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  1. #1076
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    ^ For the orange douche, its all about fundraising.

  2. #1077
    Days Work Done! Norton's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Topper View Post
    ^ For the orange douche, its all about fundraising.
    Unfortunately not just Trump. American political campaigners with the most money win.
    No money, no honey.

  3. #1078
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    Quote Originally Posted by harrybarracuda View Post
    I guess you haven't been watching what's going on in Texas then.

    Most people don't give a flying fuck what he thinks any more, and it shows.

    You only have to look at how the candidates he endorsed in the mid terms did.
    Yet he still leads the Rep. presidential field by a country mile

  4. #1079
    Guest Member S Landreth's Avatar
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    he is so fvcked




    Federal prosecutors have a 2021 audio recording of former President Donald Trump acknowledging he kept a classified Pentagon document about a possible attack on Iran after leaving the White House, CNN reported on Wednesday.

    CNN did not listen to the recording but cited unidentified multiple sources describing it. Reuters was not able to confirm the report.

    The recording shows Trump, who is seeking the 2024 Republican presidential nomination, understood he retained classified material after he left the White House in 2021, according to the cable television network.

    Trump’s remarks indicated he would like to share the information but was aware of the limitations on his ability to declassify documents after leaving office, two sources told CNN.

    Trump has denied wrongdoing. A Trump representative would not comment on the report of the recording or on the specific remarks attributed to Trump and called the investigation politically motivated.

    "Leaks from radical partisans behind this political persecution are designed to inflame tensions and continue the media’s harassment of President Trump and his supporters," Trump spokesperson Steven Cheung said on Wednesday.

    Peter Carr, the spokesperson for Special Counsel Jack Smith's office at the Justice Department, declined to comment.

    The Justice Department is investigating whether Trump broke the law by retaining U.S. government records, some marked as top secret, after leaving office in January 2021.

    In August, the department disclosed that it was investigating Trump for removing White House records because it believed he illegally held documents including some involving intelligence-gathering and clandestine human sources - among America's most closely held secrets.

    Smith's probe includes whether Trump or his associates obstructed the Justice Department's probe into his retention of thousands of government records, about 300 of which were marked classified.

    The special counsel is also investigating efforts to overturn Trump's 2020 election loss that culminated in the deadly Jan. 6, 2021, attack on the U.S. Capitol.

    _________




    The US special counsel investigating Donald Trump’s attempt to overturn his 2020 election defeat is examining his firing of a cybersecurity official whose office said the vote was secure, the New York Times said.

    Jack Smith, who is also investigating Trump’s handling of classified documents, has subpoenaed former Trump White House staffers as well as Christopher Krebs, who oversaw the Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency (Cisa) under Trump, the Times said, citing unnamed sources.

    Trump fired Krebs in November 2020, days after Cisa issued a statement calling the 3 November election “the most secure in American history”, as the then-president made his unsupported accusations that the vote was rigged.

    Cisa, part of the Department of Homeland Security, works to protect US elections. Krebs told associates at the time he expected to be fired.

    Representatives for Smith declined to comment on the New York Times report. Representatives for Krebs and Trump could not be reached for comment.

    The frontrunner in the race for the Republican presidential nomination in 2024, Trump has persisted in making unfounded claims of widespread election fraud and promised pardons for supporters who attacked the US Capitol on 6 January 2021, in a failed effort to block certification of Joe Biden’s victory.

    Smith is leading a grand jury investigation into Trump’s actions. A special bipartisan House committee last year urged the Department of Justice to charge Trump with crimes including inciting or aiding an insurrection.

    In Georgia, a county prosecutor is investigating alleged interference in the 2020 election, with charging decisions expected by 1 September.

    Trump faces several other legal threats, including Smith’s investigation of classified documents found at Trump’s residence in Florida after he left the White House.

    In March, a New York grand jury indicted Trump for falsifying business records related to a hush money payment to a porn star before the 2016 election. The New York attorney general has sued Trump and his company for alleged fraud. In a civil trial in New York, Trump was found liable for sexual assault and defamation, relating to an allegation of rape.

    Trump denies all allegations and accuses prosecutors of a political “witch-hunt”.

    Special counsel subpoenas Trump White House staffers over Krebs firing
    Keep your friends close and your enemies closer.

  5. #1080
    Guest Member S Landreth's Avatar
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    Extra

    Donald Trump's Scottish golf course Turnberry 'is BLACKLISTED from hosting The Open

    Donald Trump's Scottish golf course Turnberry 'is BLACKLISTED from hosting The Open until he sells up' with organisers worried about protests becoming a distraction

    Donald Trump's Turnberry golf course in Scotland will be barred from hosting The Open until the former President sells his resort, according to reports.

    The 45th President bought the golf course in 2014, five years after the last time it staged the storied competition, and is keen to see the tournament return to the Ayrshire venue.

    Speaking on GB News in early May whilst visiting the course, Trump claimed that 'everybody wants to see the Open championship here,' adding that only a few 'minor adjustments' would have to be made to ready the course.

    Per the Telegraph, the tournament's organising body the R&A are adamant that Turnberry remains out of contention as a host.

    The would-be 2024 presidential candidate is believed to have been told that his course would not be considered for the honour after the attack on the Capitol in January 2021, due to the perceived threat of potential protests at the event.

    A source inside the company stressed that the position was 'unchanged', adding: 'We have no plans to stage any of our championships there in the foreseeable future and will not return until we are convinced that the focus will be on the championship, the players, and the course itself'.

    Another added: 'The way it looks now, he would have to sell up before anything changes'.

  6. #1081
    Guest Member S Landreth's Avatar
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    Former Trump administration White House lawyer Ty Cobb said late Wednesday that an audio recording that reportedly reveals former President Trump discussing a classified document he took from the White House “eviscerates” Trump’s defense in the Justice Department’s (DOJ) classified documents probe.

    Cobb said in an interview with CNN’s Erin Burnett that the recording undermines Trump’s previous arguments that he could declassify documents just by taking them out of the White House or that he could declassify them simply by thinking about it.

