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Read previewDonald Trump's hush money trial remained on track for Monday jury selection after the judge on Friday night denied — in no uncertain terms — a defense bid to delay the trial indefinitely due to prejudicial pretrial publicity. "This is not tenable," the trial judge, New York Supreme Court Justice Juan Merchan , said in his decision, noting that much of the pretrial publicity has been caused by Trump himself. "Defendant appears to take the position that his situation and this case are unique and that the pre-trial publicity will never subside," the judge wrote in Friday's decision. The poll "provides no information about how it obtained the contact information of respondents or how it ensured its samples were actually random or representative," the judge wrote. Last week, Trump lost a Manhattan appellate court bid for an emergency delay of the trial on pretrial publicity grounds.
Persons: , Donald, Juan Merchan, Trump, Joe Biden, Kamala Harris, Merchan, Defendant, Jean Carroll, Susan Necheles, Todd Blanche, Trump's, pollsters, Prosecutors, Attorney Alvin Bragg, Stormy Daniels, Daniels Organizations: Service, New, Business, Court, Federal, Defendant, Defense, Prosecutors, Manhattan, Attorney, Trump Organization Locations: Chicago, Manhattan
Winners of the 2024 British Academy Film Awards
  + stars: | 2024-02-18 | by ( Associated Press | Feb. | At P.M. | ) www.usnews.com   time to read: 1 min
Judge Eviscerates Trump Business EmpireThe blistering decision costs the former president some $364 million. But it also strikes at the business empire that fed his ego, cemented his brand and ultimately propelled him to the world’s most powerful political position.
Persons: Eviscerates Organizations: Eviscerates Trump Business
The decision also bans Trump from serving as an officer or director of any New York corporation, bans his two adult sons from serving for two years and fines his two adult sons $4 million. The blistering decision from Judge Arthur Engoron effectively eviscerates the business empire Trump built over decades – an empire that fed his ego, cemented his brand and ultimately propelled the real estate mogul to the world’s most powerful political position. “In order to borrow more and at lower rates, defendants submitted blatantly false financial data to the accountants, resulting in fraudulent financial statements," Engoron wrote. Here, despite the false financial statements, it is undisputed that defendants have made all required payments on time; the next group of lenders to receive bogus statements might not be so lucky. New York means business in combating business fraud.”Engoron anticipated finalizing his decision on damages by the end of January, but two new issues emerged that ultimately delayed the decision.
Persons: Donald Trump, Arthur Engoron, Trump, Justice Potter Stewart, Engoron, Letitia James, , James, , , he’s, He’s, ” Engoron, Trump's, Allen Weisselberg, pander, Jean Carroll Organizations: Trump, United States Supreme, Donald Trump View, New York, The New York Times, Manhattan, defaming Locations: York, New York, The
Judge Eviscerates Trump Business EmpireThe blistering decision costs the former president some $364 million. But it also strikes at the business empire that fed his ego, cemented his brand and ultimately propelled him to the world’s most powerful political position.
Persons: Eviscerates Organizations: Eviscerates Trump Business
The CFPB's funding design draws money each year from the Federal Reserve instead of from budgets passed by lawmakers. Challengers to the CFPB - trade groups representing the high-interest payday loan industry - argued that the agency's funding structure violates a constitutional provision giving Congress the power of the purse. The Supreme Court's 6-3 conservative majority has rolled back the power of federal agencies including the Environmental Protection Agency in important rulings in recent years. The court's three liberal justices pressed the challengers on the repercussions of deeming the CFPB's funding structure unconstitutional. Circuit Court of Appeals, which last October ruled that the CFPB's funding structure violated the Appropriations Clause.
Persons: Clarence Thomas, Samuel Alito, Kevin Wurm, Joe Biden's, Elizabeth Prelogar, Biden, Elena Kagan, Barack Obama, Wells, John Kruzel, Will Dunham Organizations: U.S, Supreme, REUTERS, Companies Wells, Co, Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, Federal, Environmental Protection Agency, Conservative, Federal Reserve, Democratic, New, Circuit, Appeals, Republican, Thomson Locations: Washington , U.S, WASHINGTON, New Orleans
REUTERS/Dado Ruvic/Illustration Acquire Licensing RightsSept 28 (Reuters) - Apple (AAPL.O) on Thursday asked the U.S. Supreme Court to strike down an order requiring changes to its App Store rules stemming from an antitrust case brought by "Fortnite" owner Epic Games. After the ruling, the trial court judge ordered that Apple must change those rules for all developers in its U.S. App Store. The U.S. Ninth Circuit Court of Appeal upheld the orders, though they remain on hold until the Supreme Court either makes a decision or declines to hear the case. Epic on Wednesday also appealed lower court rulings in the Apple case. The Supreme Court will likely decide either late this year or early next year whether to hear the case.
