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Legal experts say that a Department of Justice (DOJ) filing in response to former President Donald Trump's request for the Supreme Court to intervene in the dispute over documents seized at Mar-a-Lago is "compelling" and "masterful."

Trump's lawyers filed an emergency request with the Supreme Court last week, urging them to allow special master Raymond Dearie to review the 100 documents recovered at his south Florida residence. The filing was in response to the 11th Circuit Court of Appeals ruling that allowed the DOJ to continue using the classified documents in a criminal investigation of the former president. Trump-appointed Judge Aileen Cannon had previously ruled that the documents would be off limits pending their review by Dearie.

The DOJ filed its response to Trump's request on Tuesday, the deadline that had been set by Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas, who is in charge of overseeing cases from the 11th Circuit. The brief from the DOJ urged the Supreme Court to reject Trump's request, arguing that the former president had not come close to showing he had been "irreparably injured" by the appeals court ruling and had demonstrated "no plausible claim of privilege or ownership" over the classified documents.

> Legal experts say that a Department of Justice (DOJ) filing in response to former President Donald Trump's request for the Supreme Court to intervene in the dispute over documents seized at Mar-a-Lago is "compelling" and "masterful." > Trump's lawyers filed an emergency request with the Supreme Court last week, urging them to allow special master Raymond Dearie to review the 100 documents recovered at his south Florida residence. The filing was in response to the 11th Circuit Court of Appeals ruling that allowed the DOJ to continue using the classified documents in a criminal investigation of the former president. Trump-appointed Judge Aileen Cannon had previously ruled that the documents would be off limits pending their review by Dearie. > The DOJ filed its response to Trump's request on Tuesday, the deadline that had been set by Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas, who is in charge of overseeing cases from the 11th Circuit. The brief from the DOJ urged the Supreme Court to reject Trump's request, arguing that the former president had not come close to showing he had been "irreparably injured" by the appeals court ruling and had demonstrated "no plausible claim of privilege or ownership" over the classified documents.

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[–] [deleted] 2 pts

Now continuing our class on the usage of grammar, let's look at a few examples of how to use the word, compel, in a sentence:

1) That fish taco compelled me to vomit.

2) Explosive diarrhea can compel one to sit on the toilet until the matter is finished.

and, my favorite,

3) A cadre of heavily-armed FBI agents raiding your premises and stealing materials is an attempt to compel compliance with their unconstitutional and illegal demands.

Personally, I find these examples rather compelling...