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Search resuls for: "Donald Trump’s Florida"


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Fox News did not report that Deutsche Bank filed a foreclosure notice on former U.S. President Donald Trump’s Florida residence, Mar-a-Lago, in November 2023. The post reads: “BREAKING FOX NEWS Deutsche Bank has filed a notice to foreclose on Mar A Lago. A spokesperson for Deutsche Bank declined to comment. The account that first posted the claim describes itself as a parody account. A spokesperson for Fox News said that the claim is “fake.”This article was produced by the Reuters Fact Check team.
Persons: Donald Trump’s, Lago, Trump, , , Read Organizations: Fox, Deutsche Bank, FOX, Trump, Facebook, Fox News, Reuters, Deutsche Bank's, Thomson Locations: Donald Trump’s Florida, Mar, New York
WASHINGTON—President Biden said that there are “degrees of irresponsibility” regarding handling of classified materials, drawing a distinction between the material found at locations he used and documents taken from former President Donald Trump’s Florida home. Asked by ABC News if there was anything irresponsible in how he handled classified documents, the president played down his situation.
FILE PHOTO: U.S. President Donald Trump departs on travel to West Point, New York from the South Lawn at the White House in Washington, U.S., December 12, 2020. REUTERS/Cheriss May/File Photo(Reuters) - A federal appeals court in Atlanta has set Nov. 22 arguments on the third-party review of materials seized from former U.S. president Donald Trump’s Florida resort in August, according to court documents. Prosecutors are conducting a criminal probe of Trump’s retention of government records, including classified information.
The special master appointed to review documents federal agents seized at Donald Trump’s Florida estate has given the former president until next Friday to back up his allegation that FBI planted evidence in the search on Aug. 8. Following the FBI search of his Mar-a-Lago resort in Palm Beach, Trump and his lawyers have publicly insinuated on multiple occasions without providing evidence that agents had planted evidence during the search. In an filing Thursday, Senior U.S. District Judge Raymond J. Dearie of New York, the court-appointed special master, ordered the government to turn over copies of all non-classified items seized in the case to Trump's lawyers by Monday. Dearie also asked Trump's lawyers to identify any items that were seized by agents but not listed in the inventory. Both sides were ordered to appear for a status conference in the case on Oct. 6.
A federal appeals court on Wednesday said the Justice Department can resume using classified documents seized from former President Donald Trump’s Florida estate in its criminal investigation. The appeals court panel, comprised of two Trump appointees and one Obama appointee, thoroughly rejected Trump’s position on the classified documents and parts of Cannon’s reasoning for issuing her original order. The appeals court said that among the factors under consideration were whether or not Trump had individual interest or need for the classified documents, which the district court had not mentioned in its analysis. The Justice Department previously said that its criminal investigation would look into identifying anyone who accessed the classified materials, whether they had been compromised and whether additional classified materials were missing. The ruling by the appeals court was the second legal blow to Trump on Wednesday.
The federal judge tasked with reviewing documents seized from Donald Trump’s Florida golf club on Tuesday pressed the former president’s lawyers on whether they planned to argue that Mr. Trump had declassified some of the material in his possession. Judge Raymond Dearie in Brooklyn, N.Y., holding his first public hearing as special master in the case, said that if some of the seized documents bear markings of being classified, that would be a strong reason not to provide them to Mr. Trump’s legal team unless his lawyers could claim otherwise.
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