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The judge presiding over Donald Trump's New York hush money trial on Friday postponed the sentencing that was scheduled for next week to allow for more time for arguments on whether the case should be dismissed. “Just as a sitting President is completely immune from any criminal process, so too is President Trump as President-elect,” Trump lawyers Todd Blanche and Emil Bove argued in a filing Wednesday. Trump last week said he plans to nominate Blanche and Bove for high-ranking posts at the Justice Department in his new administration. Prosecutors in Manhattan said they would challenge Trump’s efforts to dismiss the hush money case but acknowledged that his sentencing might need to take place after he leaves office. The case was the only one of four criminal cases brought against Trump after he left office in 2021 to go to trial.
Persons: Donald Trump's, Juan Merchan, Alvin Bragg's, Merchan, Trump, , , ” Trump, Todd Blanche, Emil Bove, They've, that's, Blanche, Bove, Michael Cohen, Stormy Daniels, Daniels Organizations: State, Manhattan, Trump, Justice Department, Prosecutors, Supreme Locations: York, Manhattan, U.S, Georgia
AdvertisementDonald Trump's sentencing in his New York hush-money case has been officially put off. President-elect Donald Trump's scheduled sentencing in his New York criminal case will not move forward next week, a Manhattan judge ruled on Friday. The sentencing in the former and future president's hush-money case had been on the calendar for November 26. Merchan ordered that Trump's motion is due by December 2, and prosecutors should respond by December 9. "All of the sham lawfare attacks against President Trump are now destroyed and we are focused on Making America Great Again."
Persons: Donald Trump's, Juan Merchan, Merchan, Trump, Steven Cheung, Hunt, Stormy Daniels, Attorney Alvin Bragg, Bragg Organizations: Trump, White House, American People, Manhattan, Attorney Locations: New York, Manhattan
New York CNN —The judge overseeing Donald Trump’s criminal hush money trial has adjourned his sentencing, which was set for next week. Judge Juan Merchan also agreed to hold off on issuing his decision on presidential immunity until after he reviews the parties’ filings. The judge did not set a new sentencing date or make any further statements about the delay. Trump’s lawyers have argued his conviction should be tossed both because of the presidential immunity decision and his return to the White House. His sentencing, originally scheduled for July, was delayed twice after the Supreme Court’s immunity decision prompted Trump’s lawyers to file a motion to vacate the conviction.
Persons: Donald, Judge Juan Merchan, Merchan, Trump’s, Steven Cheung, Trump, Attorney Alvin Bragg, Michael Cohen, Stormy Daniels, Shania Shelton Organizations: New, New York CNN, Attorney, Democrat Locations: New York, Georgia, York
Donald Trump's attorneys are demanding the judge who presided over his New York hush money trial and conviction immediately throw out the case, saying it would be "uniquely destabilizing to the country" otherwise. The letter also cited presidential immunity as a reason to dismiss the case, and maintained Trump is already protected by it. "Just as a sitting President is completely immune from any criminal process, so too is President Trump as President-elect," the letter said. The attorneys have argued he can't be sentenced while in office because it would interfere with his constitutional duties. Trump was convicted earlier this year on 34 counts of falsifying business records related to a hush money payment made to adult film actor Stormy Daniels.
Persons: Donald, Trump’s, Todd Blanche, Emil Bove, Judge Juan Merchan, , Trump, Stormy Daniels, Alvin Bragg's Organizations: Trump, Justice Department's Locations: York, Manhattan
AdvertisementLawyers for Donald Trump on Wednesday demanded the immediate dismissal of his hush-money case. Trump can't be sentenced while either president-elect or president, they argued. Donald Trump's legal team filed for immediate dismissal of his New York hush-money case on Wednesday, arguing that he cannot be sentenced while either president-elect or president. "On November 5, 2024, the Nation's People issued a mandate that supersedes the political motivations of DANY's 'People,'" the defense filing concludes, using the acronym for the District Attorney of New York. One prosecutor should not have "practical power to interfere with the ability of a popularly elected president to carry out his constitutional functions," the defense filing says.
