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WASHINGTON — Republican Presidential candidate Donald Trump on Friday called the judge overseeing the Jan. 6-related federal criminal case against him "the most evil person," despite threats U.S. District Judge Tanya Chutkan has already faced from his supporters. They do show that Smith’s team is relying upon transcripts of interviews and other information disclosed by the House Jan. 6 Committee, which dissolved after Democrats lost the House in 2022. Chutkan began overseeing the Trump case following his first federal indictment in the Jan. 6-related case in August 2023 and made clear from the beginning that Trump's 2024 presidential candidacy would have no impact on her handling of the case. You know, judge is supposed to keep— what judge would say ‘We’re going to release something, you know, a couple of days before.'" One key to Smith's case is his contention that Trump knew the lies he spread to his followers about the 2020 election were, in fact, false.
Persons: WASHINGTON, Donald Trump, Tanya Chutkan, Trump, Jack Smith, , Dan Bongino, Smith, “ It’s, Aileen Cannon, Abigail Jo Shry, Shry, Chutkan, Smith's, might've Organizations: Republican, U.S, Trump, Justice Department Locations: Texas, Washington, United States
Donald Trump on Friday called the judge presiding over his criminal election interference case in Washington, D.C., "the most evil person" for ordering the release of nearly 1,900 pages of previously sealed documents filed by prosecutors. Trump suggested U.S. District Court Judge Tanya Chutkan made the files public to harm the Republican presidential nominee's chances in November's election. "Now, it's a terrible thing, what's happening and the judge is, this judge is the most evil person," Trump said on Dan Bongino's podcast. "They're going to release something else, and always before the election," Trump said. Smith has charged Trump with crimes related to his attempts to undo his loss in the 2020 election to President Joe Biden.
Persons: Donald Trump, Trump, Tanya Chutkan, Dan Bongino's, it's, Chutkan, Jack Smith, Smith, Joe Biden Organizations: Washington , D.C, U.S, Republican Locations: Washington ,
There's also Kimberlyn, a Black on-air reporter at a conservative cable news outlet, played by Christina Elmore. Chozick also suggested the book “What it Takes: The Way to the White House” by Richard Ben Kramer. “You have these complicated, interesting women who all come from different backgrounds, different ideologies, different generations, and they are theoretically competitors, yet ultimately end up valuing each other over any of that," said Gugino. Throughout the episodes, the characters debate journalism ethics and ideologies and whether text, video or digital is the best medium. "Lola is arguing a point I’ve heard young journalists make or aspiring journalists make, that objectivity is sort of a myth.
Persons: Felicity Walker —, Hayden Wells Garrett, shucks, Scott Foley, Garrett, Mark Consuelos, Julie Plec, Amy Chozick, Hillary ”, ” Melissa Benoist, Sadie McCarthy, Hunter S, Thompson, Sadie's, Griffin Dunne, , Carla Gugino, she's, There's, Christina Elmore, Lola, Natasha Behnam, Benoist, , “ I’ve, Chozick, Alexandra Pelosi, George, George W, Richard Ben Kramer, ” Lola, I’ve, Elmore, Foley, “ Felicity ”, Noel Organizations: , New York Times, Texas Gov Locations: Grace, America
Why tiny homes could be a big deal
  + stars: | 2023-08-06 | by ( Matt Turner | ) www.businessinsider.com   time to read: +6 min
It's easy to look at these tiny homes as undersized gimmicks, but there are real use cases. Others are leaning on tiny homes to house homeless veterans. Denver changed its zoning laws to make ADU construction easier, allowing two-story units in some parts of the city. Tiny homes won't fix that, but innovation in zoning and construction, taken with recent data pointing to a surge in residential construction, offer reasons for hope. Why tiny homes could be a big dealThis first appeared in the Insider Today newsletter.
Persons: Joyce Higashi, Katie Sandoval, Clark, Maggie, John Randolph, crumbles Karl Maasdam, Lawrence D, Thornton, Rebecca Zisser, Francesca Gino, Gino, she's, Read, Morgan Stanley, Arantza Pena Popo, Who's, James Gorman, Ted Pick, Morgan Stanley copresident, Insider's Hayley Cuccinello, Pick, Andy Saperstein, Ted Pick Big, Tyler Le, Brad Setser, Tess Turner, Stack, coders, — Jasmine Hyman, Doc Martens, Matt Turner, Hallam Bullock, Lisa Ryan Organizations: Service, Harvard, Big Pharma Locations: Wall, Silicon, California, San Jose, New Hampshire, Denver, Austin's, New York City
Francesca Gino is suing Harvard and bloggers who accused her of data fraud for $25 million. Francesca Gino is suing Harvard and the bloggers who accused her of data fraud in a $25 million lawsuit. The Harvard professor claims they "worked together to destroy my career and reputation." In the June blog posts, Data Colada reported on a series of anomalies in Gino's data. Some worry the lawsuit will make exposing data fraud even more difficultGino is not the first high-profile professor that Data Colada has accused of unethical behavior.
Persons: Francesca Gino, Gino, Data Colada, , Uri Simonsohn, Joe Simmons, Leif Nelson —, Gino's, Simine Vazire, Goldman Sachs, Michael Sanders, Colada, Gary Pisano, Harvard, Data, Sanders, ESADE Business School —, Francesca Gino's, Simonsohn, Simmons, Nelson, Nick Brown, Vazire Organizations: Harvard, Data, LinkedIn, Data Colada, University of Melbourne, Disney, Alaska Airlines, Harvard Business School, King's College London, ESADE Business School, YouTube, Wharton Locations: Harvard
"We believe that many more Gino-authored papers contain fake data," the Data Colada professors wrote. Data Colada found that the raw data showed clear anomalies, such as a distribution infinitely more likely to be produced by a random-number generator than actual people. Soon after, Data Colada ran an article alleging that Gino tampered with data in at least one of her honesty-pledge experiments. A post on Data Colada or a tweet from Brown is like a bomb going off in the behavioral-science world. Others who attempted to build on Gino's studies are grappling with having wasted time, money, and energy.
Persons: It's, Francesca Gino, Gino, Michael Sanders, Greg Burd, , Hugo Boss, Gino coauthoring, Swarthmore College's Bhanot, Maurice Schweitzer, Simine Vazire, Sanders, Goldman Sachs, Schweitzer, they'd, Uri Simonsohn, Joe Simmons, Leif Nelson —, Data Colada, Dan Ariely, Ariely, Chris Goodney, Harvard, Colada, Nick Brown, Brown, Jeff Lees, Lees, There's Ariely, Brian Wansink's, HBS's Amy Cuddy's, Cuddy, Amy Cuddy's, Marie Claire's, Allison Williams, Astrid Stawiarz, Marie Claire Simonsohn, Simmons, Nelson, they're, Gordon Pennycook, Pennycook, it's, Bhanot Organizations: TED, Twitter, LinkedIn, Harvard, Wharton, Swarthmore College, Harvard Business School, Alaska Airlines, King's College London, Tione, University of Trento, Sant'anna, Studies, Carnegie Mellon University, University of North, Wired, Forbes, Google, Swarthmore, University of Melbourne, Disney, Lavin Agency, Data, Duke University, who's, NBC, BuzzFeed News, Bloomberg, Getty, Privately, Higher Education, Hill, Duke, US Department of, Cornell University, New York Times Locations: Trento, Pisa, University of North Carolina, HBS, Guatemala, Boston, New York, British, Guatemalan
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