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US District Judge Lewis Kaplan scheduled the hearing after Ryan Salame, a former executive of Alameda Research and FTX Digital Markets, tried to withdraw his guilty plea. Salame said prosecutors broke a promise to him by later indicting his romantic partner, Michelle Bond — a claim that prosecutors vigorously disputed. Instead, Kaplan grilled Salame under oath for over 30 minutes in his Manhattan courtroom Thursday morning, accusing him of misrepresenting the plea negotiations. That left Kaplan in a bind: Either Salame lied in his plea hearing, throwing the plea into doubt. Bond would not be pursued if I plead guilty," Salame said.
Persons: , who's, Lewis Kaplan, Ryan Salame, Salame, Michelle Bond, Kaplan, Sam Bankman, Salame didn't, Bond, FTX, Mary Altaffer, wasn't, Danielle Sassoon, Christopher Bartolomucci, he'll, Salame's Organizations: Service, Alameda Research, FTX, Markets, Business, Prosecutors, AP, US, Office, Southern, of Locations: Manhattan, Alameda, of New York
According to an indictment unsealed Thursday, Bond had a fake consulting agreement with FTX, the notorious cryptocurrency exchange run by Sam Bankman-Fried. The $400,000 she received — along with gobs of more stolen money from FTX — fueled her congressional campaign, prosecutors say. The charges against Bond come one day after she finalized a divorce with her previous partner, according to Salame. In total, Salame and FTX gave Bond over $900,000, according to the indictment — far above the legal limits. AdvertisementAccording to prosecutors, Salame even once asked a friend to donate to Bond's campaign, who joked about Salame reimbursing them.
Persons: , Michelle Bond, Bond, Sam Bankman, Ryan Salame, Salame, Gary Wang, Nishad Singh, Caroline Ellison —, Wang, Singh, Ellison, Prosecutors, FTX, that's, Salame didn't, Lewis Kaplan, Danielle Sassoon, Bond —, Sassoon, Judge Kaplan, He's Organizations: Service, FTX, Business, Federal Elections Commission, US, Republican, Digital, Alameda Research, Justice Department Locations: Manhattan, Bahamas, New York's, Long, Bankman, Salame
They also include quite a few Amazon purchases, including cheap ties and "deep bronze" tanning lotion. For the first time, Giuliani disclosed the financial details of Giuliani Communications, the company he owns that produces his video livestreams on social media. On a monthly basis, Giuliani Communications spends more money than it makes — even before the WABC cancellation. Earlier filings were compiled by Joseph Ricci, an accountant whose firm was paid $4,000 by Giuliani Communications in May. Ricci has since declined to work on the banruptcy, Giuliani's lawyers have said.
Persons: , Rudy Giuliani, Giuliani, Maria Ryan, it's, Donald Trump, Tanner, Bice, Giuliani —, Wandrea Moss, Ruby Freeman, Jose Luis Magana It's, Giuliani's, Mike Lindell, John Catsimatidis, Ryan Organizations: Service, New, New York City, Business, Giuliani Communications, New York, eBay, Verizon, Citi, AP, Giuliani's, WABC, Republican Locations: New York, Arizona, New York City, Amazon, Manhattan, Palm Beach, Washington , DC, MyPillow, American
Read previewWhen Rudy Giuliani filed for bankruptcy late last year, it gave him some room to breathe. They all flowed into a federal bankruptcy court, where creditors could negotiate for whatever funds the aging former New York City mayor had left. But if the judge were to agree with the creditors and appoint a Chapter 11 bankruptcy trustee, Giuliani would lose control of his own financial life. AdvertisementA bankruptcy trustee would control all of Giuliani's assets and would be able to sell his two homes unimpeded. Giuliani's creditors have formed a supergroup to try to dig into his finances.
Persons: , Rudy Giuliani, Sean H, Lane, Giuliani, hasn't, mismanaging, Eric Snyder, Wilk Auslander, They've, Ruby Freeman, Shaye Moss, Noelle Dunphy, Akin Gump, Freeman, Moss, Joe Biden, didn't, TrustPoint, Smartmatic, Jacquelyn Martin, Donald Trump, Snyder, Maria Ryan, Rudy Giuliani's, Ryan couldn't, Matt Rourke Giuliani, John Catsimatidis, Biden, Barrett Prettyman, Shane Moss, Drew Angerer, isn't Organizations: Service, Systems, Business, New, New York City, Department, Dominion, Giuliani, Trump's Saving America, Rudy's, Towers Foundation, Giuliani Communications, Republican, Trump, AP, WABC, America's, Washington , DC Locations: New York, New York City, Florida, Georgia, Smartmatic, WASHINGTON, DC, Washington ,, Fulton County, Fulton, Arizona
I sat down and checked my backpack for the 10th time to make sure my passport and wallet were still inside. Melissa Noble and her friends traveled together throughout Cambodia and Vietnam when they were in their 20s. We met at college and traveled through Cambodia and Vietnam together in our early 20s. The main one was how much I love traveling with girlfriends at different life stages. Melissa Noble and her friends connected while traveling.