    “It further enhances the obstruction case because it eviscerates the two defenses that Trump has put forward,” Cobb said.

    CNN reported earlier Wednesday that the DOJ had obtained the recording of Trump discussing the document — which refers to a potential U.S. attack on Iran — during a meeting at his golf club in Bedminster, N.J., in July 2021.

    Trump and his allies have defended his actions over the classified and sensitive documents that were taken out of the White House to locations such as his Mar-a-Lago estate in Palm Beach, Fla., by arguing that he declassified the documents.

    Cobb said on CNN that Trump’s arguments are “out the door” because he acknowledged on the tape that he knew there were restraints on what he could do with the documents.

    Cobb said the recording could also place additional pressure on special counsel Jack Smith to tie the potential obstruction of justice case to Trump’s possession and use of the documents. But he said Smith would not have to take on the “burden” of a case on classified documents along with one on obstruction, because he already has access to the evidence on Trump’s possession of the documents.

    Pursuing cases on obstruction and possession would slow down the proceedings, Cobb added, something Smith does not appear to want to do.

    “I think Trump and his own team believe this is going to come quickly,” Cobb said, referring to a potential indictment.

    Smith has been investigating Trump’s roles in the documents taken from the White House along with the Jan. 6, 2021, insurrection and efforts to overturn the results of the 2020 presidential election.

  7. #1082
    Guest Member S Landreth's Avatar
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    the Republican 2024 presidential front runner




    Dual revelations about Jack Smith’s probe into the mishandling of records at Mar-a-Lago suggest the special counsel’s probe into former President Trump is advancing on several fronts, bolstering the case against him.

    Reporting from CNN this week indicates authorities have a recording of Trump discussing his inability to share the contents of a classified document he retained — undercutting his long-standing claim he declassified the records in his possession.

    The special counsel is also seeking more information about the movement of boxes at the Mar-a-Lago carried out by two Trump employees, The Washington Post reported, while Trump attorney Evan Corcoran was waived off from searching certain portions of Trump’s Florida home following a subpoena, according to The Guardian.

    Collectively, the reporting suggests the special counsel is buttressing Espionage Act charges over the episode and still building an obstruction of justice case over the ensuing saga to secure the return of the records.

    The week was capped with a report from lawyers and former prosecutors who concluded, based on public reporting, that the DOJ has enough evidence in the case to merit charging Trump directly.

    “The Department’s own precedent makes clear that charging Trump would be to treat him comparably to others who engaged in similar criminal behavior, often with far fewer aggravating factors than the former president. Based on the publicly available information to date, a powerful case exists for charging Trump,” the group wrote in a model prosecution memo published by Just Security.

    “We conclude that Trump should — and likely will — be charged.”

    The tapes, which have not been directly reviewed by any outlet and only described by sources familiar, capture Trump in summer 2021 discussing a classified document reviewing options for launching a possible attack on Iran.

    In a short segment of a longer discussion, taped in preparation for a book on Trump’s chief of staff, Mark Meadows, Trump apparently suggests he would like to show them the document but can’t, given constraints on his ability to declassify documents after leaving office.

    The tape is significant on two counts. It undercuts Trump’s ongoing claim that he declassified the records found at his home, something he at one point claimed a president could do simply by thinking about it.

    But it also shows Trump’s awareness of the rules and processes surrounding the classification process ahead of the special counsel’s investigation, a key detail for prosecutors who would need to successfully demonstrate the former president willfully retained the records.

    “The tape recording is most probative of Trump’s mental state. It shows that he knew the documents remained classified and shouldn’t be shared with others, which further undercuts any potential argument that he secretly declassified them,” Brian Greer, a former CIA attorney, told The Hill.

    “It also makes it much easier to demonstrate that Trump’s retention of the documents was willful, a key element of an Espionage Act charge.”

    Jim Trusty, an attorney for Trump, wouldn’t comment on whether the document in question was classified — saying during an appearance on CNN that Trump has “unfettered authority” to both declassify and personalize records from his presidency.

    Trump, in a Thursday night interview with Fox’s Sean Hannity, also defended his actions without getting into specifics.

    “All I know is this — everything I did was right. We have the Presidential Records Act, which I abided by a hundred percent,” Trump said.

    Prosecution under the Espionage Act doesn’t require that information be classified, just that it deals with information important to the national defense. Plans for responding to Iran would likely qualify.

    Part of the power of the tape is it allows prosecutors to hear in Trump’s voice his awareness of the rules surrounding the handling of sensitive information.

    “If it is accurate as reported, I do think it’s very powerful evidence. One, it proves Donald Trump’s knowledge about the law regarding the handling of classified information. Unlike most laws, where ignorance of the law is no excuse, there are some exceptions to that law and one of them is handling classified information. You do have to know that it’s illegal when you violate that law,” said Barbara McQuade, a former U.S. attorney.

    “Having Trump on tape talking about, ‘I wish I could talk about this, but I can’t because it’s classified and I should have declassified it before I left,’ — that’s pretty good evidence of his knowledge.”

    Other developments in the case show the DOJ continues to actively pursue evidence that could lead to an obstruction of justice charge.

    Justice Department officials recently questioned a second Trump aide who was seen on camera helping Trump’s valet, Walt Nauta, in moving boxes at Mar-a-Lago, including the day before DOJ officials came to collect classified material in June following a subpoena.

    They’ve since asked additional questions about actions taken in July, when the DOJ issued a subpoena for video camera footage at Mar-a-Lago. That tape has been reported to have gaps, and the Justice Department recently spoke with two Trump Organization security officials about the matter.

    In the warrant to search Mar-a-Lago, authorities said they had evidence of “obstructive conduct” and said that items “were likely concealed and removed from the storage room.”

    Prosecutors also have at their disposal detailed notes from Corcoran, who removed himself from the Mar-a-Lago case after a judge pierced attorney-client privilege in the matter after determining that Trump may have misled him.

    Judges have the power to strip the privilege if they believe legal advice has been used in furtherance of a crime.

