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Caroline Ellison, the star witness in the prosecution of FTX founder Sam Bankman-Fried, reported to a low-security federal prison in Connecticut on Thursday, according to a spokesman for the Bureau of Prisons. The federal Probation Department had recommended that Judge Lewis Kaplan sentence Ellison to three years of supervised release, with no time behind bars. Kaplan allowed Ellison to remain free on bail until surrendering to prison either on or after Nov. 7. He was sentenced to 25 years in prison in March and also was ordered to pay $11 billion in forfeiture by Kaplan. Both Bankman-Fried and Ellison had faced the same statutory maximum sentence of about 110 years in prison for their crimes.
Persons: Caroline Ellison, Sam Bankman, Ellison, Lewis Kaplan, Kaplan, FTX spiraled, I've, Miss Ellison, Nishad Singh, Fried Organizations: Alameda Research, Bureau of Prisons, federal, Department Locations: New York, Connecticut, Alameda, Fried . Alameda, FTX, U.S, Manhattan
Prosecutors proposed remedies after Google antitrust violation ruling by a federal judge. Judge Amit Mehta previously ruled Google violated antitrust laws by securing default search deals. AdvertisementProsecutors said they're considering a requirement that Google share the data that powers a big chunk of its business — the inputs and models for Google search and search results — through an application programming interface. Another proposal would prevent the company from using its other products, such as Chrome and Android, to promote Google search over competitors. Google previously said that the company plans to appeal the ruling, which could delay the judge from imposing any remedies filed by the prosecution.
Persons: Amit Mehta, , Prosecutors, doled, Evelyn Mitchell, Wolf, Mehta, Dan Ives Organizations: Service, Google, Big Tech, Apple, Prosecutors, Companies, Microsoft, Wedbush Securities, Department of Justice
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
Defense lawyers also had requested a no-prison sentence for Ellison, who had run Alameda Research , a hedge fund connected to FTX. Kaplan allowed Ellison to remain free on bail until she surrenders to prison either on or after Nov. 7. He was sentenced to 25 years in prison in March and also was ordered to pay $11 billion in forfeiture by Kaplan. On Tuesday, before sentencing Ellison, Kaplan contrasted her conduct after she was charged with that of Bankman-Fried. Both Bankman-Fried and Ellison had faced the same statutory maximum sentence of about 110 years in prison for their crimes.
Persons: Ellison, Lewis Kaplan, Caroline Ellison, Sam Bankman, Kaplan, I've, Miss Ellison, FTX spiraled, Ellison's Organizations: Alameda Research, federal, Department Locations: New York, U.S, Manhattan, FTX
How a U.S. spy tapped into Russian communication lines
  + stars: | 2024-09-13 | by ( Cnbc.Com Staff | ) www.cnbc.com   time to read: +2 min
Olson, who served more than 30 years overseas, had been intercepting sensitive Russian information that was being sent over microwave transmissions. For this series, Eamon Javers spent nearly a year investigating a criminal network and exploring how wealthy Russian hackers stole millions from U.S. investors. Javers interviewed FBI agents, prosecutors — and even spies like Olson — to reveal the shocking details of a massive criminal enterprise. Javers asked Olson what it feels like to go on such a mission, something he called "Mission Impossible stuff." "It's humbling because you have this sense that your country put that much trust in you to carry out that mission," Olson said.
Persons: Jim Olson, Olson, Eamon Javers, Javers, , we're Organizations: CIA, CNBC Senior Washington, FBI Locations: Moscow, Russian
The cybersecurity scam targeted well-known American companies like Skechers, Snapchat and Roku. As Vladislav Klyushin's cybersecurity scam grew, collecting more than $93 million in less than three years, the FBI's investigation was closing in on unraveling his scheme. CNBC's new original podcast series "The Crimes of Putin's Trader" takes you inside the mission to put Klyushin behind bars. The third episode of the podcast details how Klyushin made a critical mistake, finally opening the door for U.S. law enforcement to step in. The latest episode of the original podcast series takes listeners through the action – right up to when Klyushin steps off the plane in Switzerland, completely unaware of his catastrophic mistake.
