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A real-estate brokerage owned by Warren Buffett's Berkshire Hathaway has agreed to pay $250 million to settle a lawsuit over its commission fees, according to plaintiffs in the case. AdvertisementHome sellers had sued HomeServices of America, alleging it conspired to force sellers to pay inflated agent commissions. Related stories"As we move beyond this settlement, our focus remains steadfast on ethical operations, industry integrity, and delivering value," Kelly said. AdvertisementThe group of home sellers, in this case, had also sued other brokerages and have scored millions in settlements already. Among the payouts is a whopping $418 million from the National Association of Realtors that has shaken up the real-estate industry.
Persons: Warren Buffett's Berkshire Hathaway, HomeServices, Benjamin D, Brown, Cohen Milstein Sellers, Chris Kelly, Kelly Organizations: Warren, Business, National Association of Realtors Locations: America
Donald Trump is asking the Supreme Court to recognize that he had total legal immunity as president. Trump is asking the Supreme Court to grant him a sweeping immunity mandate as he runs to recapture the presidency. "This may indeed be the most important US Supreme Court case in the history of our country," he told journalists at a panel organized by the Defend Democracy Project. The Supreme Court will likely issue a decision in late April. "The Supreme Court need not stray into other questions just because Trump has made it easy for them.
Persons: Donald Trump, Jack Smith's, , Trump, Jack Smith, Richard Nixon, David Frost, Smith, He's, Stormy Daniels, Todd Blanche, David Pecker, Tanya Chutkan, Barack Obama, Dana Verkouteren, doesn't, MANDEL NGAN, Nixon, Gerald Ford's, Ford, Leon Jaworski, indicting Nixon, Robert Ray, Bill Clinton, Monica Lewinsky, Donald Ayer, Ronald Reagan, George H.W, Bush, it's, Justice Department's, Chutkan, BRENDAN SMIALOWSKI, framers, Mark Meadows, Norm Eisen, Obama's Organizations: Service, Justice Department, Capitol, Department, Air Force, Nixon, Trump, Prosecutors, AP, Getty, Independent, Department of Justice, Defend, Justice, White House Locations: Washington , DC, Georgia, Florida, New York, Manhattan, United States, AFP, Fulton County
The Supreme Court is set to hear Starbucks’s challenge on Tuesday to a federal judge’s order to reinstate workers who were attempting to unionize a store in Memphis. Starbucks is asking the court to make it harder for the National Labor Relations Board to obtain intervention by judges in cases where a company is accused of violating labor law. Starbucks, which has faced hundreds of accusations of labor law violations across the country, argues that there is a patchwork of standards under which the N.L.R.B. The appellate court in this case, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit, applies a lower standard, and Starbucks is pushing the Supreme Court to apply a more strict, uniform standard that is in line with other circuits. Starbucks Workers United, the union representing the company’s workers, filed an unfair labor practice charge over the firings, arguing that the company selectively enforced the rules against organized workers.
Organizations: National Labor Relations Board, Starbucks, U.S ., Appeals, Sixth, Starbucks Workers United Locations: Memphis
CNN —The Supreme Court’s hearing Thursday on former President Donald Trump’s immunity claim will underline a historic power shift. Trump’s relationship has been complex with the court’s conservative majority – despite his instrumental role in establishing it. In sharp contrast, the court’s conservative majority has exerted its influence year after year, without interruption. “There is just much more intense vetting of Supreme Court justices,” said Pierson. “You can tell by the results of the court decisions over the past several years that it is fundamentally different.
Persons: Donald Trump’s, , , Jeff Shesol, Franklin D, John Roberts, Amy Coney Barrett, Ruth Bader Ginsburg, Paul Pierson, , Barack Obama’s, Roberts, Joe Biden, Trump, they’ve, Michael McConnell, Jack Smith, Gore, outvoted, George W, Bush, MAGA, Michael Waldman, ” Waldman, Bill Clinton, Richard Nixon, Nixon, Waldman, ” McConnell, McConnell, Sandra Day O’Connor, Anthony Kennedy, Ronald Reagan, David Souter, George H.W, Pierson, Obama, Brett Kavanaugh, Barrett, Cecilia Munoz, Biden, “ It’s, Samuel Alito, Clarence Thomas, Clinton, ” Shesol, FDR, Shesol Organizations: CNN, White House, GOP, Republican Party, Trump, Republicans, University of California, Democratic, House, White, Constitutional, Center, Stanford University Law School, Brennan Center for Justice, New York University School of Law, Senate, Republican, Federalist Society, Alabama, Electoral, Citizens, Constitutional Law Center, New, Great Society Locations: Berkeley, Manhattan, Florida, , George H.W . Bush, Shelby County
Merchan didn't hit Blanche as hard as a federal judge in Manhattan has hit Trump lawyer Alina Habba for her lawyering. During the E. Jean Carroll defamation trial in January, Judge Lewis Kaplan bench-slapped Habba 14 times during a single day of testimony. "Please direct me to the portion of the original gag order, or the subsequent gag order, where it makes any exception if Mr. Trump feels he is under attack. The judge told Blanche to file a response, in writing, explaining why Trump should not be held in contempt for violating the gag order. The judge paused, then added, with some sarcasm, "I don't recall inserting that anywhere in either gag order."
