Top related persons:
Top related locs:
Top related orgs:

Search resuls for: "Michel Paradis"


12 mentions found


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
Trump has vowed to fire the special prosecutor who brought two federal cases against him. His win may largely free Trump from dealing with his criminal cases for the foreseeable future, experts told Business Insider. Here's what will happen with Trump's four criminal cases — two federal and two state — moving forward. Related Video All the ways Donald Trump wins from the Supreme Court immunity rulingDonald Trump confers with his defense lawyer Todd Blanche in his hush-money trial before New York Supreme Court Justice Juan Merchan. AdvertisementIn July, the US Supreme Court issued a landmark opinion that provides presidents with broad protection from being prosecuted for official acts while in office.
Persons: Donald Trump, Trump, , Donald Trump's, Neama Rahmani, Todd Blanche, Juan Merchan, Jane Rosenberg, Stormy Daniels, he's, Michael Dorf, Rahmani, Jack Smith, Jonathan Ernst, Smith, Dorf, Michel Paradis, Paradis, Steven Cheung, Kamala Harris, Crooked Joe, Witch Hunts, Dana Verkouteren, Citizen Trump, Aileen Cannon, Fani Willis, John Bazemore, Willis, Nathan Wade, Wade, it's Organizations: Service, Trump, New, Cornell Law School, West, Trial, Reuters, Department, Columbia Law School, Justice Department, Witch, DOJ, Citizen, Supreme, White, Appeals, AP Locations: Georgia, New York, Manhattan, New, York, Washington , DC, Fulton County, Atlanta
AdvertisementNot only is the presidency on the line for Donald Trump in the 2024 election, but so are his four criminal indictments. Here's what will happen with Trump's four criminal cases — two federal and two state — if he wins or loses this year's presidency. AdvertisementDonald Trump confers with hush-money defense lawyer Todd Blanche before New York Supreme Court Justice Juan Merchan. If reelected president, Trump could ask his attorney general to fire Smith. In July, the US Supreme Court issued a landmark opinion that provides presidents with broad protection from being prosecuted for their official acts.
Persons: Donald Trump, Trump, , Kamala Harris, Neama Rahmani, Todd Blanche, Juan Merchan, Jane Rosenberg, Stormy Daniels, he's, Michael Dorf, it's, Rahmani, Jack Smith, Jonathan Ernst, Smith, Dorf, Michel Paradis, Paradis, Steven Cheung, Crooked Joe, Witch Hunts, Dana Verkouteren, Citizen Trump, Aileen Cannon, Smith's, Fani Willis, John Bazemore, Willis, Nathan Wade, Wade Organizations: Trump, Service, Democratic, Business, New, Cornell Law, West, Trial, Reuters, Department, Columbia Law School, Justice Department, Witch, DOJ, Citizen, Supreme, White, Appeals, AP Locations: New, New York, Manhattan, York, Washington , DC, Fulton County, Georgia, Atlanta
In a court filing on Monday, Adams attorney Alex Spiro cites a groundbreaking June SCOTUS decision as reason enough to toss the bribery count. AdvertisementFederal prosecutors say Adams enjoyed nearly a decade of globe-circling Turkish Airlines trips. "I know," the feds say Adams responded when told by the staffer that Turkey saw this as "his turn" to reciprocate. (In addition to Spiro, Adams is represented by Avi Perry and William Burck. Adams has pleaded not guilty to the indictment, which also charges him with illegally accepting campaign contributions from Turkish officials and others via straw donors.
Persons: SCOTUS, Adams, , Eric Adams, It's, Alex Spiro, Snyder, Spiro, Michel Paradis, Paradis, Brett Kavanaugh, Avi Perry, William Burck, Anthony Kennedy, Kavanaugh, Spiro didn't Organizations: New York City, Service, US, Indiana, Columbia Law School, Prosecutors, Turkish Airlines, Fox Corp, New York Times, Turkish, Justice Department Locations: New York, United States, Turkey, Turkish, Spiro, Burck
Read previewLate Thursday morning, Donald Trump lost his last state-level appeal of his hush-money gag order. These two new legal losses now leave the door open for Trump to run to the US Supreme Court, according to constitutional law expert Michel Paradis. New York CourtsBoth losses are eligible under federal statute for Trump to seek Supreme Court review, also known as petitioning for "certiorari," or "cert" for short. Related stories"Ordinarily, the Supreme Court will only agree to hear questions that were decided by a lower court. AdvertisementAnd because Trump is Trump — and because "the Supreme Court can basically do whatever it wants" — the former president will likely dream big, Paradis predicted.
Persons: , Donald Trump, Michel Paradis, Trump, Paradis, Appeals, Donald Trump's, Hope Hicks, wouldn't, Bush, Gore Organizations: Service, Business, Trump, Columbia University School of Law, New Locations: Manhattan, New York, they're
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
In fact, a single piece of evidence could be Trump's handiest monkey wrench of all. Manhattan district attorney's office/BIDays before closing arguments, Business Insider highlighted People's 81 as one of ten pieces of incriminating "smoking gun" evidence. SCOTUS/Business InsiderIt took less than a day for defense lawyers to use this ban on "official act" evidence to challenge Trump's May 30 conviction. "Under Trump," defense lawyer Todd Blanche wrote Monday, referring to the SCOTUS decision, "this official-acts evidence should never have been put before the jury." Why People's 81 may be Trump's best monkey-wrenchIn hopes of setting aside Trump's verdict, Trump's lawyers raised other instances where they say "official acts" were improperly used at trial against him.