Persons: Klyushin, Vladislav Klyushin's cybersecurity, Vladislav Klyushin, Eamon Javers, , you've, Steven Frank, Javers, Frank, we're Organizations: FBI, U.S, U.S . Department of Justice, CNBC, Washington, Swiss Federal Police Locations: Russian, Russia, Moscow, U.S, Switzerland
Then, they traded based on that insight, buying and selling stock from well-known American companies like Skechers, Snapchat and Roku. Vladislav Klyushin, who was sentenced to nine years in an American prison for his $93 million hack-to-trade conspiracy. "[They're] breaking into these American companies," said Steven Frank, a federal prosecutor familiar with the case. "Stealing information day after day…and just trading on it." Zoom In Icon Arrows pointing outwards The homepage for the Russian cybersecurity firm M-13, which was stealing financial information from American companies.
Persons: Vladislav Klyushin, Klyushin's, Roku, Tesla, Steven Frank, Klyushin, Massachusetts CNBC's Eamon Javers, Javers, , Evan Gershkovich, Ella Milman, Roberto Schmidt Organizations: Attorney's, Massachusetts, of Massachusetts, Tesla, FBI, U.S, Wall Street, Russia, Joint Base Andrews, Afp, Getty, CNBC Locations: Russian, U.S, Russia, Maryland
What's next: Media Matters filed a motion to dismiss Musk's lawsuit in March, but a judge has yet to rule. VCG/GettyGovernment lawsuits and investigationsSEC investigation into Musk's Twitter takeoverThe issues: The Securities and Exchange Commission is investigating Elon Musk's Twitter purchase. Matt Winkelmeyer/Getty ImagesPersonal lawsuits against MuskTornetta v. MuskThe issues: Tesla shareholder Richard Tornetta sued Musk and Tesla in a class action lawsuit regarding Musk's compensation package, which was worth $55.8 billion at the time. Several lawsuits also allege Musk discriminated against them because of their race, gender, or disability in choosing to fire them. The executives were set to receive golden parachutes, but claim Musk and X have not paid them out.
Persons: , Elon Musk, Musk, Claire Boucher, Grimes, Alex Spiro, Sam Altman, Donald Trump, Spiro, Anna Webber, Angelo Carusone, What's, Gina Carano, Schaerr Jaffe, Tesla, Musk's, Elon, SEC hasn't, Elon Musk's, who've, Owen Diaz, Matt Winkelmeyer, Richard Tornetta, Kimbal Musk, He's, Boucher, Benjamin Brody, Brody, Brody reverberated, Ben Brody, didn't, Robert Kaiden, Kaiden, he's, Agrawal, Parag Agrawal, Ned Segal, Twitter Vijaya Gadde, Sean Edgett, Segal, hadn't Organizations: Service, SpaceX, Business, OpenAI, SEC, Trump, Trump —, Elon, Variety, Media, X Corp, Disney, National Labor Relations Board, UAW, Tesla, Getty Government, Twitter, Securities, Exchange Commission, Justice Department, Reuters, Traffic, Administration, NHTSA, Apple, NLRB, Musk's SpaceX, US, Employment Opportunity, Musk, Nazi, Litigation Locations: Texas, Texas and Missouri, America, Nazi Germany, California, Delaware, San Francisco
The criminal trial and conviction of (mostly former) national leaders has happened in stable, mature democracies, just as it has in former dictatorships. The track record of convicted leaders shows just how risky it is to try to predict what will happen. In 2017, South Korea impeached and later criminally convicted now-former President Park Geun-hye in a bizarre corruption scandal involving the influence of a friend and confidante. After a scandal emerged involving the state oil company Petrobras, Lula was convicted in 2017 of corruption and money laundering. “Political leaders can choose how they will speak about these institutions.”