    Corcoran reportedly told authorities he was waved off of searching Trump’s office, where numerous classified records were found during the execution of the search warrant, and he said he was told any classified records would be found in the storage room with the records from Trump’s presidency. It’s unclear who waved him off.

    Corcoran turned over 38 classified records in June in response to the subpoena, while the FBI found a little more than 100 more during their August search.

    McQuade said building the case will involve painting a picture for jurors breaking down the timeline of moving the boxes and other actions taken amid various DOJ and Archives entreaties seeking the return of the documents.

    “You do have to find statements and actions from which you can argue to a jury that we can infer the person’s intent,” she said, offering the example, “‘This was not an innocent movement of boxes. When they returned a small envelope and it actually turned out that they had 26 boxes, now that was not an oversight. When Corcoran was waved away from Trump’s office, that was not an innocent mistake.’”

    “You know, if you can pile up enough of those at some point … the evidence becomes so overwhelming.”

    __________





    Lawyers for Donald Trump asked a Manhattan judge to recuse himself from presiding over the criminal case against the former president, arguing in a court filing that the judge is biased and has a conflict of interest.

    In papers dated May 31 and filed publicly Friday, Trump’s lawyers said the judge, Juan Merchan, has an “actual or perceived conflict of interest” because his daughter works for a digital agency, Authentic, whose clients include a number of Democratic officials.

    The lawyers also said Merchan displayed a “preconceived bias” by urging Allen Weisselberg, the Trump Organization’s former chief financial officer, to cooperate against Trump in an earlier case. Weisselberg pleaded guilty to tax fraud last year after he was indicted alongside the Trump Organization. The company was found guilty at a trial overseen by Merchan.

    Susan Necheles, a lawyer who represented the company at trial and is now on Trump’s defense team for his criminal case, said in a court filing that Weisselberg’s lawyer told her that Merchan had encouraged Weisselberg to cooperate with prosecutors.

    Trump’s lawyers also asked that Merchan publicly explain political contributions in his name. During the 2020 presidential campaign, Merchan made three political contributions through ActBlue, according to Federal Election Commission records. He gave $15 to President Joe Biden’s campaign, $10 to the Progressive Turnout Project and $10 to Stop Republicans, records show.

    “This case before this Court is historic and it is important that the People of the State of New York and this nation have confidence that the jurist who presides over it is impartial. Most respectfully, the foregoing facts compel the conclusion that Your Honor is not and thus should recuse,” Trump lawyers Necheles and Todd Blanche wrote in the filing.

    A trial in the case is scheduled for next March.

    A court representative declined to comment, saying the matter was pending before the judge. A spokesperson for the Manhattan district attorney’s office said prosecutors would respond in court papers.

    Trump pleaded not guilty in April to 34 counts of falsifying business records in connection with an alleged scheme during the 2016 presidential campaign to pay hush money to cover up allegations of extramarital affairs. The indictment, brought by Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg, made Trump the first former president ever to face criminal charges.

  8. #1083
    Guest Member S Landreth's Avatar
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    • Grand jury in Trump classified document case to meet this week: report


    The federal grand jury in the Department of Justice’s (DOJ) probe of former President Trump’s classified document handling is expected to meet this week, according to a new report.

    NBC News, citing unidentified sources, reported that the grand jury will meet in Washington, D.C., though it’s unclear whether prosecutors are ready to seek a possible indictment.

    The grand jury has reportedly been hearing evidence from special counsel Jack Smith, who is leading the probe into whether Trump mishandled classified materials.

    Investigators are reportedly looking at whether Trump improperly kept classified documents after he left the Oval Office, and whether he failed or refused to comply with government requests for certain records to be turned over to the National Archives. Last summer, the FBI executed a search warrant at Trump’s Mar-a-Lago estate in Florida and found a trove of classified materials.

    Smith’s investigation has recently shown signs of ramping up. The New York Times reported last month that the DOJ had found an “insider witness” and CNN reported last week that prosecutors have a 2021 audio recording of Trump discussing a classified Pentagon document he took from the White House.

    The purported audio recording — in which Trump reportedly suggests that he shouldn’t show a document to two people working on an autobiography of his former chief of staff because they didn’t have security clearance — undercuts Trump’s claim that he had declassified materials in his possession.

    Trump has defended his actions, saying last week that “everything I did was right” and suggesting the case is a “witch hunt.”

  9. #1084
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    It's indictment season!

  10. #1085
    Guest Member S Landreth's Avatar
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    I like this headline......




    Former Watergate prosecutor Jill Wine-Banks said she thinks former President Trump is “toast” after prosecutors secured a tape recording of Trump discussing what seemed to be classified material on a potential military strike in Iran.

    “This evidence just adds to the mound of stuff that already exists, and no one piece is the ‘be all and end all,’ but when you put them all together, the case is so strong. You cannot imagine his getting away with this,” Wine-Banks said on MSNBC.

    “I’m wearing a toast pin today because I think he’s toast,” she added, gesturing to a pin on her blouse resembling a piece of toast.

    __________




    Former President Trump’s lawyers were spotted meeting with federal prosecutors Monday to discuss the Justice Department’s probe into his handling of White House documents after leaving office, according to multiple reports from Washington.

    Trump attorneys John Rowley, James Trusty and Lindsey Halligan were first spotted at the D.C. federal courthouse Monday morning by CBS News. Prosecutors appear to be nearing a charging decision in the case.

    The former president’s legal team late last month had requested a meeting with prosecutors, arguing that he is being “baselessly investigated in such an outrageous and unlawful fashion.”

    “We request a meeting at your earliest convenience to discuss the ongoing injustice that is being perpetrated by your Special Counsel and his prosecutors,” Rowley and Trusty wrote in a letter May 23.

  11. #1086
    Guest Member S Landreth's Avatar
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    Mark Meadows, the final White House chief of staff under President Donald J. Trump and a potentially key figure in inquiries related to Mr. Trump, has testified before a federal grand jury hearing evidence in the investigations being led by the special counsel’s office, according to two people briefed on the matter.