Persons: , Melissa Noble, Carmen, Peter Andre, what's Organizations: Service, Singapore Changi, Business Locations: Singapore, Bhutan, Brisbane, Cambodia, Vietnam, Kathmandu, Bhutanese, Gasa, Southeast Asia, Australia, Hong Kong
The National Bureau of Statistics is due to release data on retail sales, industrial production and fixed asset investment for April on Friday. Some of the weakness speaks to genuine sluggish demand in China at present. The firm expects this week's economic data releases to show a "softening in economic momentum," affirming its forecasts for the central bank to cut rates by the end of June. "Some of the weakness speaks to genuine sluggish demand in China at present," said Hui Shan, Goldman Sachs' China chief economist, in a note Sunday. Businesses' loan demand fallsNew bank loans to businesses and government organizations dropped sharply in April from March, as did new loans to households, according to official data accessed through Wind Information.
Persons: Hui Shan Goldman Sachs, Louise Loo, Goldman Sachs, Hui Shan, Goldman, RRR, Pan Gongsheng Organizations: Visual China, Getty, BEIJING, National Bureau, Statistics, Reuters, Finance, Oxford Economics, People's Bank of, Information, Clocktower, CNBC Locations: Lianyungang, Jiangsu Province, China, , Beijing, People's Bank of China
Trump's lawyers defended his $175M civil fraud bond — and Knight Specialty — in court filings. AdvertisementLawyers for Donald Trump are defending the "respected" insurers behind his $175 million civil fraud bond in a series of new court filings. Trump's bond was underwritten by Knight Specialty Insurance Company, based in Los Angeles, run by billionaire Trump supporter Don Hankey, a so-called king of subprime car loans. "KSIC is a respected, well-capitalized, Delaware-domiciled insurer that has long underwritten surety bonds and other types of insurance placed around the country," Trump's lawyers wrote. Beyond that, the insurer "has access to more than $2 billion in assets and $1 billion in equity" through its parent company, Knight Insurance Company," the filings say.
Persons: Trump, , Donald Trump, general's, Charles Schwab, KSIC, Letitia James, Knight, Arthur Engoron, Engoron, Don Hankey, Trump's Schwab, Read, Christopher Kise, Alina Habba, Clifford Robert Organizations: Service, underwriters, New York, Knight Specialty Insurance, Knight Insurance Company, Trump, Associated Press Locations: Manhattan, KSIC, New, Los Angeles, Delaware, Engoron
Sam Taylor-Johnson isn't fond of the public scrutiny that her age-gap relationship with Aaron Taylor-Johnson gets. AdvertisementDirector Sam Taylor-Johnson said she does not enjoy the attention she and her actor husband, Aaron Taylor-Johnson, receive over the 23-year age gap in their relationship. "There are times when it's uncomfortable," Sam told The Hollywood Reporter, referring to the scrutiny they receive for their age-gap relationship. In March, Aaron told Rolling Stone UK that he doesn't quite understand why people like to weigh in on their relationship. Aaron and Sam aren't the only celebrity couple with a big age gap.
Persons: Sam Taylor, Johnson, Aaron Taylor, , Amy Winehouse, Sam, Aaron, Harper's, Sam isn't, James Bond, Daniel Craig, Sam aren't, Dick Van Dyke, Arlene Silver, Patrick Stewart, Sunny Ozell Organizations: Hollywood, Service, Guardian, Rolling Stone UK, Office Mojo, Business Insider
The LA company that underwrote Trump's $175M appeal bond needs major vetting, NY says. Judge Arthur Engoron, who presided over Trump's civil fraud trial, gets final say over the bond. AdvertisementThe New York Attorney General's Office wants a closer look at Donald Trump's $175 million appeal bond. In a two-page court filing Thursday, state officials are giving Trump or his underwriters — the Knight Specialty Insurance Company — ten days to "justify," or prove the sufficiency of, the bond. Justifying was not necessary, for example, when Trump used insurance giant Chubb to post a $92 million bond last month for his E. Jean Carroll defamation appeal.