Persons: Chris Good, Donald Trump, , Trump, Stormy Daniels, Cristina Fernández de Kirchner, Sebastian Kurz, ” Kurz, Park, , Nicole Bibbins Sedaca, Nicolas Sarkozy, Bertrand Guay, Bibbins Sedaca, Jacques Chirac, ” Bibbins Sedaca, Sarkozy, Moammar Gaddhafi illicitly, Silvio Berlusconi, Yara Nardi, Berlusconi “, , Berlusconi, Matteo Salvini, Giorgia Meloni, Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva, Nelson Almeida, Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva, Lula, Jair Bolsonaro, Oliver Stuenkel, Fundação Getulio Vargas, ” Stuenkel, Politicization, Stuenkel, didn’t, Lula “, Mark Peterson, Ariel Edwards, Levy, Lula —, Chirac, Trump’s Organizations: CNN, ABC News, Economist Intelligence Unit, Freedom House, Getty, Freedom, Reuters, Forza Italia, Five Star, AFP, Brazil, Petrobras, Bolsonaro, School of International Relations, Fundação, NEW, Manhattan Criminal, Trump, Twitter, Facebook Locations: The, Manhattan, Argentina, Austrian, South Korea, Washington, DC, France, Italy, Brazil, Paris, AFP, Moroccan, Milan, Trump, America, São Paulo
If I’d pictured Donald Trump’s first criminal trial a few years ago, I’d have imagined the biggest, splashiest story in the world. In a recent Yahoo News/YouGov poll, only 16 percent of respondents said they were following the trial very closely, with an additional 32 percent following it “somewhat” closely. When people were asked how the trial made them feel, the most common response was “bored.” TV ratings tell a similar story. “Network coverage of Donald Trump’s hush money trial has failed to produce blockbuster viewership,” Deadline reported at the end of April. I’m aware of no similar effort to dramatize this trial’s testimony, and I almost never hear ordinary people talking about it.
Persons: Donald Trump’s, , Yahoo News’s Andrew Romano, who’d, Robert Mueller’s, Robert DeNiro, Rosie Perez, Laurence Fishburne, you’re, you’ve, Trump, Organizations: Republican, Yahoo, Cable, MSNBC
Mr. Cohen said that, according to Mr. Trump, she recommended calling it “locker-room talk” to explain it away. Mr. Cohen brought many of those moments to life, describing Mr. Trump’s micromanagement and his campaign’s panic after the release of the “Access Hollywood” tape. Mr. Cohen also bolstered testimony by David Pecker, the former National Enquirer publisher, establishing a deal to suppress unflattering stories about Mr. Trump. “Once I received the money back from Mr. Trump, I would deposit it and no one would be the wiser,” Mr. Cohen said. He also held a news conference blasting Democrats, whom he and Mr. Trump blame for the case, and Mr. Cohen.
Persons: Michael D, Cohen, Donald J, Trump’s, , Stormy Daniels, Trump, Daniels, Melania, , Todd Heisler, ” Mr, Karen McDougal, ” Cohen, Mr, Trump’s micromanagement, David Pecker, Keith Davidson, Daniels’s, , , Allen Weisselberg, J.D, Vance of, Vance, Rick Scott of, Ken Paxton, Tommy Tuberville, Michael Cohen, Organizations: ., New York Times, Playboy, National Enquirer, Republican, Prosecutors Locations: Manhattan, Lower Manhattan, Vance of Ohio, Rick Scott of Florida, Texas, Alabama
In late March, after two years of withering attacks on Ukraine, Russia knocked out half of Ukraine’s power supply. Up to that point, Russia’s missiles and kamikaze drones had mostly targeted the Ukrainian substations that push electricity from power plants to consumers. But the global community must now draw bright lines for combatants in future conflicts — and strengthen the hand of future prosecutors — by codifying specific protections for power grids. The international community already attempts to do that for select infrastructure, including hospitals, dams and nuclear power plants, via the Geneva Conventions. It’s time to add power grids to that privileged roster.
Persons: grinds, Viktor Nikolayevich Sokolov, Sergei Ivanovich Kobylash, Organizations: Criminal Locations: Ukraine, Russia, The Hague, Russian, Geneva
Donald Trump is in court for his first criminal trial. It is the grimy, hot, and poorly lit location of the first-ever criminal trial of a former US president. Monday marked the start of jury selection, presided over by Manhattan Supreme Court Justice Juan Merchan and expected to last up to two weeks. Just before the lunch break, Christopher Conroy, an assistant district attorney, accused Trump of violating the gag order. AdvertisementFormer President Donald Trump appears with his legal team at the start of jury selection in his criminal trial in New York City.
