Thousands of records seized by the FBI from former President Donald Trump’s Florida home can be reviewed on time by a neutral third party if roughly 500 documents are processed each business day, the Justice Department said in a court filing.

A third-party vendor should be hired to scan and upload the documents to a secure and customizable database in the presence of FBI agents, the DOJ said in a proposal filed Monday in federal court in Brooklyn. The vendor can then release the documents on a rolling basis to Trump’s lawyers for their review, the government said.

The Justice Department made the suggestion to New York federal judge Raymond Dearie, who was selected as the “special master” to oversee the review and issue recommendations on disputes over privilege. Dearie will oversee a hearing in the matter today.

“The vast majority of documents should be easy to categorize as presidential or personal records,” the DOJ said in the filing.

The review process requires Trump to categorize the seized materials as presidential records or personal records, assert any privileges that the former president believes apply, and record those positions document-by-document in logs.

“For its part, the government is to review plaintiff’s position and agree or disagree,” DOJ said. “Any disagreements are to be submitted to the special master for a report and recommendation to Judge Cannon.”

U.S. District Judge Aileen Cannon issued an order late Thursday appointing Dearie as special master.