Persons: Dado Ruvic, Apple, Stephen Nellis, Leslie Adler Organizations: Apple, REUTERS, U.S, Supreme, Epic Games, Ninth Circuit, Constitution, Thomson Locations: California, U.S, San Francisco
CNN —A federal grand jury reconvened on Tuesday for the first time since handing up an indictment last week against former President Donald Trump related to his efforts to overturn the 2020 election. CNN spotted grand jury members at the federal courthouse in Washington, an indication that the investigation into election interference is not over. In the Trump indictment, prosecutors refer to six unnamed co-conspirators, raising questions about whether they also could face charges in the case. On Monday, Bernie Kerik, a longtime Giuliani associate who coordinated with him after the 2020 election, met with investigators at the special counsel’s office. Kerik spoke with investigators about Giuliani’s efforts to try to uncover election fraud in 2020, according to his attorney Tim Parlatore.
Persons: Donald Trump, Jack Smith’s, Trump, Rudy Giuliani, Bernie Kerik, Giuliani, Kerik, Tim Parlatore, Giuliani “, Ted Goodman, eviscerates Organizations: CNN, Capitol, Trump, Prosecutors Locations: Washington
CNN, however, can identify five of the six co-conspirators based on quotes in the indictment and other context. They include:Co-Conspirator 1 is former Trump lawyer Rudy Giuliani. Among other things, the indictment quotes from a voicemail that Co-Conspirator 1 left “for a United States Senator” on January 6, 2021. The quotes in the indictment match quotes from Giuliani’s call intended for GOP Sen. Tommy Tuberville, as reported by CNN and other outlets. The indictment quotes from the memo, and those quotes match a two-page memo that Eastman wrote, as reported and published by CNN.
Persons: Donald Trump, , Trump, Rudy Giuliani, , GOP Sen, Tommy Tuberville, Ted Goodman, Giuliani, John Eastman, Mike Pence, Eastman, Charles Burnham, ” Burnham, Sidney Powell, Powell, Brian Kemp, Jeffrey Clark, Clark, rebutting Clark’s, Clark ., Kenneth Chesebro, Chesebro Organizations: CNN, United, GOP, Electoral, Eastman, Trump, Georgia ”, Georgia Gov, Justice, Justice Department, Department, Clark, Chesebro Locations: United States, Georgia, Pennsylvania
Sentencing Commission approved new guidelines on Wednesday that will expand federal inmates' ability to qualify for compassionate release from prison. The First Step Act, signed into law by former President Donald Trump in 2018, expanded compassionate release criteria for sick and elderly federal inmates. Requests for compassionate release then surged during the COVID-19 pandemic, with 7,014 motions filed in fiscal year 2020. The new compassionate release guidelines approved on Wednesday expanded the criteria for what can qualify as "extraordinary and compelling reasons" to grant compassionate release, and it will give judges more discretion to determine when a sentence reduction is warranted. Among the new categories that could make an inmate eligible for compassionate release is if he or she becomes the victim of sexual assault by a corrections officer.
China’s Leaders: Xi Jinping and His Men
  + stars: | 2022-10-23 | by ( Chun Han Wong | Keith Zhai | ) www.wsj.com   time to read: 1 min
Xi Jinping, 69, general secretary: The most formidable Chinese leader of the post-Mao era has taken a third term as head of the Communist Party without designating an obvious successor, a move that eviscerates the party’s decadeslong efforts to ensure regular leadership succession and prevent a return to Mao-style dictatorship. Since taking power in 2012, he has reversed the party’s embrace of collective leadership, concentrated decision-making authority in his own hands and scrapped constitutional term limits on the presidency. Having dominated the latest leadership shuffle, he enjoys a firm hand to pursue his agenda, which includes a more egalitarian society, a state-led economy and a muscular foreign policy—under the stewardship of a strong, centralized party.
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