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Microsoft President Brad Smith has urged Donald Trump to protect the US from Russian, Chinese, and Iranian cyber attacks. He said that Joe Biden's administration had made "tremendous progress" on the issue, but added that more steps were needed to dissuade and deter countries from "unleashing these cyber attacks." Smith's appeals come as the US faces an ongoing wave of cyber attacks that have targeted government agencies, election campaigns, and businesses. and in some cases even facilitated" such attacks, Smith told the FT. The review found that a Microsoft security breach by a Chinese-affiliated hacking group in 2023 was "preventable and should never have occurred."
Persons: Donald Trump, Cybersecurity, Smith, Brad Smith, Trump, Joe Biden's, Christopher Wray, cyberattacks, Satya Nadella Organizations: Microsoft, Financial Times, Cyber Safety Locations: Russia, China, Iran
COLUMBIA, S.C. --- Susan Smith, the young mom who shocked the nation 30 years ago when she rolled her car into a lake with her two sons inside and watched them drown, was denied parole Wednesday. Susan Smith is led from the Union County Courthouse after the first day of testimony in the penalty phase of her trial. Brooks Kraft LLC / Sygma via Getty Images fileFrom behind bars, Smith continued to claim she was a good mother. He then read a passage that Smith wrote explaining why she allowed her sons to die. “I knew Jesus would take better care of them than I could,” Smith wrote, according to Thomas.
Persons: Susan Smith, Smith, recusing, Michael, Alex, Smith's, David Smith, It's, it’s, Brooks Kraft, , ” Smith, Tommy A, Thomas, Jesus, ” Tommy Pope, “ Susan, Susan, , Juliette Arcodia, Corky Siemaszko Organizations: COLUMBIA, S.C, TV, Courthouse, Reuters, Brooks, Brooks Kraft LLC, Getty, State, Women’s Correctional, South Carolina Department of Corrections, Republican, Pro Tem, South Carolina House Locations: Union , South Carolina, Union, South Carolina, Columbia, New York
Susan Smith arrives at Union County Courthouse as the penalty phase of her trial moves into closing arguments in 1995. On Wednesday, Smith will have her chance to make her argument before the parole board, according to the South Carolina Department of Probation, Parole and Pardon Services. Inmates in South Carolina are allowed to receive and send letters but cannot legally communicate with journalists in person or on the phone. Smith and the filmmaker discussed shooting the documentary after the parole hearing and how she would be paid for her participation, according to an incident report. Pope is against Smith’s parole and said he will be speaking before the parole board at the hearing Wednesday.
Persons: Susan Smith, Smith, Michael, Alex, , , John D, , Susan Smith's, Tommy A, Thomas, haven’t, David Smith, Money, David Smith fastens, John Kuntz, ” Tommy Pope, Pope, “ Susan, Susan, , ” Pope, Larry King, ” David Smith Organizations: CNN, Courthouse, Reuters, South Carolina Department of Probation, Services, South Carolina Department of Corrections, Judicial Locations: Union , South Carolina, Long, Union, South Carolina
COLUMBIA, S.C. — Susan Smith, who shocked the nation 30 years ago when she rolled her car into a lake with her two children inside and watched them drown, will ask a parole board Wednesday to release her from prison. Almost 30 years ago to the day, Susan Smith made international headlines when she said she was carjacked late at night near Union, South Carolina, by a Black man. Smith, now 53, has had an eventful three decades behind bars in South Carolina, including multiple disciplinary actions. As of Monday, 471 people had written to the South Carolina Department of Probation, Parole and Pardon Services regarding Smith's hearing. Former lead prosecutor and current South Carolina State Rep. Tommy Pope is also expected to speak in opposition.
Persons: — Susan Smith, Smith, Susan Smith, Michael, Alex, David Smith, it’s, Houston Cagle, Alfred R, Rowe Jr, Smith “, , Willie Rice, Rice, Tommy Pope, Pope, NewsNation, she’s Organizations: COLUMBIA, TV, Women’s Correctional, South Carolina Department of Corrections, State, South Carolina Department of Probation, South Carolina State Rep Locations: Union , South Carolina, South Carolina, Richland County
A Georgia appeals court on Monday canceled until further notice oral arguments on an effort by President-elect Donald Trump and other co-defendants to remove Fulton County District Attorney Fani Willis from the criminal election interference prosecution against them. The Georgia Court of Appeals acted on its own in canceling the arguments scheduled for Dec. 5. Trump and other defendants had appealed that ruling, and the Court of Appeals in June halted proceedings in the case pending the outcome of that effort. Circuit Court of Appeals to suspend proceedings in that case, citing Trump's election victory. That federal appeals court granted Smith's request.