Persons: Donald Trump, Trump, Donald Trump's, Trump's, DANY's, Todd Blanche, Emil Bove, Attorney Alvin Bragg, Bragg, Juan Merchan, Stormy Daniels Organizations: Wednesday, District, Manhattan, Attorney, Democrat, New York City Locations: Manhattan, York, New York, New
New York prosecutors told the judge who presided over Donald Trump's hush money trial on Tuesday that his sentencing should be postponed while the president-elect's lawyers file further legal arguments asking the case be dismissed. The proposal Tuesday from Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg's office would need to be signed off on by Judge Juan Merchan to become official. A ruling against Trump on the issue would have paved the way for the judge to proceed with his sentencing, which was tentatively scheduled for Nov. 26. That case has been paused while Trump and some of his co-defendants seek to have an appeals court remove Willis from the case for an alleged conflict of interest. Trump's lawyers have contended that even if she’s allowed to remain on the case, any Trump trial would have to wait until he’s out of office in 2029 because of constitutional issues.
Persons: Donald Trump's, Alvin Bragg's, Judge Juan Merchan, Merchan, Trump, Matthew Colangelo, ” Colangelo, Court's, Michael Cohen, Stormy Daniels, Daniels, he’s, Hope Hicks, Madeleine Westerhout, Cohen, Court’s, ” Trump, Bragg, He’s, Fani, Willis Organizations: Manhattan, U.S, Trump, Trump White House, Lawyers, Prosecutors, Justice Department Locations: York, U.S ., , Fulton County, Georgia
AdvertisementTrump's felony hush-money sentencing had been scheduled for November 26. Trump's election and SCOTUS-bestowed immunity have thrown a giant monkey wrench in the schedule. Prosecutors have said they'll tell the judge how they wish to move forward by Tuesday, November 19. Whether President-elect Donald Trump will ever get sentenced on his now six-month-old hush-money conviction could become clearer as early as Tuesday, when prosecutors are scheduled to announce — at least to the judge — how they wish to proceed with the case. Since his decisive victory on Election Day, Trump's November 26 sentencing date has remained on hold indefinitely.
Persons: SCOTUS, Donald Trump, Trump, hampers, Juan Merchan, Merchan, Matthew Colangelo, Attorney Alvin Bragg, Colangelo, Stormy Daniels Organizations: Prosecutors, New, Attorney, Trump, New York City Locations: Manhattan, New York
Bannon is facing numerous charges from the Manhattan district attorney's office for allegedly defrauding donors who believed they were giving money to build a wall at the southern U.S. border. "We’re not changing it again," Newbauer told both sides including Bannon, who attended virtually. Bannon was indicted in the case in Sept. 2022 and hit with charges including money laundering, scheming to defraud, and conspiracy. Three other members of the group, including Kolfage, have already been convicted of charges related to the scheme. Bannon was initially hit with charges related to the same scheme by federal prosecutors in Aug. 2020.
Persons: Steve Bannon, Donald Trump, White, Bannon, Bannon's, Newbauer, Brian Kolfage, Attorney Alvin Bragg, Bragg Organizations: Manhattan, Attorney, Democrat, Trump, Capitol Locations: York, Manhattan, U.S
The judge overseeing Donald Trump's New York criminal trial delayed a key ruling Tuesday on whether the president-elect's conviction should be set aside, according to correspondence between the parties. The court has granted them a week's delay to provide their position, the clerk informed both sides in a court filing. Donald Trump outside the courtroom as jurors began deliberating at his criminal trial at Manhattan Criminal Court on May 29, 2024 in New York City. Trump was convicted in May on 34 felony counts related to hush money payments made to adult film actress Stormy Daniels. The Justice Department is now winding down the two federal criminal cases against the former and future president.
Persons: Donald Trump's, Trump, Judge Juan Merchan, Matthew Colangelo, Donald Trump, Doug Mills, Alvin Bragg's, Stormy Daniels, Merchan, Fani, Willis Organizations: Manhattan Criminal, The, Trump, Justice, department’s, Trump : Fulton, NBC News Locations: York, New York City, Manhattan, New York, Trump : Fulton County, Georgia
President-elect Donald Trump on Tuesday won a stay of deadlines in his hush-money case. Trump was to learn Tuesday if the case is dismissed, and if not be sentenced next week. AdvertisementOne week from sentencing, President-elect Donald Trump has won at least a temporary stay in his criminal hush-money case. On Friday, the judge in the Washington, DC-based election-interference case similarly froze all deadlines until at least December 2 on agreement with the special counsel. AdvertisementIn the hush-money case, two pending deadlines are now at least temporarily wiped from the calendar.