Persons: Arthur Engoron, , General's, Donald Trump's, Letitia James, Knight, Don Hankey, Forbes, Trump, Chubb, Jean Carroll Organizations: Service, New York, Trump, Knight Specialty Insurance, New York's Department of Financial Services, GOP, Trump Organization, Associated Press, Knight Locations: Los Angeles, New York, New, Angeles, Manhattan
Read previewAn appellate court decision reducing former President Donald Trump's bond to $175 million was a win for the former president — and certainly a rare one, according to legal experts. But the former president was tossed a last-minute lifeline Monday when an appeals court ordered a whopping 62% reduction in the size of the bond. AdvertisementIn that time, he's only heard of roughly a couple dozen instances when a New York appeals court reduced an appeal bond — and those involved far lower judgments. While the lowered bond buys Trump time, he'll still owe the entire sum if he loses on appeal. As part of Monday's decision, Trump is required to file a full appeal argument in time for the court's September 2024 session.
Persons: , Donald Trump's, Trump, Neil Pedersen, Pedersen, he's, Letitia James, Eric Snyder, Wilk Auslander, Snyder, he'll, Arthur Engoron, Engoron Organizations: Service, Business, Sons, New York, Trump, New, Trump Organization Locations: York, New York, he'll
With Donald J. Trump on the clock to secure a nearly half-billion-dollar bond in his civil fraud case, a New York appeals court appears to have handed the former president a lifeline on Monday, saying it would accept a far smaller bond of $175 million. The ruling by a five-judge panel of appellate court judges was a crucial and unexpected victory for the former president, potentially staving off a looming financial disaster. Had the court denied his request — and had he failed to obtain the full bond — Mr. Trump risked of losing control over his bank accounts and, eventually, even some of his marquee properties. If Mr. Trump obtains the smaller bond, it would prevent the New York attorney general’s office, which brought the case accusing him of fraudulently inflating his net worth, from collecting while Mr. Trump appeals the $454 million judgment imposed by a trial judge. Mr. Trump has 10 days to secure the bond, and two people with knowledge of his finances said he should be able to do so by then.
Persons: Donald J, Trump Organizations: New Locations: New York
There are currently 415 entities — including the LLCs holding his physical properties — under the Trump Org umbrella. Trust Revocable Trust, which holds all of Trump Org's assets and for which Trump is the sole beneficiary. The judge also ordered on Thursday that Trump foot the bill for the additional staff needed for this extra monitoring. More penaltiesViolations of Thursday's order could result in the judge ordering more penalties against Trump Org, the judge warned. Trump and his three codefendants — Donald Trump, Jr., Eric Trump, and former Trump Org CFO Allen Weisselberg — owe a combined fraud-trial penalty of $467 million as of Thursday, according to a penalty calculator maintained by the Associated Press.
Persons: , Donald Trump's, Trump's, Barbara Jones —, who's, Arthur Engoron, Trump, Engoron, Donald J, Jones, Letitia James, — Donald Trump , Jr, Eric Trump, Allen Weisselberg —, he's Organizations: Service, Wall Street, Business, Trump Organization, Trump Org, Trump, Trump's, Revocable Trust, New York, Associated Press, New, Bloomberg Locations: Trump's, New York, Westchester County, Manhattan, Seven Springs
Ten days ago, Chubb underwrote Trump's $92 million bond for his E. Jean Carroll defamation appeal. But Chubb declined to handle the far higher appeal bond Trump now needs in his NY civil fraud case. The insurance giant had faced blowback after agreeing to the Carroll bond. Chubb's "no, thanks" comes just five days after the company's CEO, Evan Greenberg, sent a letter to brokers, clients, and investors addressing widespread criticism over the Carroll bond. The Carroll bond was underwritten by Chubb subsidiary Federal Insurance Company.
Persons: Chubb, Trump's, Jean Carroll, Trump, Carroll, , Donald Trump's E, Evan Greenberg, Greenberg, Nick Newton, Newton, Neil Pederson, Pedersen, it's, Letitia James, James, Alan Garten Organizations: Service, GOP, Trump, Insurance, Business, Chubb, Insurance Company, National Association, Bond, Sons, New York, Trump Organization Locations: New York, York, AssuredPartners, Manhattan
Three days after Donald J. Trump posted a $91.6 million bond in the defamation case he lost recently to the writer E. Jean Carroll, her lawyer on Monday suggested she was considering filing yet another defamation lawsuit against the former president. The lawyer raised the prospect of a new lawsuit after Mr. Trump in recent days repeatedly lashed out at Ms. Carroll, using the same kind of disparaging language that led to the huge judgment against him in January. “The statute of limitations for defamation in most jurisdictions is between one and three years,” Roberta A. Kaplan, Ms. Carroll’s lawyer, said in a statement Monday morning. “As we said after the last jury verdict, we continue to monitor every statement that Donald Trump makes about our client.”In a separate court filing, Ms. Kaplan told the federal judge overseeing the case that she and Mr. Trump’s lawyers had reached an agreement on the details of his proposed $91.6 million bond. The bond — provided by Federal Insurance Company, an arm of the insurance giant Chubb — will prevent Ms. Carroll from collecting her multi-million-dollar judgment while Mr. Trump appeals the defamation verdict.