Persons: , Donald Trump's, Trump, Michael Cohen, Cohen, Donald Trump, Joshua Steinglass, SCOTUS, Trump's, It's, Hope Hicks, Todd Blanche, Blanche, Attorney Alvin Bragg, — Bragg, Juan Merchan, Merchan, Michel Paradis, — Trump, Hicks, Stormy Daniels, Paradis, Daniels Organizations: Service, Business, Manhattan, Attorney's, Supreme Court, People's, Trump, Prosecutors, Attorney, New York, Columbia Law School Locations: Manhattan, SCOTUS
download the appSign up to get the inside scoop on today’s biggest stories in markets, tech, and business — delivered daily. "Most, if not all, of that conduct would fall on the 'presumptively-official' side of the line," said Michel Paradis, an attorney who teaches national security and constitutional law at Columbia Law School. AdvertisementUnder Monday's decision, "courts may not inquire into the President's motives" in deciding if a presidential act is official or unofficial. "And this opinion, more than any other in the Supreme Court's history, gives the president king-like powers," Sloan added. "Everybody was horrified" when Trump's lawyer first raised immunity in that circumstance as a possible consequence, Sloan said.
Persons: , Richard Nixon, — Nixon, Michel Paradis, Paradis, Trump, Trump's, Rudy Giuliani, Neama Rahmani, Rahmani, Cliff Sloan, Sloan, Sonya Sotomayor Organizations: Service, FBI, CIA, Business, Columbia Law School, Department of Education, Environmental Protection Agency, Biden, Trump, West, Georgetown Law, Supreme Locations: Independence
Both of his prosecutions of Donald Trump — the Mar-a-Lago documents case in Florida, and the insurrection case out of Washington, DC — will be delayed and diminished by Monday's United States Supreme Court's immunity decision, legal experts predict. The SCOTUS decision found that former presidents are presumptively immune from prosecution for acts they took while in office. That review of the insurrection case — by the DC Circuit Court of Appeals and, likely, the Supreme Court once again — will take many months. Advertisement"The way the Supreme Court set up the new rule is that most everything the president does is 'presumptively immune,'" he said. By that new measure, any communication Trump has with another federal official is, for all practical purposes, immune from prosecution, he said.
Persons: , Jack Smith, Donald Trump —, SCOTUS, Trump, Cliff Sloan, Michel Paradis, Sloan, Paradis, Justice Barrett Organizations: Service, Monday's United, Business, DC, Appeals, Georgetown University, Columbia Law School, Prosecutors, Justice Department, Department, Trump Locations: Florida, Washington, Monday's United States, DC, Beach , Florida
Former President Donald Trump has run out of legal options to delay Monday's start of his Manhattan hush-money trial, legal experts predict. Trump's lawyers struck out 0-3 this week, when three Manhattan appellate judges rejected three separate emergency delay bids during arguments on Monday, on Tuesday, and Wednesday. Barring an unforeseen, nonlegal emergency, jury selection in Trump's first of four criminal cases will begin as scheduled on Monday morning in Supreme Court in lower Manhattan, experts said. Ditto the US Supreme Court, where Trump could ultimately end up, given that all three appellate efforts raise Constitutional issues, Schechtman said. AdvertisementBut though Trump's lawyers failed to stop the trial, their efforts may not be wasted down the road.
Persons: , Donald Trump, Trump's, Barry Kamins, Trump, Juan Merchan's, I'd, Paul Shechtman, Schechtman, Michel Paradis, it's, Paradis Organizations: Service, Business, New York, Getty, Trump, New, Columbia Law School Locations: Trump, Manhattan
Trump struck out 0-3 during three visits this week to a Manhattan appellate courthouse. Former President Donald Trump has run out of legal options to delay Monday's start of his Manhattan hush-money trial, legal experts predict. Barring an unforeseen, nonlegal emergency, jury selection in Trump's first of four criminal cases will begin as scheduled on Monday morning in the Supreme Court in lower Manhattan, legal experts say. But even if Trump wins — and that's a long shot — it's highly unlikely any of these three appellate decisions would stop or even pause the trial, legal experts also say. Ditto the US Supreme Court, where Trump could ultimately end up, given that all three appellate efforts raise Constitutional issues, Shechtman said.
Persons: Trump, , Donald Trump, Trump's, Barry Kamins, Juan Merchan's, I'd, Paul Shechtman, Shechtman, Kamins, Michel Paradis, it's, Paradis Organizations: Service, New York, Getty, Trump, New, Columbia Law School Locations: Manhattan, Trump
A federal appeals court on Tuesday rejected a bid by a Yemeni prisoner at Guantánamo Bay to have a new military jury reconsider his life sentence for conspiring to commit war crimes as a propaganda chief for Al Qaeda and an aide to Osama bin Laden. Earlier appeals struck down two of the three crimes for which Ali Hamza al-Bahlul was convicted in 2008. His lawyer, Michel Paradis, had argued that a new sentencing jury should be assembled at the base to hear evidence and arguments on whether his remaining conspiracy conviction deserved a lesser sentence. Mr. Paradis also sought reconsideration of the sentence because, a year after Mr. Bahlul’s trial, Guantánamo’s military commission system was overhauled to explicitly prohibit the use of evidence “obtained by the use of torture or by cruel, inhuman, or degrading treatment.”A three-judge panel of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit said that the sentence should stand and that the prisoner’s lawyers brought up the question of torture too late in the appellate process.
Persons: Osama bin Laden, Ali Hamza al, Bahlul, Michel Paradis, Paradis, Bahlul’s, , Organizations: Al, U.S ., Appeals, District of Columbia Circuit Locations: Guantánamo, Al Qaeda
Total: 12