Persons: Donald Trump, Trump, , Juan Merchan, Attorney Alvin Bragg, Jack Smith, Fani Willis, Fulton County , Georgia —, Smith, Merchan Organizations: Tuesday, Service, New, Prosecutors, Attorney Locations: Manhattan, Fulton County , Georgia, Washington, DC, Florida
CNN —Donald Trump’s lawyers and the Manhattan district attorney’s office have agreed to delay activity in the hush money case until November 19 to give the president-elect’s lawyers time to make new arguments on how his election victory impacts the case. Judge Juan Merchan was expected to rule Tuesday on whether to overturn the business fraud conviction based on this summer’s Supreme Court ruling on presidential immunity. “The stay, and dismissal, are necessary to avoid unconstitutional impediments to President Trump’s ability to govern,” Bove wrote. The Supreme Court’s immunity decision also indefinitely tied up Trump’s federal election subversion case in Washington, DC. The jury should not have heard any testimony from Hope Hicks about events in 2018 when she was the White House Communications Director, Trump’s lawyers argued.
Persons: Donald Trump’s, Judge Juan Merchan, Matthew Colangelo, Emil Bove, , Trump’s, ” Bove, Trump, Jack Smith, , Alvin Bragg’s, , Hope Hicks, Madeleine Westerhout –, , Daniels, didn’t Organizations: CNN, US Supreme, Trump, Justice Department, Manhattan, ” Prosecutors, White, White House Communications Locations: Manhattan, Washington ,,
Mickey Barreto lived in the New Yorker Hotel for free for years before his recent arrest. AdvertisementDoctors say a man who had lived inside the iconic New Yorker Hotel for free for more than half a decade is unfit to stand trial. Mickey Barreto lived in the New Yorker Hotel for years without paying a single cent in rent. In June 2018, Barreto and his partner, Matthew Hannan, stayed in room 2565 at the New Yorker Hotel for one night and paid $200.57. Although a judge ordered him to stop representing himself as the owner of the hotel, Barreto continued to live there for free.
Persons: Mickey Barreto, Barreto, Doctors, , Cori Weston, Weston, Brian Hutchinson, Hutchinson, Alvin Bragg's, Matthew Hannan Organizations: New Yorker, Service, Manhattan District, New York Times, Times, Addiction, Mount, Business, Associated Press, Holy Spirit Association, Department of Environmental, Unification Locations: , New York, Mount Sinai, Hutchinson, Barreto's
A man charged with fraud for claiming to own a storied Manhattan hotel where he had been living rent-free for years has been found unfit to stand trial, prosecutors said Wednesday. Finally, we convinced him to go seek treatment,’” Barreto told The Associated Press on Wednesday. They say he forged a deed to the New Yorker Hotel purporting to transfer ownership of the entire building to him. Because I’m not being treated as a criminal but I’m treated like a nutjob,” Barreto told the AP. But the New Yorker closed as a hotel in 1972 and was used for years for church purposes before part of the building reopened as a hotel in 1994.
Persons: Mickey Barreto, he’s, Alvin Bragg’s, Judge Cori Weston, Barreto, , He’s, ’ ” Barreto, Brian Hutchinson, didn’t, I’m, ” Barreto, Muhammad Ali, Nikola Tesla Organizations: New York Times, Associated Press, Times, New, Unification Church, AP, Garden, NBC, Yorker Locations: Manhattan, Madison
AdvertisementDonald Trump will use his new status as president-elect in a renewed effort to challenge his upcoming sentencing on his Manhattan hush-money conviction, legal experts predicted Wednesday. A US District Court judge rejected that effort in September, and it remains under appeal by the Second Circuit Court of Appeals. "Any of those tracks can get you to the US Supreme Court pretty fast, if that's his goal," Paradis said. REUTERS/Jane RosenbergA 'unique place in this nation's history'Merchan addressed the unique circumstances of prosecuting, trying, and sentencing Trump in September, when he agreed to delay the sentencing for a second time. "A state judge is now potentially setting himself up to sentence the most powerful federal officer in the world."
