justify a search warrant executed by the FBI at the former president’s Florida home. The FBI said the National Archives and Records Administration determined that 15 boxes recovered from the property in January contained “highly classified documents mixed in with other records.” Within the 15 boxes given to the National Archives, 184 documents had classification markings, including 67 marked “confidential,” 92 marked “secret” and 25 “top secret,” the FBI said in its affidavit. Agents who conducted a preliminary examination of the boxes in mid-May also found that some of the documents were marked “HCS,” or HUMINT Control System, which the affidavit says is “designed to protect intelligence information originating from undercover human sources”. Trump has criticized the FBI’s Mar-a-Lago investigation, arguing without evidence that it is a politically motivated attack by the Justice Department ahead of a potential 2024 presidential campaign. Trump also claimed that some of the documents obtained by the FBI are covered by attorney-client privilege and asked Cannon last week to appoint a “special master” to review the records seized from Mar-a-Lago. In a preliminary order issued Saturday, Cannon said it is her “preliminary intention to appoint a special master” in response to Trump’s request, though her decision is not yet final. He also set a Tuesday deadline for the Justice Department to provide a more detailed description of the property seized by the FBI from Trump’s Palm Beach residence.