Persons: Donald Trump, Fani Willis, Trump, Joe Biden, Scott McAfee, Willis, Jack Smith, Aileen Cannon, Smith Organizations: Republicans, Hyatt, Georgia, Trump, Republican, Appeals, U.S . Department of Justice, Washington , D.C, Biden's, White, U.S, Circuit Locations: Washington , DC, Georgia, Fulton County, Atlanta, York, Manhattan, Washington ,, Florida, U.S
AdvertisementIf the Mar-a-Lago classified documents case is dismissed, Trump can probably take his 33 boxes back. If the Mar-a-Lago classified documents case is dismissed, can Trump take back those 33 boxes of keepsakes — ranging from Christmas decorations to highly sensitive nuclear secrets — that the FBI seized from his Palm Beach resort two years ago? AdvertisementThat includes the documents Smith sees as contraband, currently stored in an FBI "SCIF," or sensitive compartmented information facility. Classified documents on the floor of a storage area at Mar-a-Lago, next to presidential gifts and a case of Diet Coke. That appeal is now on hold, with Smith saying that on December 2, he will announce his plans for the documents case and Trump's election interference case.
Persons: Trump, Donald Trump, Jack Smith, Smith, , Paul Shechtman, Brian Greer, Greer, General Merrick Merriand, Michael Bachner, Bachner, Coke, Lago, Aileen Cannon Organizations: National Archives, DOJ, Mar, Trump, Department, Prosecutors, Justice Department, National Archives Records, US, Department of Justice, CIA's, Obama, US Department of Justice, Getty, FBI, White, Radical Left Democrats, Biden's Locations: Palm, flouting, Manhattan, Mar, Palm Beach , Florida, United States
President-elect Donald Trump said Thursday he will nominate Todd Blanche, one of his criminal defense lawyers, to be deputy attorney general. The statement noted that Blanche has experience working for the Justice Department — something former Rep. Matt Gaetz, R-Fla., Trump's choice for attorney general, does not have. Blanche was Trump's lead lawyer when he stood trial on charges of falsifying business records related to a hush money payment this year. If Blanche's nomination is confirmed before Gaetz's, he could serve as acting attorney general while Gaetz goes through the process. He will also nominate D. John Sauer, who argued Trump's successful immunity case before the Supreme Court, for solicitor general.
Persons: Donald Trump, Todd Blanche, Todd, Trump, Blanche, Justice Department —, Matt Gaetz, Trump's, Juan Merchan, Aileen Cannon, Jack Smith's, Smith ., Tanya Chutkan, Gaetz's, Gaetz, Emil Bove, Emil, John Sauer, John, Antonin Scalia, Sauer's Organizations: Justice Department, Justice, of New York United, of New York United States Attorney’s, Trump, State, Manhattan, White House, U.S, Smith . U.S, Senate, National Security Unit, United States Supreme, Supreme, MAGA Locations: Southern, of New York United States, ., Florida, Missouri
Special counsel Jack Smith speaks to members of the media at the US Department of Justice building in Washington, DC, on August 1, 2023. WASHINGTON — Special counsel Jack Smith and his team plan to resign before President-elect Donald Trump takes office, a source familiar with the matter said. The special counsel's office is required under Justice Department regulations to provide a confidential report to Attorney General Merrick Garland, who can choose to make it public. Before Trump's re-election last week, Smith and his team had continued moving forward in their election interference case against Trump. The Justice Department indicted Trump last year for his efforts to overturn the 2020 presidential election.
Persons: Jack Smith, WASHINGTON —, Donald Trump, Smith, General Merrick Garland, Trump, Trump's, Smith's, There's Organizations: US Department of Justice, WASHINGTON, Trump, New York Times, Justice, Supreme, Justice Department Locations: Washington ,, Florida, Washington
Dwayne Johnson's goal was once to be a bigger star than George Clooney and Will Smith. GQ reported Johnson fired agents who didn't agree with his ambition. AdvertisementDwayne Johnson said he used to hope he would be a bigger star than George Clooney or Will Smith. From 2012 to 2020, Johnson appeared on Forbes' highest-paid actor list, and above Smith and Clooney in 2016, 2019, and 2020. "You reach a point in life where on the other side of running, it's the stuff you love," Johnson said.