Persons: Donald J, Trump, Jean Carroll, Carroll, ” Roberta A, Kaplan, Donald Trump, Chubb Organizations: Federal Insurance Company
Read previewFormer President Donald Trump has posted a bond that will stop E. Jean Carroll from being able to collect $83.3 million from a defamation judgment against him. Trump agreed to the terms of the bond with the Federal Insurance Co. on Tuesday, according to documents filed in court Friday. Trump would have shopped around for the lowest premium, and there may have been more than one carrier competing for his business, Pedersen said. Mandatory costs and interest raise the bond by a standardized 111% above the original judgment in federal cases, Pedersen said. Trump has already put the $5 million in damages he owes in that case into a court-controlled account as he pursues appeals.
Persons: , Donald Trump, Jean Carroll, Trump, Chubb —, Chubb, Neil Pedersen, Pedersen, Lewis Kaplan, Kaplan, They're, Carroll Organizations: Service, Trump, Business, Federal Insurance Co, Sons, New Locations: Manhattan, New York
Under last month's fraud trial judgment, Trump's debt to NY rises by $111,984 in interest per day. Under the final fraud trial judgment, the GOP frontrunner's debt to New York state rises daily by $111,984 in interest. That means every 9 days, Trump owes the state another $1 million in interest. On that same day, the total Trump owes New York will tick up by another $1 million, to $456 million. Former Trump Organization CEO Allen Weisselberg owes $1 million; interest is adding $272 to his total every day.
Persons: , Donald Trump, Trump, Arthur Engoron, Engoron, Donald Trump’s, UqZ85lGILh, Mike Sisak, ingle, ong, ike, J r., ric, wes Organizations: Service, they're, GOP, Mike Sisak 🗒️, ust, tate Locations: New York
Attorneys for Donald Trump on Wednesday said the former president and his co-defendants plan to post a $100 million bond to pause enforcement of their civil fraud judgment — though that is just a fraction of the total amount that they have been ordered to pay. To secure a "complete" appeal bond — which could cost more than $550 million — would be "impossible," the defense lawyers wrote in a court filing to the appellate division of Manhattan Supreme Court. Engoron ordered the defendants to pay a total of $464.6 million in fines and interest. Trump's total was more than $454 million, which includes more than $98 million in pre-judgment interest. In this case, the bond could be worth upwards of $550 million.
Persons: Donald Trump, Trump, Letitia James, James, Arthur Engoron's, Engoron Organizations: New York, Court, Manhattan Supreme, Trump Locations: New York City, Manhattan, New York
But first, he has to secure a bond — and that might not be so easy. Unless he wants to pay the entire penalty while his expected appeal is considered, Trump will need to post an appeal bond. At that rate, Trump's original ruling with interest would indicate he will need to secure a bond worth more than $540 million. It's "not very attractive to take real estate as collateral," said Neil Pedersen, owner of New York-based surety bond agency Pedersen & Sons. Trump could have to liquidate some assets to secure a bond, said Pedersen.
Persons: Donald Trump, Trump, Neil Pedersen, Pedersen, Judge Arthur Engoron's Organizations: U.S, Court, Trump, Sons Locations: New York, Manhattan , New York
My partner entered the hospital room in a blue gown, his clothes stuffed in a clear plastic bag. AdvertisementThe author's partner, Don, while in the hospital. The author and their partner, Don. Courtesy of the authorDuring his surgery, I considered reaching out to his exI thought of calling Bridget, Don's ex. AdvertisementBefore Bridget, I'd never felt the power of a metamour bond — the bond with my partner's partner.
