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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
Kremlin officials and allies welcomed Donald Trump's 2024 election win. AdvertisementKremlin officials and allies celebrated as Donald Trump closed in on victory in the 2024 election. Meanwhile, Kirill Dmitriev, the head of Russia's sovereign wealth fund, said a Trump victory could help improve Russia's relationship with the US. Despite the understated response from the Kremlin, there are indications that the Russian leadership has long favored a Trump victory in the election. There's reason to be waryThe reaction to Trump's victory from Russian state TV host and Kremlin propagandist Olga Skabeyeva was openly celebratory.
Persons: Donald Trump's, Dmitry Medvedev, Trump, , Donald Trump, Medvedev, Putin, Kirill Dmitriev, Biden, Goldman Sachs, Volodymyr Zelenskyy, Dmitry Peskov, Vladimir, Peskov, Kamala Harris, Trump's, Vladimir Putin, he's, JD Vance, Maria Zakharova, Olga Skabeyeva, Putin wasn't, Barack Obama Organizations: Service, Ukraine, Trump, Reuters, Republican, Democratic, Russian Direct Investment Fund, RDIF, Moscow Times, Fox News, Kremlin, Washington Post Locations: Russian, Ukraine, Moscow, Russia, United States, Washington, DC
Former Sen. Pat Toomey on new strain of economic populism
  + stars: | 2024-05-22 | by ( ) www.cnbc.com   time to read: 1 min
Share Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via EmailFormer Sen. Pat Toomey on new strain of economic populismFormer U.S. Senator Pat Toomey (R-Pa.) joins 'Squawk Box' to discuss the Republican party's new wave of economic populism, what Trump wouldn't go along with economically if put in office, and much more.
Persons: Former Sen, Pat Toomey, Trump Organizations: Former, U.S, Republican
Could Trump's next courtroom outburst or gag-violating Truth Social post really be the final straw that gets him locked up on contempt of court? "You get more due process" when you commit an act of contempt outside the courtroom, Levine said. "It's when the judge calls the court officers and tells them to surround the defendant so that he doesn't try to walk out of the courtroom." AdvertisementBut Trump already has at least two court officers standing behind him at all times in Merchan's courtroom, for his own protection. Reality will instead set in when the judge gives what's usually the final instruction to the court officers, "Take charge," Galluzzo said.
Persons: Trump, , audibly, Stormy Daniels, Donald Trump, misbehaving, Trump's, Juan Merchan, Arthur Aidala, Harvey Weinstein, Weinstein, Aidala, Arnold Levine, Levine, heckles Daniels, Matthew Galluzzo, Galluzzo, Daniel Scott, who's, Scott, Joe Schmoe, Daniels Organizations: Service, , New, Trump, Legal Aid Society of New York, Defense Task Force, Secret Service Locations: ,, Manhattan, Merchan's, Merchan, Trump
Trump wouldn't dismiss the possibility of political violence this election season if he loses. He said in an interview with Time: "It always depends on the fairness of an election." AdvertisementFormer President Donald Trump said in a new interview that he's not ruling out the possibility of election-related violence if he loses to President Joe Biden in November. When first pressed about the prospect of "political violence" over the upcoming presidential election, Trump said he didn't think it would play out. A poll last year from the US Association of Former Members of Congress and the University of Massachusetts Amherst, found that a whopping 84% of ex-members of Congress were worried about election-related violence in 2024.
Persons: Trump, , Donald Trump, he's, Joe Biden, didn't, Biden, Michael Fanone Organizations: Capitol, Service, Lago Club, US Association, Former, University of Massachusetts, Former Metropolitan Police Locations: University of Massachusetts Amherst
Read previewThe accountant hired to audit former President Donald Trump's social media company seemed to have a lot of trouble spelling his name, the Financial Times reported on Wednesday. But others, like Blake F Borgers and Ben F Vonesh, were entirely different names. Representatives for BF Borgers and Trump Media & Technology Group did not immediately respond to a request for comment from BI sent outside regular business hours. In November, Borgers' firm was also removed from the American Institute of Certified Public Accountants' peer review program. Trump Media shares had initially soared when it went public, only to crash by nearly 40% in a matter of weeks.