Persons: Dwayne Johnson's, George Clooney, Will Smith, Johnson, , Dwayne Johnson, Zach Baron, Clooney, Smith, Gabe Ginsberg, I'm Organizations: GQ, Service, IMDB Pro, Forbes Locations: Canada
By December 2, 2024, the Government shall file a status report indicating its proposed course for this case going forward," the judge wrote. Trump was indicted in the case in August 2023, but significant delays have kept it from going to trial. He's tentatively scheduled to be sentenced in the New York case on Nov. 26 after he was convicted earlier this year on 34 counts of falsifying business records, a low-level felony. The Georgia election interference case has been on hold as Trump and some of his co-defendants are asking an appeals court to remove the prosecutor in the case because of conflict of interest allegations. Trump has denied any wrongdoing in the Georgia case as well.
Persons: WASHINGTON, Donald, Jack Smith, Smith, Tanya Chutkan, Trump, ” Trump, He's, Juan Merchan, Letitia James, E, Jean Carroll Organizations: U.S, Department, DOJ, Trump, NBC News, NBC, New York Locations: Florida, New York, Georgia, York, New
Prosecutors sought to vacate remaining deadlines in Donald Trump's election-interference case. Justice Department policy says a sitting president cannot be prosecuted while in office. AdvertisementA federal judge on Friday granted special counsel Jack Smith's request to vacate all pending deadlines for President-elect Donald Trump's federal election interference case. There is long-standing Justice Department policy that a sitting president cannot be prosecuted while in office. Over the last month, the federal judge overseeing the election interference case released a trove of prosecutors' evidence against Trump.
Persons: Donald Trump's, Jack Smith, , Jack Smith's, Smith, Trump, John Moscow, Steven Cheung Organizations: Service, Trump Department of Justice, Manhattan, Department of Justice, Department, Trump
A judge on Friday paused proceedings in the criminal election interference case against President-elect Donald Trump, a move that reflects the expected end of the prosecution. Trump's win against Vice President Kamala Harris earlier this week was considered a death knell for Smith's prosecutions of him. On Wednesday, NBC News reported that DOJ officials have been evaluating how to wind down the election case and another criminal case against Trump before he is sworn in as president. Trump has said he plans to fire Smith, and is expected to force the DOJ to end the prosecutions. And DOJ policy bars the department from prosecuting a president while in office due to the department's position in the executive branch of government.
Persons: Jack Smith, Donald Trump, Smith, Trump, Tanya Chutkan, Chutkan, Kamala Harris Organizations: Department of Justice, NBC News, DOJ, Trump Locations: Washington , U.S, Washington ,
Being elected president will likely result in the federal criminal cases against him being dismissed, while his state criminal cases could at the least be frozen until after he leaves office. Trump’s legal team, meanwhile, is evaluating its next steps for how to get all four criminal cases resolved, and plan to argue soon that all of the cases “must stop immediately,” according to a source directly involved in the discussions. Here's a look at where the various legal cases against Trump stand — and how they could be affected by his victory. They argue that some of the evidence presented to the grand jury and at the criminal trial should not have been allowed in the wake of the high court's ruling. Trump's victory likely won't impact his pending appeals of the civil judgments against him that total more than $550 million.
Persons: Donald Trump's, can’t, Trump, Steven Cheung, Stormy Daniels, Juan Merchan, he's, It's, Merchan, Fani Willis, Willis, Trump wouldn't, Donald Trump, Susan Necheles, Win McNamee, Jack Smith —, Aileen Cannon, Danny Cevallos, Tanya Chutkan, Smith, Cevallos, shouldn’t, Letitia James, James, We've, we've, Jean Carroll Organizations: Justice Department, Trump, NBC News, Fulton, New, Getty Images, The, Department, NBC, U.S . Capitol, New York, Division Locations: New York, Georgia, Fulton County, Manhattan, U.S
With his comeback victory over Vice President Kamala Harris in the books, Trump can rest easy. But he has not yet escaped from liability in a handful of high-profile civil cases, where he has been ordered to pay combined penalties of over $570 million. "In theory, there should be no effect" from Trump's election on those civil matters, former federal prosecutor Neama Rahmani told CNBC. "It's well established that while a sitting president can't be prosecuted, he can face civil cases," Rahmani said. A state-level criminal case in Georgia, alleging Trump illegally meddled in that state's 2020 election, is also on ice.