Persons: Trump, , Donald Trump, Stormy Daniels, He's, Charles Solomon, that's, Solomon, Timothy A, Clary, he's, Juan Merchan, Attorney Alvin Bragg, Merchan, — Trump, Michel Paradis, Paradis, Jane Rosenberg, Mark Bederow, Bederow, Todd Blanche, Emil Bove ., it's, Neama Rahmani, Bragg Organizations: BI, Trump, Service, GOP, Reuters, New, Attorney, Second, Appeals, Columbia Law School, Court, Trump v ., New York City, Joint Chiefs, Staff, United States Supreme, West, Trial Locations: NY, New York, Manhattan, United States, Trump v, Trump v . United States, Central Park
You can’t look this up in a law book and find an answer to the query because it doesn’t exist.”Previously, prosecutors have not objected to Trump’s bids to delay his sentencing before the election, which Judge Juan Merchan noted in agreeing to postpone Trump’s sentencing until late November. If Trump loses on immunity, his lawyers are expected to ask Merchan to delay Trump’s sentencing so they can appeal. Trump’s attorneys attempted this in 2023, and District Judge Alvin Hellerstein denied it. But following the Supreme Court ruling, Trump’s attorneys made a second attempt this summer. That was denied when Merchan agreed to postpone Trump’s sentencing.
Persons: Donald Trump, Stormy Daniels, , Karen Friedman Agnifilo, he’s, , Jill Konviser, Juan Merchan, Trump, Merchan, that’s, Alvin Hellerstein, Hellerstein, Prosecutors, Diane Kiesel, you’re, You’ve, ’ ”, ” Konviser, Attorney Alvin Bragg, “ It’s, Bragg, prosecutorially, Elie Honig, Honig, , ’ ” Honig, ” Agnifilo Organizations: CNN, Trump, White, Washington, New York, Manhattan, Attorney, Democrat, Prosecutors Locations: Manhattan, New York, DC, Rikers
(CNN) — A New York woman has been indicted on hate crime charges after allegedly pepper-spraying a Muslim Uber driver while he was praying, according to the Manhattan District Attorney’s Office. Jennifer Guilbeault, 23, was indicted on multiple hate crime charges on Monday after allegedly pepper-spraying a 45-year-old Uber driver while he began praying in Arabic, according to a press release from the prosecutor. “As alleged, Jennifer Guilbeault senselessly assaulted a Muslim Uber driver while he was just doing his job. Everyone is welcome to live and work in Manhattan,” said Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg. The charges against Guilbeault include one count each of Assault in the Second Degree as a Hate Crime, Assault in the Third Degree as a Hate Crime and Aggravated Harassment in the Second Degree.
Persons: Jennifer Guilbeault, Guilbeault, Mahmud, Michael J, Alber, , Jennifer Guilbeault senselessly, , Attorney Alvin Bragg, Bragg Organizations: CNN, Manhattan, Attorney’s, Lexington, Yorker, Attorney, Guilbeault Locations: York, Manhattan, Central, Muslim
At least four large YouTube channels devoted to firearms have announced they’re quitting the platform and moving to rival services with looser rules. YouTube, which is owned by Google, has for years imposed rules on gun videos. YouTube says gun videos are only one part of its enormous app. Responsible firearms content is just one part of this vibrant mix of communities,” the company said in a statement. A successful YouTube gun channel can make hundreds of thousands of dollars a year in ad revenue and sponsorships, Bloomberg News reported this year.
Persons: they’re, they’ve, ” Jon Patton, ” Patton, it’s, Attorney Alvin Bragg, Donald Trump, Matt Carriker, Carriker, YouTube’s, , , hasn’t, Alexander Reville, podcasters, “ You’ve, we’re, Guns.com, Joel Persinger, Chris Mijic, Persinger, “ GunTubers, ” Justin Wagner, Nick Fuentes, John Kinman, Greg, Greg Kinman, YouTube ”, we’ve Organizations: YouTube, Google, Bloomberg News, Gun Safety, Attorney, Trump, Firearms, NBC News, Safety Locations: Manhattan, California, Pennsylvania
Harvey Weinstein’s attorneys have submitted a filing opposing a move by prosecutors to combine two sexual crimes cases against the disgraced film mogul. Manhattan prosecutors have sought to consolidate new charges with ones previously brought against Weinstein so that they could be tried in court together. But in a court document, a response to the prosecutors' motion to consolidate cases filed Oct. 2, the Oscar-winning producer’s lawyers accused the district attorney’s office of acting improperly and unfairly. Bragg’s office signaled that it would seek to link the two cases together ahead of Weinstein’s retrial. Samson says prosecutors say they won’t be ready in time and want to move the trial to January.