Persons: , Donald Trump's, Ben F Borgers, Ben F Brogers, Ben F orgers, Blake F Borgers, Ben F Vonesh, Borgers, Brown, WithumSmith, Trump, Forbes, Jean Carroll, he's, Stormy Daniels Organizations: Service, Financial Times, Public Company, Business, BF Borgers, Trump Media & Technology Group, BI, Bloomberg, American Institute of Certified Public Accountants, Trump, Trump Media, New Locations: New York, Manhattan, Mar
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
A decade later, Trump's failed Bills bid is one of the business moves under scrutiny in the trial of a lawsuit brought by New York Attorney General Letitia James. In offering to buy the Bills, Trump cited his net worth as $8 billion in an initial offer letter but never provided his financial statements. Throughout the sale process, Cohen insisted Trump was serious about his bid and his commitment to keeping the Bills in Buffalo. “There’s nobody more serious than Donald Trump,” Cohen said in an interview with The Associated Press in 2014. Trump told the AP in 2016 that had he been able to buy the Bills, it’s unlikely that he would've run for president.
Persons: Donald Trump, “ Trump, Morgan Stanley, K, Don Cornwell, doesn’t, he'd, Jeffrey Holzschuh, Trump, Ralph Wilson, Terry, Kim Pegula, Jon Bon Jovi, Trump's, Letitia James, James, He'd, Pete Rozelle, Rozelle, Michael Cohen, Forbes, Cohen, ” Cohen, Cornwell, ” Holzschuh, Holzschuh, he'd “, ” Trump, , Christopher Kise, John Wawrow Organizations: Buffalo Bills, NFL, Bills, of Fame, NHL’s Buffalo Sabres, New York, Republican, Trump, New, New Jersey Generals, USFL, U.S, Supreme, Forbes magazine's, Associated Press Locations: New Jersey, Buffalo, , Buffalo , New York
Former Trump attorney Jenna Ellis broke down as described her efforts to overturn the 2020 election. Ellis pleaded guilty to one count related to her efforts to overturn Georgia's 2020 election results. She pleaded guilty to one count of aiding and abetting false statements, stemming from her falsely telling Georgia lawmakers that fake votes were counted in the 2020 election. Powell, last week, pleaded guilty to her own set of criminal charges in the case, and Giuliani faces numerous other legal problems. A Colorado judge said she "undermined the American public's confidence in the presidential election" as he handed down a censure.
Persons: Jenna Ellis, Ellis, Georgia's, , Donald Trump, Joe Biden's, Biden, Sidney Powell, Rudy Giuliani, Trump, Powell, Giuliani, Ron DeSantis, Trump's, Ellis didn't Organizations: Trump, Service, Strike Force, Republican National Committee, The Washington Post, Florida Gov Locations: Georgia, Fulton County, Atlanta, Colorado
Ron DeSantis accused Trump of proposing "Soviet dystopian nonsense." Christina Pushaw attacked Trump's plan for new federally-chartered US cities on federal land. Ron DeSantis publicly battled with former President Donald Trump's defenders on Twitter over what she called the ex-president's "Soviet dystopian" plan for American cities. This is Soviet dystopian nonsense," she tweeted. A Republican consultant close to Trump's campaign told Insider in March that Trump came up with the idea for Freedom Cities himself and was likely inspired by Saudi Arabia's futuristic desert cities.