Persons: Donald Trump, Trump, , Juan Merchan, Stormy Daniels, Daniels, Michael Cohen, Merchan, Attorney Alvin Bragg, Christopher Conroy, Conroy, Cohen, Stephanie Clifford, — Trump, Jabin, Melania Trump, Trump's, there's, Joe Biden, Jean Carroll, Lewis Kaplan, Jack Smith, Fani Willis Organizations: Service, Manhattan Supreme, Trump, Manhattan, Attorney, New, Yorkers, Republican, US, Trump Organization, Justice Locations: New York County, Manhattan, Merchan, New York, America, New York City, Jabin, Mar, Fulton County, Georgia
Sam Bankman-Fried has been sentenced to 25 years in prison. US District Judge Lewis Kaplan sentenced Bankman-Fried Thursday to 25 years in prison. In his sentencing, Kaplan described Bankman-Fried as ambitious and deceitful, willing to gamble with his customers' livelihoods. He knew it was criminal," Kaplan said as Bankman-Fried slumped in his chair. AdvertisementNow that Bankman-Fried's sentencing is over, Kaplan, the judge, will likely swiftly order sentencing hearings for Ellison, Wang, and Singh.
Persons: Sam Bankman, Fried, , Lewis Kaplan, Bankman, Kaplan, Prosecutors, Bernie Madoff, Marc Mukasey, Mukasey, perjured, it's, FTX, Caroline Ellison, Gary Wang, Nishad Singh —, Ellison, Wang, Singh, Ryan Salame, I've, didn't, John J, Ray III, Ray, Joseph Bankman, Barbara Fried Organizations: Service, Justice Department, FTX, Alameda Research, Prosecutors, Detention, Federal Bureau of Prisons Locations: Manhattan, FTX, Bahamas, Washington , DC, Brooklyn's, San Francisco
Trump was in court in Manhattan when he learned his hush-money trial date: April 15. AdvertisementA Manhattan judge has set an April 15 date for jury selection in Donald Trump's hush money case, the GOP presidential frontrunner's first of four criminal trials. Trump and his legal team must appear in court each day of the approximately six-week trial on 34 felony counts of falsifying business records. Now the trial date is finally set. Related storiesThe payment was recorded in Trump's business records as routine legal fees paid to his then-personal attorney Michael Cohen.
Persons: Trump, , Donald Trump's, frontrunner's, Juan Merchan, Stormy Daniels, Michael Cohen, Attorney Alvin Bragg, Daniels, Cohen, Merchan Organizations: Service, GOP, New, Trump, Trump Organization, Manhattan, Attorney Locations: Manhattan, York City, Georgia
Sam Bankman-Fried bilked FTX customers out of over $8 billion, according to prosecutors. AdvertisementAccording to federal prosecutors, Sam Bankman-Fried orchestrated one of the biggest criminal frauds in the history of the world. According to his lawyers, FTX's customers might get all their money back. According to prosecutors, Bankman-Fried was responsible for more than $11 billion in fraud overall between FTX customers and investors in FTX and Alameda Research. The recovered calculations, too, distort how much money customers are actually getting back.
Persons: Sam Bankman, , Fried, FTX, John J, Ray III, Ray, Lewis Kaplan, Kaplan, Sarah Krissoff, Cozen O'Connor, Krissoff, it's, Sarah Silbiger, Bankman, bitcoin, Rachel Maimin, Lowenstein Sandler, Barbara Fried, Mark Cohen, Jane Rosenberg Bankman, Maiman, Maimin, Caroline Ellison Organizations: Service, FTX, Bankman, Alameda Research, US, United States, Second Circuit, U.S . House Financial, Capitol, Reuters, K5 Global, Prosecutors, Wall, REUTERS, Business, of Prisons, Alemda Research Locations: FTX, Manhattan, New Jersey, New York, Washington , U.S
The US DOJ, with 16 state attorneys general, has filed a civil antitrust lawsuit against Apple. Apple says the suit is "wrong on the facts and the law," and it will "vigorously" defend itself. download the app Email address Sign up By clicking “Sign Up”, you accept our Terms of Service and Privacy Policy . Meanwhile, it was a bad day for Apple's stock, which was down more than 4% at market close. AdvertisementHere are the five key areas where prosecutors say Apple is breaking the law and harming consumers:1.