Persons: Harvey, Weinstein, Oscar, , unabashedly —, Jessica Mann, Mimi Haley, Attorney Alvin Bragg, Diana Fabi Samson, Samson, , ” Samson Organizations: Manhattan, Manhattan District, Attorney Locations: Manhattan, New York, New, New York City, Rikers
WASHINGTON — The Supreme Court on Tuesday takes on another battle over restrictions on firearms as the justices consider the Biden administration's move to ban "ghost gun" kits that allow people to assemble deadly weapons at home while skirting existing regulations. The challengers focus on the text of the Gun Control Act, saying in their brief that the law simply doesn't apply to gun kits. The ATF does not have unilateral authority to ban ghost guns, with Congress required to act if it wants to do so, they argue. Those defending the availability of ghost gun kits say that they are mostly used by hobbyists, rejecting the government's argument that criminals favor them. Although it is a gun case, the legal question does not turn on the right to bear arms under the Constitution's 2nd Amendment.
Persons: WASHINGTON —, , Biden, Elizabeth Prelogar, Attorney Alvin Bragg, John Roberts, Amy Coney Barrett, District Judge Reed O’Connor, Jennifer VanDerStok, Michael Andren Organizations: Biden, of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms, Explosives, Manhattan, Attorney, federal Gun Control, District, Circuit, Control, ATF Locations: York City, Texas, New Orleans
Jon-Adrian Velazquez spent close to 27 years caught in the criminal justice system — nearly all of it behind bars in New York's Sing Sing prison, convicted of a murder he insisted he did not commit. Andrew Cuomo granted Velazquez executive clemency, citing his work in Sing Sing on an educational initiative by those incarcerated to combat gun violence, and he was freed after serving almost 24 years of a 25-year-to-life sentence. The results determined Velazquez's DNA was not on the key evidence. Since his release from prison, Velazquez has used his experience to become an advocate for criminal legal reform and even played himself in the 2023 drama "Sing Sing," based on an actual Rehabilitation Through the Arts program at the prison. The podcast "Letters from Sing Sing" was a finalist for a 2024 Pulitzer Prize in audio reporting and Slepian's book about the case, "The Sing Sing Files: One Journalist, Six Innocent Men, and a Twenty-Year Fight for Justice," was released this month.
Persons: Jon, Adrian Velazquez, Velazquez, , Mr, Abraham Clott, Dan Slepian, Velazquez's, NBC's, Andrew Cuomo, JJ, Lester Holt, I've, Adrian, Velasquez, Maria Velazquez Velazquez, Albert Ward, Attorney Alvin Bragg, Bragg, ” Velazquez, Holt, Dan, I’d, didn't Organizations: New York, NBC, New York Gov, NBC News, Attorney, Justice Locations: Manhattan, New, New York City, Sing, Harlem, attorney's, reinvestigations
CNN —Federal prosecutors say New York City Mayor Eric Adams engaged in a “long-running conspiracy,” accepting luxury travel and gifts from foreign businesspeople and at least one Turkish government official. Adams, who’s been indicted on five federal public corruption charges, has denied wrongdoing and says he is being targeted because of his positions. Federal agents search Gracie Mansion, the official residence of the mayor of New York City, on September 26, 2024, after Mayor Eric Adams was indicted on federal criminal charges. That Adams, a Democrat, has been charged by prosecutors in the Southern District of New York on corruption charges does not, on its own, disprove Trump’s point. Adams remains defiant in the face of the charges, but they are clearly having an effect on New York politics.
Persons: Eric Adams, Adams, who’s, , , Gracie, Timothy A, Clary, Donald Trump’s, Trump, Sen, Bob Menendez, Trump’s, Menendez, Stormy Daniels, Attorney Alvin Bragg, Jack Smith, General Merrick Garland, Smith, George Santos, Santos, Elie Honig, Honig, Sheldon Silver, Dean Skelos, ” Honig, Alexandria Ocasio, Kathy Hochul Organizations: CNN, New York City, Getty, White, Department of Justice, DOJ, Democrat, of, New, New Jersey Democrat, Manhattan, Attorney, Trump, Republican, CNN The Southern, of New York, New York State Assembly, New York State Senate, Key New York Democrats, New York Gov Locations: New York, New York City, AFP, Southern, of New York, New Jersey, Florida, Washington , DC, York, Manhattan, Lower Manhattan, of New, New, Alexandria, Cortez
Harvey Weinstein was arraigned on an additional sex crimes charge in a New York City courtroom Wednesday, roughly two months ahead of a retrial in the disgraced Hollywood producer’s landmark #MeToo case. “Thanks to this survivor who bravely came forward, Harvey Weinstein now stands indicted for an additional alleged violent sexual assault,” Bragg said. “This investigation is ongoing.”In all, more than 80 women have accused Weinstein of sexual assault or harassment going back decades. (He was acquitted of two counts of predatory sexual assault and a count of first-degree rape.) (The jury acquitted him of a count of sexual battery by restraint and failed to reach a verdict on three other sexual assault counts.)