Persons: Ron DeSantis, Trump, Christina Pushaw, Pushaw, , Donald Trump's, DeSantis, Obama, Biden, Hillary, Paul Ryan, Ron, didn't, I've, Pushaw didn't, Sonnie Johnson, That's Organizations: Gov, World Economic, Service, Florida Gov, Twitter, World, Trump, Freedom Cities, Pacific Partnership, — Trump, Tea Party, Fox News Locations: Soviet, Freedom, globalism, Pres, It's, Saudi
Donald Trump continues to deny not knowing E. Jean Carroll, even after a jury found he sexually abused her. He also denied being friends with Roger Ailes at the time he was Carroll's boss in the 1990s. He was friends with Donald Trump," Carroll testified in the trial. Donald Trump on a November 1995 episode of Roger Ailes's talk show "Straightforward" on the America's Talking TV channel. "Because admitting that he knew Roger Ailes in the mid-1990s would be further proof that Donald Trump knew E. Jean Carroll."
A Manhattan grand jury voted to indict Donald Trump, possibly over a "hush-money" payment. Here's a timeline of Trump and Daniels' alleged relationship, the $130,000 payment to keep Daniels silent, and the testimonies leading to a possible indictment. Markus Schreiber/APManhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg convened a grand jury in mid-January of this year to consider an indictment against Trump. And Trump's former fixer and lawyer Michael Cohen, prosecutors' key witness, has made repeated visits to the DA's office and to the grand jury. Anna Moneymaker/Getty ImagesThe Manhattan grand jury voted to indict Trump on Thursday, March 30.
A Manhattan grand jury weighing evidence for a possible Donald Trump "hush-money" indictment. Here's a timeline of Trump and Daniels' alleged relationship, the $130,000 payment to keep Daniels silent, and the testimonies leading to a possible indictment. Markus Schreiber/APManhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg convened a grand jury in mid-January of this year to consider an indictment against Trump. And Trump's former fixer and lawyer Michael Cohen, prosecutors' key witness, has made repeated visits to the DA's office and to the grand jury. What could happen nextThe final witnesses were scheduled to testify before the grand jury on March 20, though it is unclear when the panel may vote.
The other kind of search — "exploratory search" — is the hard one. That's where you don't know what you don't know. When you're scrolling through the links in a Google search, looking for "esoteric shit," as one search expert calls it, you see some pages that just look dodgy, maybe in ways you can't even totally articulate. But search chatbots can fake all that. Google's search pages already aren't fully trustworthy — they overindex YouTube video results, for example, because YouTube is a subsidiary of Google.
Trump will not commit to supporting the 2024 GOP nominee. Trump told Nikki Haley she should run for president if she wanted to, but called her "overly ambitious." Trump is the only 2024 candidate to have declared that he's running for president, though former UN Ambassador Nikki Haley is expected to be next. "I don't want to say," Trump said. Hewitt on Thursday pressed Trump repeatedly about what his nicknames would be for potential 2024 challengers, but the former president wouldn't share them.
Oral arguments focused on whether something called the "Trump Organization" legally exists. The judge, meanwhile, warned that "come hell or high water" an October trial will not be delayed. "Come hell or high water, and pardon my French," the judge added of his set-in-stone trial start time: 10 a.m. on Monday, October 2, 2023. It's shorthand for them, as well — James' lawsuit references "the Trump Organization," for convenience's sake, some 300 times in its 222 pages. The judge urged the attorney general's office and the defendants' lawyers to avoid a protracted argument over sanctions.
Chris Sununu predicted Sunday that Trump won't win the Republican New Hampshire primary. download the app Email address By clicking ‘Sign up’, you agree to receive marketing emails from Insider as well as other partner offers and accept our Terms of Service and Privacy PolicyNew Hampshire GOP Gov. Chris Sununu said former President Donald Trump seems to be lacking the spark that propelled him to victory in 2016. He also criticized Trump's recent campaign stop in the state and predicted Trump wouldn't win the Republican primary there. Trump took aim at DeSantis' potential run for the GOP presidential nomination, telling Politico it would be "very disloyal."