Persons: , Apple, Prosecutors — Organizations: DOJ, Apple, Service, US Department of Justice, Prosecutors, Microsoft, Department
Every morning in his townhouse in the tony San Francisco neighborhood of Pacific Heights, the man once referred to as Britain’s Bill Gates gets to work. That man, Mike Lynch, checks in with his investment firm, Invoke Capital, on its recent performance. He receives updates on the heritage Red Poll cattle and other livestock at his farm in Suffolk, in the east of England. Eventually, Mr. Lynch, 58, turns to his most important task: defending himself against 16 criminal counts of conspiracy and fraud. The trial begins on Monday in San Francisco, where federal prosecutors — who extradited Mr. Lynch from Britain in May and placed him under house arrest — have accused the former tech mogul of defrauding Hewlett-Packard of billions when he sold HP his software company, Autonomy, for $11 billion in 2011.
Persons: tony, Bill Gates, Mike Lynch, Lynch, , Mr Organizations: tony San, Red Poll, Hewlett, Packard, Autonomy Locations: tony San Francisco neighborhood, Pacific Heights, Cambridge, England, Suffolk, San Francisco, Britain
Trump's New York hush-money trial is now back on track for mid-April. The delay will give Merchan, prosecutors, and defense lawyers time to contend with late evidence. AdvertisementThe Manhattan judge who will preside over Donald Trump's first criminal trial agreed on Friday to push back the original March 25 trial start date by about three weeks. Related storiesBoth sides — the defense and Manhattan prosecutors — are blaming each other for the delay, though prosecutors also blame the US Attorney's Office for what they describe as unneccessary footdragging. The trial, which is expected to last six weeks, could now run from mid-April until just after Memorial Day, given the judge's previous plan to give jurors the fourth week of April off.
Persons: Trump's, Juan Merchan, , Donald Trump's, Michael Cohen, Merchan, Mary, it's Organizations: Service, US, Office, ., Defense Locations: York, Manhattan, New York City
Ms. Willis and Mr. Wade acknowledged the relationship in a February court filing. Lawyers for Mr. Roman and other defendants are seeking to disqualify the two prosecutors from the case. Defense lawyers argue that the money paid to Mr. Wade creates an incentive for Ms. Willis to prolong the case. She said that the costs of the couple’s personal travel had been “divided roughly evenly” between her and Mr. Wade, so it represented no financial conflict. Judge Scott McAfee of Fulton County Superior Court, the presiding judge in the Trump case, was persuaded that there was sufficient reason to hold an evidentiary hearing delving into the relationship.
Persons: Donald J, Trump, — Fani, Willis, Nathan J, Wade, Mr, Michael Roman, Scott McAfee, , Wade’s Organizations: Trump, Mr, Fulton County Superior Court Locations: Georgia, Fulton County, Atlanta
NEW YORK (AP) — A convicted drug dealer reluctantly testified Monday that Jam Master Jay — known for his anti-drug advocacy as part of the groundbreaking rap group Run-DMC — got involved in cocaine trafficking to pay his bills. Mullgrav said Jam Master Jay, born Jason Mizell, approached him periodically to sell cocaine that the rap star had acquired — “maybe 1 or 2 kilos, here or there.”“Jason wasn't a drug dealer. He just used it to make ends meet,” Mullgrav said. Mizell wanted to put Washington, who's known as “Tinard,” on the ground in Baltimore, said Mullgrav, who grew up with both men. Prosecutors — and some witnesses who were in the studio that night — say that Jordan shot Mizell while Washington brandished a gun and blocked the door.