Persons: Don, we'd, I'd, I've, Don I'd, Bridget, Don's, they'd, she'd, mindlessly, Polyamory Organizations: Service Locations: polyamory
The bond bear market is the worst in more than 200 years, according to BNP Paribas' global chief investment officer. "This represents the biggest US bond bear market in over 200 years," Shing said. But, he said, one corner of the bond market is an opportunity for investors: U.S. "fallen angels" in the high-yield credit segment. "So actually, you can still capture 8% plus gross yield of these fallen angels, but at a much lower default risk at a time when the economy is slowing." Those keen on investing in "fallen angel" bonds can consider exchange-traded funds and funds that have been specifically developed to focus on such bonds.
Persons: Edmund Shing, CNBC's, They've, there're, Shing Organizations: BNP, Treasury, U.S, U.S . Federal, U.S ., Morningstar Locations: U.S
Beware the bears: Why it's too easy to be a seller right now
  + stars: | 2023-10-01 | by ( Jim Cramer | ) www.cnbc.com   time to read: +6 min
Now that we are almost back to normal via de-inversion, what does that say to the billionaire class? The stock sellers show no fortitude. As a subscriber to the CNBC Investing Club with Jim Cramer, you will receive a trade alert before Jim makes a trade. Jim waits 45 minutes after sending a trade alert before buying or selling a stock in his charitable trust's portfolio. If Jim has talked about a stock on CNBC TV, he waits 72 hours after issuing the trade alert before executing the trade.
Persons: , Jerome Powell, Brent, didn't, Jim Cramer's, Jim Cramer, Jim, Kai Pfaffenbach Organizations: Treasury, Costco, Organization of Petroleum, Club, Costco Wholesale, Nike, Honeywell, Nvidia, Fed, Jim Cramer's Charitable, CNBC Locations: Saudi Arabia, Frankfurt, Germany
In 2005, Justin Trudeau, the son of a legendary Canadian prime minister, and Sophie Grégoire, a well-known television journalist, married inside a stone church in Montreal’s wealthy, French-speaking enclave of Outremont. “I’m the luckiest woman in the world,” the bride said to a crowd of onlookers as she entered the church. Under a sunny sky, the couple drove away in a Mercedes roadster that belonged to Mr. Trudeau’s father, Pierre Trudeau, producing an iconic wedding photo. “The wedding was talked about a lot, maybe not as much as Céline Dion’s, but it was talked about,” Geneviève Tellier, a political science professor at the University of Ottawa, said, referring to the singer who is from Quebec. “It was a media event.”Over the next decade, Mr. Trudeau, with his wife and their three children, shrewdly crafted an image that became integral to his rapid ascent — that of a modern husband, father and political figure, who would go on to win votes with a mix of idealism and glamour.
Persons: Justin Trudeau, Sophie Grégoire, , Trudeau’s, Pierre Trudeau, ” Geneviève Tellier, Trudeau, shrewdly Organizations: Canadian, University of Ottawa Locations: Montreal’s, Outremont, Quebec,
Are the travails of the bond market, like Macbeth expounds, a "tale told by an idiot, full of sound and fury, signifying nothing?" The billionaire class — so incorrectly sought after by the media — so often seems to use the bond market as a sort of intellectual cudgel. That's why I always start my discussion on bonds with the simple query of "where are the layoffs, not forget about stocks, think fixed income." Here the bond market polices only those companies that haven't pivoted to making a profit. They, among all sectors, could be pummeled by the bond market freeze and by the consumers' paralysis.
‘Polite Society’ Review: Pride and Plenty of Fists
  + stars: | 2023-04-27 | by ( Amy Nicholson | ) www.nytimes.com   time to read: +2 min
“Polite Society,” a rollicking genre mash-up, is set in an enclave of well-to-do Muslim Londoners who play along with the comedy’s title until they get cranky. Then come the punches and neck chops, the bruises and broken glass, the ludicrous wire-fu that allows a matron in a brocade lehenga to fly through the air. Stubborn and snotty, Ria is so hellbent on breaking up the betrothal that she’s willing to spy and lie, claw and kick. She gets as good as she gives, ending more than one scene in a bloody, heaving heap. At the same time, the audience can appreciate what Ria is too childish to see: Lena’s joy that the neighborhood screw-up has landed its most eligible bachelor.
They are Larry Kramer and Andreas Paepcke, both of whom have ties to Stanford, where SBF's parents work. On Wednesday, unsealed court records identified the FTX founder's bail guarantors as Larry Kramer, a former dean of Stanford Law School, and Andreas Paepcke, a senior research scientist at Stanford. A screenshot of Larry Kramer's bio on a Stanford Law School web page shows that he's emeritus dean of the institution. from the University of Chicago Law School in 1984, according to his Stanford Law bio page. On his personal page, Paepcke listed hobbies including "piano studies and simple composition, worrying, and poetry."
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