Persons: Donald Trump, Donald Trump's, Kamala Harris, Trump, Neama Rahmani, Rahmani, Jack Smith, Smith's, Smith, Aileen Cannon, Fani Willis, Willis, Stormy Daniels Organizations: Convention Center, CNBC, of Justice, D.C, Trump, DOJ, Fulton Locations: Palm Beach, West Palm Beach , Florida, U.S, Smith's Washington, Florida, Georgia, Fulton County, York
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
Activist Irenic Capital Management said Tuesday that it would back fellow dissident Starboard Value's push to dissolve the dual-class structure at Rupert Murdoch's News Corp , ahead of a closely watched shareholder meeting. Irenic wrote in its Tuesday letter to News Corp's board that while it opposed the dual-class structure, it remained supportive of management's efforts to "unlock immediate value." Irenic also wrote it believes the Murdoch family and other super-voting shareholders should be paid a premium if a conversion to a single-share structure happened. A vote to dissolve the dual-class structure at News Corp nearly a decade ago failed, although it was supported by 90% of non-Murdoch shareholders. The Murdoch family controls roughly 40% of the vote through a family trust and the supervoting Class B shares, making governance changes tough.
Persons: Jeff Smith's, Murdoch, Adam Katz's Irenic, Irenic, Glass Lewis Organizations: Irenic Capital Management, Rupert Murdoch's News Corp, Wall Street, News Corp
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
Former President Donald Trump said Thursday that, if elected to a second term in November, he would immediately fire special counsel Jack Smith, who brought two federal indictments against Trump. "It's so easy — I would fire him within two seconds," said Trump, who added that he got “immunity at the Supreme Court" and called Smith a "crooked person." Firing him as special counsel potentially could end the federal government's prosecution against Trump. Judge Tanya Chutkan allowed the release of hundreds of pages of heavily redacted documents last week that contained evidence the special counsel was using for the prosecution. Last year, Trump warned that Smith and other Justice Department officials would wind up in a mental institution if he's re-elected.
Persons: Donald Trump, Jack Smith, Hugh Hewitt, Trump, Smith, doesn't, Smith's, Tanya Chutkan, he's, Adam Schiff Organizations: Trump . Conservative, Department of Justice, Trump, Washington , D.C, White, Democratic, Republican Locations: Florida, Washington ,
Former Abercrombie & Fitch CEO Mike Jeffries was charged with sex trafficking on Tuesday. AdvertisementLong before federal charges hit, there were concerns about former Abercrombie & Fitch CEO Mike Jeffries — and lawsuits that attacked the way he ran his company. Attorneys for Jeffries and Smith told Business Insider in statements that they would respond "in the courthouse." "This is very much a military operation," Jeffries told The Wall Street Journal in 1997. The pilot accused the CEO of enacting similar standards on board as in Abercrombie stores and firing him due to his age.
Persons: Mike Jeffries, Jeffries, Abercrombie, , Mike Jeffries —, Matthew Smith, Smith, Fitch, Les Wexner, Jeffrey Epstein, Paul Harris, Bruce Weber, Weber, Barts, Tig Ol, Erik Gordon, Jeffries shouldn't Organizations: Abercrombie, Fitch, Service, Prosecutors, Wall Street, Revenue, CNN, Hamptons, Employees, Supreme, University of, BBC, Eastern, of Locations: Midwest, New York City, St, Oklahoma, Assam, Darjeeling, of New York
WASHINGTON — A Donald Trump supporter who stormed the Capitol and assaulted law enforcement officers now says she was "duped" by the former president's lies about the 2020 election. One of the officers who Bell, a 62-year-old Trump supporter, encountered was the late Jeffrey Smith. U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia. U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia. Moloney admitted that he assaulted officers with “Black Flag Wasp, Hornet, & Yellow Jacket Killer” spray and that he assaulted two people he thought were with the media.