    Mr. Meadows is a figure in both of the two distinct lines of inquiry being pursued by the special counsel appointed to oversee the Justice Department’s scrutiny of Mr. Trump, Jack Smith.

    One inquiry is focused on Mr. Trump’s efforts to cling to power after losing the 2020 election, culminating in the attack by a pro-Trump mob on the Capitol during congressional certification of the Electoral College results on Jan. 6, 2021. The other is an investigation into Mr. Trump’s handling of hundreds of classified documents after he left office and whether he obstructed efforts to retrieve them.

    It is not clear precisely when Mr. Meadows testified or if investigators questioned him about one or both of the cases.

    For months, people in Mr. Trump’s orbit have been puzzled by and wary about the low profile kept by Mr. Meadows in the investigations. As reports surfaced of one witness after another going into the grand jury or to be interviewed by federal investigators, Mr. Meadows has kept largely out of sight, and some of Mr. Trump’s advisers believe he could be a significant witness in the inquiries.

    Mr. Trump himself has at times asked aides questions about how Mr. Meadows is doing, according to a person familiar with the remarks.

    Asked about the grand jury testimony, a lawyer for Mr. Meadows, George Terwilliger, said, “Without commenting on whether or not Mr. Meadows has testified before the grand jury or in any other proceeding, Mr. Meadows has maintained a commitment to tell the truth where he has a legal obligation to do so.”

    Mr. Meadows was a polarizing figure at the White House among some of Mr. Trump’s aides, who saw him as a loose gatekeeper at best during a final year in which the former president moved aggressively to mold the government in his image.

    Mr. Meadows was around for pivotal moments leading up to and after the 2020 election, as Mr. Trump plotted to try to stay in office and thwart Joseph R. Biden Jr. from being sworn in to succeed him. Some of them were described in hundreds of text messages that Mr. Meadows turned over to the House select committee that investigated the Jan. 6 attack at the Capitol before he decided to stop cooperating. Those texts served as a road map for House investigators.

    But Mr. Meadows also has insight into efforts by the National Archives to retrieve roughly two dozen boxes of presidential material that officials had been told Mr. Trump took with him when he left the White House in January 2021. Mr. Meadows was one of Mr. Trump’s representatives to the archives, and he had some role in trying to discuss the matter with Mr. Trump, according to two people briefed on the matter.

    Mr. Meadows is also now connected tangentially to a potentially vital piece of evidence that investigators uncovered in recent months: an audio recording of an interview that Mr. Trump gave to two people assisting Mr. Meadows in writing a memoir of his White House years.

    Mr. Meadows did not attend the meeting, which took place in July 2021 at Mr. Trump’s club at Bedminster, N.J. During the meeting, Mr. Trump referred to a document he appeared to have in front of him and suggested that he should have declassified it but that he no longer could, since he was out of office.

    That recording could undercut Mr. Trump’s claim that he believed he had declassified all material still held at his properties for months after he left office.

  12. #1087
    Guest Member S Landreth's Avatar
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    It will be a wonderful day for the rule of law




    The political world is bracing for the possibility of a federal indictment of former President Trump, the leading candidate for the Republican presidential election next year.

    A flurry of recent activity and posturing related to a special counsel probe into his handling of classified documents is fueling talk that an indictment could be imminent.

    Trump’s attorneys met Monday with Justice Department officials, including special counsel Jack Smith, who is probing whether Trump improperly handled classified documents after leaving office. A Florida grand jury is reportedly convening this week in the case after a lengthy hiatus.

    Democrats and Republicans went back and forth on Tuesday over a letter Rep. Jim Jordan (R-Ohio), a vocal Trump ally and chairman of the House Judiciary Committee, sent to Attorney General Merrick Garland to obtain more information about special counsel Jack Smith’s investigations into Trump.

    And a barrage of angry social media posts from Trump on Tuesday morning further fed into talk that the former president may be concerned about an impending announcement in the case.

    “I suspect it’s near,” former Attorney General Bill Barr said Tuesday on “CBS Mornings.” “I’ve said for a while that I think this is the most dangerous legal risk facing the former president. And if I had to bet, I would bet that it’s near.”

    The extraordinary activity is preceding what would be an extraordinary event — the federal indictment of a former president who is the front-runner for his party’s nomination in 2024. Trump in April was indicted at the state level over an alleged hush money scheme during the 2016 election.

    The Justice Department and a Trump spokesperson declined to comment on whether any announcement about the case is imminent.

    Multiple reports in late May indicated that Smith, who was appointed in November, finished obtaining evidence and testimony and was nearing the end of his investigation.

    Now, Washington is watching closely for Smith’s next move, particularly in the wake of a Monday meeting with Trump’s legal team.

    “There’s no purpose in having a meeting if the DOJ has already decided no charges. If they’ve already decided ‘no charges, we’re just going to write up a report’ then no meeting is necessary — no point to it,” said Tim Parlatore, who was part of Trump’s legal team on the Mar-a-Lago team until he left due to internal dynamics in May.

    “I​f they’re resolved that they are going to charge, then it’s worth having a meeting to see, you know, it’s kind of at last resort point. Before we get past the point of no return, is there something we’re forgetting? Something we’re missing?” Parlatore told The Hill.

    Parlatore, who has argued Trump should not be charged in connection with the matter, said he puts the odds that the DOJ will bring charges at 50-50, because “I am under no false impression that they only charge people when they should.”

    Experts indicated the meeting, which Smith was present for, was likely for Trump’s lawyers to express their disapproval with some aspect of the investigation.

    “That wouldn’t be uncommon, and typically that’s just sort of a rote complaint,” said Joyce Vance, a former federal prosecutor, on MSNBC. “But what you want to do if you’re a good prosecutor is hear the defense out and make sure you haven’t missed something, because your obligation as a prosecutor isn’t to indict cases, it’s to indict the right cases.

    “I suspect what we’ve seen today, however, means that there will be indictments forthcoming,” she added.