Persons: , Jay —, Ralph Mullgrav, Mullgrav, Jay, Jason Mizell, , Jason wasn't, ” Mullgrav, Karl Jordan Jr, Ronald Washington, Mizell, , Washington “, Washington, Gary Farrell, wasn't, Tricky, Jordan Organizations: Prosecutors, Washington, Midwest, MTV Locations: Washington, Jordan, Baltimore,
Convicted Medicare fraudster Philip Esformes has reached a plea deal that could resolve a long-running, complicated criminal case that has included his 20-year prison sentence being commuted by former President Donald Trump in 2020, court filings show. Terms of Esformes' plea agreement with the Department of Justice were not included in the filings Thursday. A Miami federal judge scheduled Esformes' change of plea hearing and sentencing for Feb. 22. Esformes' lawyers have said they are unaware of any other case in which the DOJ retried a defendant whose criminal sentence in the same case was commuted by a president. Prosecutors at the time said it was "the largest single criminal health care fraud case ever brought against individuals" by the DOJ.
Persons: Philip Esformes, Harold, Donald Trump, Esformes, , Denise Stemen, Stemen Organizations: Carole Pump Foundation, Hyatt, Department of Justice, Esformes, DOJ, Prosecutors Locations: Century City , California, Miami
Sam Bankman-Fried needs to decide soon whether he'll take the witness stand in his criminal trial. AdvertisementAdvertisementCaroline Ellison testified in the trial of her ex-boyfriend, Sam Bankman-Fried JANE ROSENBERGFor that reason, the case against Bankman-Fried rests on the credibility of his alleged co-conspirators. In their own questioning of the cooperating witnesses, prosecutors have encouraged them to be open about taking responsibility for their crimes. Court sketch of Sam Bankman-Fried on the first day of his trial JANE ROSENBERG/ReutersIf Bankman-Fried takes the stand, he'll be cross-examined by prosecutors. If Bankman-Fried takes the stand, prosecutors will almost certainly point to more material and catch him in any contradictions.
Persons: Sam Bankman, he'll, he's, , They're, Fried, Mark Cohen, Lewis Kaplan, who's, Cohen, He's, Caroline Ellison, Gary Wang, Nashad Singh, Sarah Krissoff, Cozen O'Connor, FTX, Mary Altaffer, Kaplan, Paul Tuchmann, Wiggin, Dana, Tuchmann, Adam Yedidia, Fried JANE ROSENBERG, Ellison, Wang, Singh, Bankman, Wang forthrightly, Ellison teared, slovenliness, Prosecutors —, Krissoff, JANE ROSENBERG, hedged, didn't, Judge Kaplan's, SBF Organizations: Service, Defense, US, Alameda Research, Former Alameda Research, AP, Prosecutors, Toyota Corolla, Reuters, ABC News, Alameda . Locations: Manhattan, Alameda, New York, FTX
During that meeting, Mr. Tarrio recounted on Friday in a phone interview from jail, the prosecutors told him that they believed he had communicated in the run-up to the riot with President Donald J. Trump through at least three intermediaries. The prosecutors, Mr. Tarrio said, offered him leniency if he could corroborate their theory. Mr. Tarrio said he told them they were wrong. And the discussion with prosecutors — which took place in Miami, Mr. Tarrio’s hometown — apparently went nowhere. Mr. Tarrio was later convicted of seditious conspiracy in federal court in Washington and was sentenced on Tuesday to 22 years in prison.
Persons: Enrique Tarrio, Tarrio, Donald J, , Tarrio’s Organizations: Capitol, Trump Locations: Miami, Washington
Chris Christie told CNN Trump is lying to supporters about his indictment. Christie, who is running for president, had a falling out with Trump after the 2020 election. At a rally last month, former President Donald Trump claimed that his indictment for illegally retaining classified information was a "great badge of honor." It accuses Trump, in particular, of misleading his own counsel by falsely representing to them that he was returning any classified information. Christie noted that Trump is now seeking to delay his trial over the matter until after the 2024 election.
Persons: Chris Christie, CNN Trump, Christie, Trump, Donald Trump, I'm, Jake Tapper, , Jack Smith, Mark Meadows, CNN — Organizations: New Jersey Gov, CNN, Trump, Service, Republican, White Locations: Wall, Silicon, New Jersey, Iran
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