Persons: WASHINGTON, Donald Trump, Dana Jean Bell, Timothy J, Kelly, Bell, belligerently, Jeffrey Smith, , ” Bell, Smith, Erin Smith, Jeffrey Smith's, Donald Trump’s, Trump, Dana, Peter G, Moloney Organizations: Capitol, U.S, U.S . Capitol Police, Metropolitan Police Department, United States Capitol, Trump, District of Columbia, Justice Department, Washington Nationals, Wasp Locations: Long Island
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
A federal judge has released additional evidence against Donald Trump in his election interference case. The release follows a previously unsealed motion with new evidence against Trump by special counsel Jack Smith. Trump tried to delay the release of Friday's court documents until after the 2024 presidential election. The collection is related to special counsel Jack Smith's 165-page bombshell motion that included a trove of new evidence against Trump in the case. Advertisement"That's exactly what I did," Bowers told committee member Adam Schiff during the June 19, 2022 interview.
Persons: Donald Trump, Jack Smith, Trump, , Tanya Chutkan, Jack Smith's, Smith, Brad Raffensperger, Chutkan, Mike Pence, Anna Moneymaker, Mike Pence's, Joe Biden's, Rusty Bowers, Ross D, Biden, Bowers, Adam Schiff, Bower's Organizations: Trump, Service, United States, Georgia, Prosecutors, Former Arizona, AP, Arizona House
U.S. President Donald Trump speaks during a "Save America Rally" near the White House in Washington, D.C., U.S., on Wednesday, Jan. 6, 2021. A federal judge on Friday ordered the release of more than 1,800 pages of documents filed by special counsel Jack Smith in the criminal election interference case against former President Donald Trump. Trump preemptively complained about the release of the records Friday morning, claiming it was "election interference" and calling Chutkan "evil." Smith was "going to release something else, and always before the election," Trump said during an interview with podcast host Dan Bongino in Manhattan's Trump Tower. Trump is charged with illegally conspiring to overturn his loss to President Joe Biden in the 2020 election.
Persons: Donald Trump, Jack Smith, Tanya Chutkan, Chutkan, Smith, Trump, Dan Bongino, Joe Biden, Kamala Harris, Defendant's Organizations: Washington , D.C, U.S, Trump, U.S . Capitol, Biden's Electoral, Capitol, of Justice, Democratic Locations: Washington ,, Manhattan's
Trump's lawyers argued in a court filing that evidence is being used in Kamala Harris ads. Trump's attorneys asked a judge to hold off on the release of documents until after the election. AdvertisementDonald Trump is fighting to delay another release of prosecutors' evidence in the 2020 election interference case against him. AdvertisementChutkan has previously admonished Trump's team for seemingly raising conspiracy theories in their arguments. Additionally, the court documents said that Trump replied, "So what?"
Persons: Donald Trump, Kamala Harris, , Trump's, Jack Smith, Tanya Chutkan, Harris, Chutkan, Smith, Trump, Mike Pence, Pence, President's Organizations: Service, United States, Democratic, Trump, Politico, Business
Trump's team had asked Chutkan to compel prosecutors in special counsel Jack Smith's office to provide them with additional evidence, including "all information" about foreign interference and influence efforts in the 2020 election. It's part of the Trump team's attempt to present Trump's concerns about mass voter fraud — which were roundly rejected by independent arbiters and courts — as "reasonable" and grounded in reality. Judge Tanya Chutkan pushed back on Trump's claims on Wednesday in an order that rejected all but three of his 14 categories of requests for additional evidence. Trump's state of mind is essential to the case, and Smith's team has alleged that Trump "knew" his election lies "were false." The Supreme Court gutted part of Smith's case over the summer with its ruling on presidential immunity, but the case against Trump is — very slowly — churning towards a potential trial.
Persons: WASHINGTON, Donald Trump, Tanya Chutkan, Chutkan, Jack Smith's, Trump, Trump’s, of National Intelligence John Ratcliffe, Mark Milley, Chris Miller, Mike Pence, Pence, Merrick Garland, Smith's, Trump “, Joe Biden’s, Steven Cheung, Witch Hunt Organizations: Capitol, Trump, Biden Administration, of National Intelligence Locations: Black, Detroit, United States, Trump's
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