    Much more in the link




    _______




    In newly filed court papers, former President Donald Trump on Monday made a fresh push to get defamation claims against him dismissed by saying his denial that he raped author E. Jean Carroll was truthful – and a jury has already agreed with him.

    Trump was found liable of sexual abuse last month after claims by Carroll that he attacked her in a Manhattan department store dressing room in the mid-1990s. But the jury did not find him liable of rape.

    The New York Times reported Trump's latest court filing is in regards to another case Carroll had filed in 2019 – and which is still going through the courts – in which she accused Trump of defaming her after she publicly disclosed the alleged rape in a magazine article. Trump called her accusation “totally false,” and said he could not have raped her because she was not his “type."

    Based on a civil jury's verdict last month which awarded Carroll $5 million in damages after finding Trump liable for sexually abusing her and for defaming her when he called her case “a complete con job” and “a Hoax and a lie” last October, Trump's lawyers argued that Carroll's second defamation claim referring to the rape accusations should be thrown out.

    But, according to Carroll’s lawyer Roberta A. Kaplan, nothing about the verdict in the recent trial was inconsistent with Carroll’s claim.

    “The jury unanimously found that Donald Trump forcibly inserted his fingers into E. Jean Carroll’s vagina and then lied about it, defaming her when he said that he did not know who she was, had never met her at Bergdorf Goodman, and that she had made the whole thing up as part of a ‘con job’ or a ‘hoax,’” Kaplan said.

    “The jury believed E. Jean Carroll when she testified that Trump sexually abused her. As a result, the jury concluded that Trump knowingly lied about Ms. Carroll when he claimed otherwise," she added.

  13. #1088
    Guest Member S Landreth's Avatar
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    Andrew Feinberg - MORE: It is understood that Mr Trump's last White House chief of staff, @MarkMeadows, has agreed to plead guilty to several lesser federal crimes in exchange for his testimony under a limited grant of immunity. https://twitter.com/AndrewFeinberg/s...28698055512079

    _________

    Prosecutors prepared to ask grand jury to indict Trump in classified documents case

    The Department of Justice is preparing to ask a Washington, DC grand jury to indict former president Donald Trump for violating the Espionage Act and for obstruction of justice as soon as Thursday, adding further weight to the legal baggage facing Mr Trump as he campaigns for his party’s nomination in next year’s presidential election.

    The Independent has learned that prosecutors are ready to ask grand jurors to approve an indictment against Mr Trump for violating a portion of the US criminal code known as Section 793, which prohibits “gathering, transmitting or losing” any “information respecting the national defence”.

    This comes as Mr Trump’s former Chief of Staff Mark Meadows has reportedly agreed to plead guilty to several federal charges as part of a deal for which he has already received limited immunity in exchange for his testimony.

    __________

    edit:

    18 USC Ch. 37: ESPIONAGE AND CENSORSHIP:

    anyone who “lawfully having possession of, access to, control over, or being entrusted with any document ...relating to the national defense,” and “willfully communicates, delivers, transmits or causes to be communicated, delivered, or transmitted or attempts to communicate, deliver, transmit or cause to be communicated, delivered or transmitted the same to any person not entitled to receive it, or willfully retains the same and fails to deliver it on demand to the officer or employee of the United States entitled to receive it” is guilty.

    Shall be fined under this title or imprisoned not more than ten years, or both.
    Last edited by S Landreth; 08-06-2023 at 05:49 AM.

  14. #1089
    Thailand Expat harrybarracuda's Avatar
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    Oh just get on with it FFS.

    The Department of Justice is preparing to ask a Washington, DC grand jury to indict former president Donald Trump for violating the Espionage Act and for obstruction of justice as soon as Thursday, adding further weight to the legal baggage facing Mr Trump as he campaigns for his party’s nomination in next year’s presidential election.

    Prosecutors ready to ask for Trump indictment on obstruction and Espionage Act charges | The Independent

  15. #1090
    Guest Member S Landreth's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by S Landreth View Post
    as soon as Thursday, ......
    I don't think it'll be today

  16. #1091
    Guest Member S Landreth's Avatar
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    Venue change in Trump docs case

    Charges in Trump documents case could come from Florida grand jury

    Special Counsel Jack Smith has been calling witnesses to appear before a grand jury in Florida this week as part of the investigation into classified documents found at former President Trump‘s Mar-a-Lago home. Smith is thought to be nearing a decision on whether to bring charges.

    Florida is a venue change — Smith had called witnesses before a grand jury in D.C. for months — and one that could be significant.

    “The move is a sign Smith is weighing filing charges there [in Florida] in addition to or instead of D.C. as defendants have a right to face trial where the alleged crime took place,” The Hill’s Rebecca Beitsch wrote, adding that “a defendant can move to dismiss charges they believe haven’t been brought in the correct location.”

    Potential charges in the case include willful retention of documents and obstruction of justice charges related to efforts to keep the documents.

    Some of the activity prosecutors have looked into occurred in Florida.

  17. #1092
    Guest Member S Landreth's Avatar
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    Trump says he’s been indicted in classified documents probe

    Former President Donald Trump said Thursday that his legal team has been told he’s been indicted in an investigation into his handling of classified documents.

    Trump posted on Truth Social that he has been summoned to appear in federal court in Miami on Tuesday afternoon.

    DEVELOPING

    Jail for the rest of his short life



    ________

    Edit:

    Trump sends out fundraising email saying he's been indicted

    The former president sent out a fundraising email just after 7:30 p.m. ET announcing that he's been indicted.

    "We are watching our Republic DIE before our very eyes," the email said. "The Biden-appointed Special Counsel has INDICTED me in yet another witch hunt regarding documents that I had the RIGHT to declassify as President of the United States."

    It continued, "This witch hunt began when the FBI RAIDED my home and then staged it to look like a made-for-TV crime scene with police sirens and flashing red and blue lights."

    Trump said that it's "nothing but a disgusting act of Election Interference."

    He asked his supporters to "make a contribution to peacefully stand" with him.
    Last edited by S Landreth; 09-06-2023 at 06:54 AM.

