Lawyers for President Trump’s personal attorney Michael Cohen say they have finished their review of 4 millions files seized in an FBI raid and want just a fraction of them withheld from the feds.

Cohen’s lawyers Monday said they had examined files from 13 mobile devices, external hard drives, flash drives and laptops seized in the April raid on Cohen’s hotel room, residence and office. And out of the 4 million files seized, they said they are asking that just 12,061 files be kept from prosecutors because they might be protected by attorney-client privilege.

A court-appointed special master will make the final call.

The feds’ ability to review the documents themselves is on hold until the issue is resolved.

Court-appointed special master Barbara Jones has already designated 168 documents off limits to the feds based on an initial review of 300,000 files. Seven of those files were deemed highly personal, and the rest were related to attorney-client communications, although they were mostly communications between Cohen and his outside lawyers, the judge has said.

Cohen’s lawyers are also asking that devices seized from Cohen’s daughter, son and wife also be “excluded from review, as there is no just purpose for the government to be rummaging through Mr. Cohen’s family’s devices.”

The feds are investigating Cohen for, among other things, his $130,000 payment to porn star Stormy Daniels to allegedly keep her quiet about her affair with Trump before he was elected.