Persons: Harvey Weinstein, Weinstein, Attorney Alvin Bragg, ” Bragg, Jessica Mann, Mimi Haley, Gloria Allred, , Mann, Harvey, ” Mann, retry Weinstein, Oscar, , Love Organizations: Hollywood, New, Attorney, Manhattan, Bellevue Hospital, Miramax, The New York Times, Yorker Locations: New York City, Manhattan, New York, New, York, Los Angeles, Angeles
WASHINGTON — Attorney General Merrick Garland is set to denounce "dangerous" and "outrageous" attacks on Justice Department prosecutors and personnel Thursday and will seek to reassure them that he has their backs. "It is dangerous to target and intimidate individual employees of this department simply for doing their jobs." "And it is outrageous that you have to face these unfounded attacks because you are doing what is right and upholding the rule of law." He'll say of the attacks on prosecutors: "You deserve better. The former president has called DOJ employees derogatory names, describing, for example, special counsel Jack Smith, who has charged Trump in separate cases, as "deranged."
Persons: General Merrick Garland, Garland, Donald Trump, Trump, Jack Smith, Smith, Attorney Alvin Bragg, he's, Organizations: Department, Justice, DOJ, White, Department of Justice, NBC News, Trump, Biden's Justice, Manhattan, Attorney, WIN, Political, Illegal Voters Locations: WASHINGTON, York
Former President Donald Trump will not be sentenced in his New York criminal hush money case until after the Nov. 5 presidential election, a judge ruled Friday. The sentencing, which was set for Sept. 18, will instead take place on Nov. 26, Manhattan Supreme Court Judge Juan Merchan ruled. The Supreme Court's ruling had already spurred Merchan to delay Trump's sentencing, which was originally scheduled for July 11, by more than two months. Trump campaign spokesman Steven Cheung in a statement Friday said, "There should be no sentencing in the Manhattan DA's Election Interference Witch Hunt." "As mandated by the United States Supreme Court, this case, along with all of the other Harris - Biden Hoaxes, should be dismissed," Cheung said.
Persons: Donald Trump, Juan Merchan, Trump, Merchan, Trump's, Michael Cohen, Stormy Daniels, Cohen, Alvin Bragg's, Steven Cheung, Harris, Biden, Cheung, Bragg, Joe Biden Organizations: U.S, New York, Court, Manhattan, Trump, Republican, United States Supreme, NBC News Locations: New York, Manhattan
Two days before his sentencing, Trump, they predict, will seek something never before allowed in the appellate courts in New York or in most states for that matter: an interlocutory appeal. AdvertisementEven Trump's Manhattan prosecutors are conceding that this is a legal monkey wrench to be reckoned with. "If New York's courts deny him a right to appeal, he can challenge the decision in federal court," said Paradis. If the federal district court in Manhattan says no, "he can appeal that to the second circuit federal court of appeals." This story has been updated to reflect Trump's federal court efforts, from August 29 to September 4, to further delay sentencing.
Persons: , Donald, Trump, John Moscow, Donald Trump, Todd Blanche, Justin Lane, that's, Stormy Daniels, Juan Merchan, White, Hope Hicks, Merchan, Alvin Hellerstein, tersely, Trump hasimmediately, Michel Paradis, Emil Bove, Paradis, Attorney Alvin Bragg, SCOTUS, Emil Bove ., Lewis Baach Kaufmann Middlemiss PLLC, unfinalized, Frank Bowman Organizations: Service, Business, Manhattan, US, White House, Trump, Columbia Law School, York, DA, Attorney, University of Missouri Locations: New York, Manhattan, Merchan
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