  18. #1093
    Guest Member S Landreth's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by S Landreth View Post
    DEVELOPING
    continued....

    “I never thought it possible that such a thing could happen to a former President of the United States, who received far more votes than any sitting President in the History of our Country, and is currently leading, by far, all Candidates, both Democrat and Republican, in Polls of the 2024 Presidential Election. I AM AN INNOCENT MAN!” Trump wrote on the social media platform.

    “This is indeed a DARK DAY for the United States of America. We are a Country in serious and rapid Decline, but together we will Make America Great Again!” he added.

    Special counsel Jack Smith has been overseeing the investigation into Trump’s handling of classified documents since he was appointed to the role in November.

    Trump’s attorneys met earlier this week with Justice Department officials, including Smith. Experts widely viewed the meeting as a sign that Smith’s investigation was winding down.

    The National Archives spent months seeking the return of presidential records after Trump left office, with Trump’s team eventually turning over a tranche that included nearly 200 classified records.

    That ignited the Justice Department investigation that included a subpoena for records and eventually spurred the August 2022 search of the property, where the FBI found more than 100 more classified records. Trump’s team in June had turned over just 38 classified records when asked to hand over any remaining classified materials.

    The warrant the FBI secured to search the property indicated that they expected to find evidence to support violations of the Espionage Act and obstruction of justice, as well as another statute that bars the retention of government records.

    It’s not clear from Trump’s post what charges he has been indicted on.

    Still, the indictment is a historic one, the first-ever federal criminal charges brought against a former president. Trump was indicted on state charges in New York in a separate matter earlier this year.

    Trump has offered various defenses, including that he had the right to take the documents and that he could unilaterally declassify them without going through any formal process.

    Multiple outlets reported last week that prosecutors obtained audio of Trump in 2021 discussing a classified Pentagon document he still had in his position, and that he indicated there were restrictions on who could view it — a comment that could undercut his defense.

    The Espionage Act also only requires wrongfully retaining national defense information, meaning prosecution does not hang on a documents’ classification status.

    Trump has compared his handling of classified documents to President Biden ever since Biden aides discovered late last year and earlier this year sensitive classified materials from Biden’s time as vice president at an old Washington, D.C., office and his Delaware home.

    But Biden’s team notified Justice Department officials of the discovery and are cooperating with an ongoing special counsel review of Biden’s handling of classified materials.

    The indictment is likely to loom over Trump’s 2024 campaign for the White House, but the former president and his team wasted little time on Thursday seeking to rally support.

    Trump’s campaign sent out a fundraising email shortly after he announced he was charged looking to raise funds off of the news.

    _________




    The twice-impeached former president is being prosecuted for retaining national security documents at his Mar-a-Lago resort

    Federal prosecutors have charged Donald Trump after investigating his retention of national security documents, according to a person familiar with the matter, a historic development that poses the most significant legal peril yet for the former US president who is running for the White House again.

    The former president was indicted on charges of wilful retention of national security material, obstruction and conspiracy, the person said. Trump and his legal team were told of the charges on Thursday afternoon.

    For more than a year, prosecutors have examined whether Trump knowingly retained classified documents at his Mar-a-Lago resort in Florida after he left office and took steps to conceal the materials after the justice department issued a subpoena for their return.

    Criminal charges against Trump in the Mar-a-Lago documents investigation means the former president is now a defendant in a second case after he was indicted on state charges in New York by the Manhattan district attorney over his role in hush-money payments to an adult film star in 2016.

    The indictment by the special counsel Jack Smith, appointed by the US attorney general, Merrick Garland, to lead the documents investigation, also means the country must grapple with the unprecedented situation of a twice-impeached, twice-charged former president running for re-election.

    The news comes after activity in the investigation recently shifted to the Wilkie Ferguson US courthouse in Miami, after prosecutors subpoenaed multiple witnesses to appear before a previously unknown grand jury taking evidence in the case in Florida, the Guardian has reported.

    Most of the grand jury activity until May had focused on the grand jury hearing evidence in the case in Washington. But that grand jury went quiet at the start of the month, around the same time that the Florida grand jury was impaneled, a person familiar with the situation said.

    The investigation has broadly been focused on three statutes under title 18 of the US code, according to the FBI’s search warrant affidavit for Mar-a-Lago: wilful retention of national defense information, obstruction of justice and the retention of government documents.

    The espionage investigation has been focused on whether Trump showed off national security materials in his office at Mar-a-Lago, and has questioned multiple witnesses about whether Trump waved around classified documents he had kept when no longer authorized to after he left office.

    Prosecutors have also asked witnesses about documents concerning potential US military action against Iran, after Trump referenced such a document in a meeting at Bedminster in July 2021 where he said he could not show a certain document because he did not declassify it when president.

    To that end, prosecutors have showed an Iran document to some witnesses who appeared before the Washington grand jury and asked whether they had ever seen the material by Trump or anyone else. It was not clear whether any witness confirmed seeing the document, one of the people said.

    The investigation into the obstruction, meanwhile, has focused on whether the failure by Trump to fully comply with the subpoena last year was a deliberate act of obstruction because he wanted to retain the classified documents even after he had left office, the people said.

    Last June, the since-recused Trump lawyer Evan Corcoran found 38 classified documents in the storage room at Mar-a-Lago and told the justice department that no further materials remained there – which came into question when the FBI seized 101 more classified documents months later.

    Corcoran later told associates he felt misled because he had asked whether he should search elsewhere at Mar-a-Lago, such as Trump’s office, but was waved off, the Guardian first reported. Corcoran’s notes also showed he told Trump he had to return all classified documents in his possession.

    ________

    Our understanding from two sources is that the seven counts against Trump include conspiracy to obstruct and willful retention of documents.
    Last edited by S Landreth; 09-06-2023 at 07:15 AM.

  19. #1094
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    Former President Donald Trump said Thursday that he has been indicted on charges connected to his handling of classified national security records, writing on social media that he has been summoned to federal court on Tuesday in Miami.

    The precise charges that federal prosecutors have obtained against Trump were not immediately clear, but Trump said his attorneys were informed by the Justice Department on Thursday that a grand jury indictment had been obtained.