Donald Trump will regain access to his Facebook account in the coming weeks, Meta announced. Nick Clegg, Meta's president of global affairs, defended the decision ahead of the 2024 election. Clegg added that he hoped Trump wouldn't want to "delegitimize" the 2024 election as he did the 2020 election, should he decide to return to the platform. "Like any other Facebook or Instagram user, Mr. Trump is subject to our Community Standards," Clegg said in a statement on Meta's website. Trump lashed out at the company's decision, calling Zuckerberg and other tech leaders "sick" in an interview with Fox News that year.
Judges have repeatedly slammed Trump for using lawsuits "to advance a political narrative." "Keep Trump busy, because this is the way you defeat him, to keep him busy with litigation," Trump testified in the deposition, speaking in the third person. US District Judge Donald M. Middlebrooks said that Trump has a "pattern of misusing the courts to serve political purposes." Trump's lawyers have to deal with his 2024 runIn the Trump lawsuits that haven't been dismissed, those trials may need to be scheduled around his 2024 campaign events. A trial for Carroll's claims is set for April of this year, and James' lawsuit against Trump is on track for October.
An appeals court is set to weigh in on E. Jean Carroll's defamation suit against Donald Trump. Trump and the DOJ argue that he can't be personally sued for statements he made in office. Carroll sued Trump for defamation in November 2019, saying her career suffered "as a direct result of Trump's defamatory statements." Seth Wenig/APThe Westfall Act protects government employees from being sued for actions in the line of their work. Because he made those comments after leaving the White House, he won't be able to claim Westfall Act protection.
The Democratic-majority House Ways and Means Committee voted to make materials related to Trump's tax returns public. Some of this was already revealed in 2020 when The New York Times obtained decades of Trump's tax information. "If this injustice can happen to President Trump, it can happen to all Americans without cause," Cheung wrote. US Treasury officials gave Neal Trump's tax filings for 2015-2020 in late November. Neal and other Democratic tax writers have been deliberating about how to handle Trump's tax documents for weeks.
Michael Cohen said that Donald Trump won't apologize for failing to condemn Kanye West. The former president "doesn't care" that his daughter's family is Jewish, Cohen said on MSNBC. Cohen was asked about a Rolling Stone article that said Jewish Republicans are "begging" Trump to denounce Ye. Cohen responded: "He doesn't care that Ivanka married Jared, doesn't care that Ivanka converted. Cohen said Trump would not apologize for failing to condemn Ye because he "can't even acknowledge fault."
GOP mega-donor and Citadel CEO Ken Griffin called Donald Trump a "three-time loser." Griffin has donated nearly $60 million to Republicans this cycle, and $1 million to Trump's PAC in 2018. Griffin donated $5 million to DeSantis' reelection campaign in 2018, according to data from the transparency website OpenSecrets. Trump and DeSantis are anticipated to clash for the Republican presidential nomination, with Trump deriding the Florida governor with a mocking nickname, "Ron DeSanctimonious." In 2018, Griffin donated $1 million to Trump's Future45 PAC, per OpenSecrets data.
Trump tried to persuade Ivanka Trump and Jared Kushner to join his 2024 launch, per the NY Post. Both Ivanka Trump and Kushner have long signaled that they're done with politics. But Kushner and Ivanka Trump have long signaled they are not keen to rejoin the fray of politics. Ivanka Trump is "done" with Washington, DC, another source told CNN. In early September, Kushner told Sky News that he's "enjoying the private sector" too much to jump back in.
The big victory has one Super PAC pushing for him to run for president in 2024 against Trump. Ron DeSantis presidential run are back on after a weak showing for former President Donald Trump's favored candidates. He'd even paused plans for the super PAC this summer after the primaries, in which Trump's endorsed candidates did well. Now, Thomas told Insider, his plans for the Super PAC are back on "full throttle with seven-figure gifts" and the group is ready to "get this show on the road." Ron to the Rescue will be launching before Thanksgiving, Thomas told Insider, and would begin producing ads and "start making some noise for the governor."
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