Federal officials have asked a court to throw out a case against Peter Navarro, an adviser to President Donald Trump.
The one-page filing did not outline why the parties are asking the court to dismiss the case.
The Department of Justice declined to comment. An inquiry to one of Navarro’s attorneys was not returned.
U.S. Magistrate Judge G. Michael Harvey, after the notice was filed, canceled a status conference that had been scheduled for June 4.
Navarro advised Trump on trade and the COVID-19 pandemic response during the president’s first term and currently serves as a White House counselor for trade and manufacturing.
In the lawsuit, the government said that Navarro used at least one non-official email account, hosted by Proton Mail, to send and receive messages while he was advising the president from 2017 through 2021.
After Trump left office, the National Archives and Records Administration, which gathers presidential records, tried to contact Navarro to secure the emails, but Navarro did not respond, according to the government.
“Mr. Navarro has refused to return any Presidential records that he retained absent a grant of immunity for the act of returning such documents,” it reads.
The Department of Justice asked the court to compel Navarro to hand over the records.
Harvey reviewed a sample of the emails and said that some were presidential records, while some were not.
In a separate case, Navarro was charged and convicted of contempt of Congress for declining to cooperate with a U.S. House of Representatives panel investigating the Jan. 6, 2021, breach of the U.S. Capitol.
He served four months in prison and was released in July 2024.