    Prosecutors are charging the former president with seven criminal counts, according to a person familiar with the indictment.

    The documents investigation has been overseen by special counsel Jack Smith and appeared to be nearing the charging phase in recent days. Smith’s team recently sent Trump a target letter and Trump’s lawyers met with senior Justice Department officials in Washington in what now appears to have been an unsuccessful bid to head off criminal charges against the former president.

    A Justice Department spokesperson referred questions about Trump’s assertions about an indictment to a Smith spokesperson, who declined to comment Thursday evening.

    It’s a moment as fraught as it is historic: the first-ever federal charges against a former president, who also happens to be the Republican Party’s frontrunner for the 2024 nomination. The charges ignite what is sure to be a protracted and intense period of pretrial litigation that will overlap with the GOP nominating contest and galvanize Republican voters who have so far been unfazed by Trump’s legal entanglements.

    Trump, who is already facing state felony charges in Manhattan related to alleged hush money payments to a porn star, has now been tagged with his second set of criminal charges, with more potentially looming. An Atlanta-based district attorney is gearing up to make a charging decision in a long-running probe of Trump’s bid to subvert the 2020 election as soon as next month. And Smith is similarly investigating Trump for his effort to derail the transfer of power to Joe Biden.

    Trump has spent months railing against Smith and other investigators, seeking to cast their probes as a politically motivated conspiracy against him — and he spent the days preceding the latest indictment attacking the Justice Department by making false comparisons to Joe Biden’s own handling of classified information.

    The documents probe has its origins in a dispute between Trump and the National Archives, which began shortly after Trump left office in January 2021. Archives officials, who realized Trump had retained some presidential papers, began asking him to return the records because they were property of the federal government.

    But Trump resisted, triggering a lengthy round of negotiation that stretched to January 2022, when he agreed to return 15 boxes of material to the Archives. That’s when Archives officials discovered several documents that were marked classified and alerted the Justice Department.

    By April 2022, DOJ issued a subpoena to Trump’s office for all remaining classified documents at his Mar-a-LAgo estate. They also subpoenaed for surveillance footage from Trump’s Mar-a-Lago estate, which his company, the Trump Organization, monitored remotely. In early June 2022, top DOJ officials visited Mar-a-Lago to meet with Trump’s lawyers Evan Corcoran and Christina Bobb, who handed over another sealed folder containing classified records. Accompanying the folder was a signed letter assuring DOJ that the folder represented all of the remaining classified material at Trump’s property.

    But that turned out to be false. In August, based on evidence that Trump had not fully turned over additional classified documents, the FBI raided Trump’s estate and recovered additional boxes containing highly classified material mixed with Trump’s personal items and other non-classified presidential records.

    The raid galvanized public attention to the documents probe and drew Trump’s fury in a way it hadn’t before. Two weeks later, he sued to reclaim his property, igniting a legal fight that would briefly delay the Justice Department’s investigation. That fight stretched into November, when Trump announced his latest bid for the White House.

    That announcement also triggered Attorney General Merrick Garland’s decision to appoint Smith as special counsel to oversee both the documents investigation and the probe of Trump’s 2020 election gambit. Garland indicated that Smith, who returned to the United States from a stint as a war crimes prosecutor at the Hague, would maintain the rapid pace of the investigations, which had been ongoing for months by the time he arrived.

    Although the election probe drew higher-profile witnesses, like former Vice President Mike Pence and other senior figures in Trump’s White House, the documents probe always seemed poised to wrap first, and Smith brought in a steady stream of witnesses — employees of Trump’s estates, advisers and even Corcoran, Trump’s lawyer.

    To secure Corcoran’s testimony, Smith fought a secret grand jury battle that was ultimately decided in his favor by U.S. District Court Judge Beryl Howell, who ruled that attorney-client privilege did not apply to Corcoran’s testimony and documents because they likely included evidence of a crime.

  20. #1095
    Guest Member S Landreth's Avatar
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    Trump says he's been indicted in classified docs probe

    Former Pesident Trump
    said Thursday that he was indicted in the criminal investigation into his handling of classified documents after leaving office.

    Why it matters: It would be the first federal indictment of a former U.S. president. He is also the front-runner for the 2024 GOP presidential nomination.

    Driving the news: Trump said on Truth Social that he has been summoned to appear at the federal courthouse in Miami on Tuesday. He told Fox News late Thursday he'd plead not guilty to the charges.


    • The Department of Justice declined to comment.
    • "The corrupt Biden Administration has informed my attorneys that I have been Indicted, seemingly over the Boxes Hoax," Trump wrote Thursday on Truth Social.


    Of note: President Biden addressed the DOJ's investigation into Trump when questioned by a reporter on the matter at a Thursday news conference before his predecessor posted on social media that he's facing charges.


    • "I have never once, not one single time, suggested to the Justice Department what they should do or not do, relative to bringing a charge or not bringing a charge," Biden said.


    Details: Trump attorney Jim Trusty said on CNN that his team received a summons to appear in court and possessed a summary sheet outlining seven charges.


    • He suggested they could include an Espionage Act charge, "several obstruction-based type charges" and false statement charges.
    • Trusty also said that he believes there is a conspiracy charge.


    The big picture: Trump's post comes nearly one year after the FBI searched Trump's Mar-a-Lago residence and retrieved more than 100 classified documents.


    • The FBI searched Trump's Florida residence last August to probe whether classified national security materials were illegally taken there.
    • An unsealed affidavit related to the search warrant revealed that 14 of the 15 boxes retrieved from Mar-a-Lago by the National Archives and Record Administration contained 184 documents with classification markings.

  21. #1096
    Guest Member S Landreth's Avatar
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    I have been summoned to appear at the Federal Courthouse in Miami on Tuesday, at 3 PM.





    Buy sports, concert, theater and indictment tickets on StubHub! https://www.stubhub.com/
    Last edited by S Landreth; 09-06-2023 at 04:25 PM.

  22. #1097
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    Trump admits on tape he didn’t declassify ‘secret information’: CNN

    Former President Trump admitted in a July 2021 recording that he had not declassified “secret information” that remained in his possession, CNN reported Friday.

    “As president, I could have declassified, but now I can’t,” Trump said, according to a transcript of the recording obtained by CNN.

    “Secret. This is secret information. Look, look at this,” he reportedly added at another point. “This was done by the military and given to me.”

    CNN had previously reported that federal prosecutors had obtained a recording of the July 2021 meeting, in which the former president appeared to acknowledge that a Pentagon document in his possession about a potential attack on Iran remained classified.

    However, the transcript captures Trump explicitly saying that he had not declassified the document and could no longer do so, despite his later, public claims to the contrary.

    In the meeting with two authors working on an autobiography for his former chief of staff Mark Meadows, Trump reportedly sought to counter an article from The New Yorker that suggested that Mark Milley, the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, had dissuaded him from attacking Iran.

    “He said that I wanted to attack Iran. Isn’t that amazing?” Trump said, according to CNN. “I have a big pile of papers, this thing just came up. Look. This was him. They presented me this — this is off the record, but — they presented me this. This was him. This was the Defense Department and him.”

    “All sorts of stuff — pages long, look,” he added. “Wait a minute, let’s see here. I just found, isn’t that amazing? This totally wins my case, you know. Except it is like, highly confidential. Secret. This is secret information. Look, look at this.”

    Trump and his legal team said Thursday night that they had been informed of an indictment against the former president in the classified documents case.

  23. #1098
    Guest Member S Landreth's Avatar
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    He is so screwed. Maybe over 100 years. No plea deal




    A federal indictment unsealed Friday charges former President Donald Trump with 37 felony counts stemming from an investigation into the presence of a trove of classified information at his Florida estate and other locations after he left office.

    The charging document indicates that on at least two occasions, Trump showed classified records to visitors without security clearances at his golf club in Bedminster, New Jersey.

    Trump is facing 31 counts of violating the Espionage Act through “willful retention” of classified records and six counts related to his alleged effort to obstruct the investigation.

    An aide to Trump, Walt Nauta, was also charged with five felonies, including obstruction of justice and making false statements to the FBI.

    The indictment lists 31 specific documents Trump is accusing of intentionally withholding from federal officials after they requested the return of all national security records: 21 of the documents are described as Top Secret, six as secret and one as lacking any classification marking but involving “military contingency planning of the United States.”

    _________

    For a start, just read the first 5 pages in the link https://www.politico.com/f/?id=00000...8-b3ff4de50000


    Last edited by S Landreth; 10-06-2023 at 01:46 AM.

  24. #1099
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    Special Counsel Jack Smith Delivers Statement on Indictment of President Trump | C-SPAN.org




    __________


    Little more




    The Department of Justice unsealed the federal indictment against former President Trump on charges related to the investigation into his handling of classified documents after he left the White House.

    Why it matters: The federal charges present the biggest legal threat to the former president, who is the frontrunner in the 2024 Republican presidential primary, and come just two months after he was charged in a Manhattan criminal court for allegedly falsifying business records.

    Driving the news: The 49-page indictment includes 37 felony counts related to retaining classified information and obstruction of justice.


    • The indictment says the classified documents that Trump stored in his boxes included information “regarding defense and weapons capabilities of both the United States and foreign countries; United States nuclear programs; potential vulnerabilities of the United States and its allies to military attack; and plans for possible retaliation in response to a foreign attack.”
    • The boxes with classified documents were stored “in various locations” at Mar-a-Lago, per the indictment, including “in a ballroom, a bathroom and shower, an office space, his bedroom, and a storage room.”


    Details: The indictment includes 31 separate counts of willful retention of national defense information under the Espionage Act.


    • Walt Nauta, an aide to Trump, is named as a co-conspirator in the indictment.


    Both Nauta and Trump face one count of conspiracy to obstruct justice.


    • “The purpose of the conspiracy was for [Trump] to keep classified documents he has taken with him from the White House and to hide and conceal them from a federal grand jury,” according to the indictment.


    What he's saying: The White House said on Friday that President Bide learned about indictment through news reports.


    • "The president, senior staff found out just like everybody else last night. No advance knowledge that this was coming. Found out from news reports just like everybody else across America,” principal deputy press secretary Olivia Dalton told reporters.
    • When asked on Friday by a CNN reporter whether he'd spoken to Attorney General Merrick Garland, Biden replied: “I have not spoken to him at all and I’m not going to speak with him. And I have no comment on that.”

  25. #1100
    Guest Member S Landreth's Avatar
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    From Fox News

    Trump, lawyers part ways after federal indictment

    Former President Donald Trump and two of his top attorneys representing him in Special Counsel Jack Smith's investigation parted ways Friday, just a day after he was indicted.

    The lawyers representing him ahead of his indictment, Jim Trusty and John Rowley, resigned Friday.

    "This morning we tendered our resignations as counsel to President Trump, and we will no longer represent him on either the indicted case or the January 6 investigation," Trusty and Rowley said in a statement. "It has been an honor to have spent the last year defending him, and we know he will be vindicated in his battle against the Biden Administration’s partisan weaponization of the American justice system."

    "Now that the case has been filed in Miami, this is a logical moment for us to step aside and let others carry the cases through to completion," they added. "We have no plans to hold media appearances that address our withdrawals or any other confidential communications we’ve had with the President or his legal team."

    Trump, taking to his TRUTH Social on Friday, said he will bring on a new attorney, Todd Blanche.

    "For purposes of fighting the Greatest Witch Hunt of all time, now moving to the Florida Courts, I will be represented by Todd Blanche, Esq., and a firm to be named later," Trump wrote. "I want to thank Jim Trusty and John Rowley for their work, but they were up against a very dishonest, corrupt, evil, and ‘sick’ group of people, the likes of which has not been seen before."

    He added: "We will be announcing additional lawyers in the coming days. When will Joe Biden be Indicted for his many crimes against our Nation? MAGA!"


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