Persons: , Juan Merchan, Donald Trump's, — Trump's, Todd Blanche, Merchan didn't, Blanche, Alina Habba, Jean Carroll, Lewis Kaplan, Joshua Steinglass, blanch, I've, Merchan, Blanche's, Trump, Donald Trump, Susan Necheles, Timothy A, Clary, — Michael Cohen, Stormy Daniels, Daniels, Cohen, Chris Conroy, Conroy, Trump's, snarked, — Merchan, meekly, Emil Bove, Jabin, — Blanche, Jack Smith, didn't, Steinglass, incredulously Organizations: Service, Business, Reuters, Former U.S, Manhattan Criminal, Justice Locations: New, Manhattan, Trump's, balking, New York City, New York, New York County
If Trump were sent to prison, would he still have his presidential Secret Service protecting him in jail? The judicial process is built around the idea that defendants are there to answer charges, and New York law requires that a defendant be present at trial. The felony charge here, which is the lowest level felony under New York law, is falsifying business records to further some other crime. His federal trial on classified documents is proceeding slowly in Miami. While Trump, under New York law, has a right to know their names, their identities will be kept from public view.
Persons: CNN —, Donald Trump’s, , I’ve, Trump, Laura Coates, Coates, Watch Coates, David, Juan Merchan, Stormy Daniels, CNN’s, Daniels, Bruce, Karen McDougal, Trump’s fixer, Michael Cohen, Cohen, Attorney Alvin Bragg, Will, Francis, Elie Honig, Honig, SCOTUS, Mark Honig, He’s, Kathryn, Trump’s, It’s, hasn’t, Norman Eisen, , Scott, That’s, Frank Bowman, he’s, Bowman Organizations: CNN, Trump, Raleigh NC Daniels, Seattle Trump, National Enquirer, Playboy, of Justice, Manhattan, Attorney, New, University of Missouri, Prisons, White Locations: New York, Tokyo, York, Georgia, Seattle, Cupertino, Miami, Fulton County , Georgia, Philadelphia
Read previewDonald Trump's hush money trial remained on track for Monday jury selection after the judge on Friday night denied — in no uncertain terms — a defense bid to delay the trial indefinitely due to prejudicial pretrial publicity. "This is not tenable," the trial judge, New York Supreme Court Justice Juan Merchan , said in his decision, noting that much of the pretrial publicity has been caused by Trump himself. "Defendant appears to take the position that his situation and this case are unique and that the pre-trial publicity will never subside," the judge wrote in Friday's decision. The poll "provides no information about how it obtained the contact information of respondents or how it ensured its samples were actually random or representative," the judge wrote. Last week, Trump lost a Manhattan appellate court bid for an emergency delay of the trial on pretrial publicity grounds.
Persons: , Donald, Juan Merchan, Trump, Joe Biden, Kamala Harris, Merchan, Defendant, Jean Carroll, Susan Necheles, Todd Blanche, Trump's, pollsters, Prosecutors, Attorney Alvin Bragg, Stormy Daniels, Daniels Organizations: Service, New, Business, Court, Federal, Defendant, Defense, Prosecutors, Manhattan, Attorney, Trump Organization Locations: Chicago, 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
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
He is a graduate of Yale Law School, a fellow of the American College of Trial Lawyers and a retired Illinois attorney. In rejecting Trump’s contention that the gag orders violate his First Amendment rights, Merchan pointed to Trump’s social media posts. Merchan was aware of the Sheppard opinion justifying his initial gag order, citing it in the ruling. A leading lawyers’ organization, the American College of Trial Lawyers, wrote that Trump’s statements about judges and prosecutors “puts our very democracy at risk. It should be universally condemned.”That’s why Merchan’s gag order is indispensable.
Persons: Michael Conway, Richard Nixon, Donald Trump’s, Juan Merchan, Stormy Daniels, Trump, Merchan, ” Merchan, Trump’s, Sam Sheppard, Sheppard, Alvin Bragg, don’t, , Organizations: Yale Law School, American College of Trial, CNN, Trump, US, Twitter, Facebook Locations: Illinois, York, New York, Manhattan
“What he has said is that we would like ultimately there to only be voting on Election Day. Republican attorneys have filed an assortment of lawsuits across the county that vary in both what types of election rules they target and how seriously election law experts believe the case should be taken. The legal fight against mail voting has taken GOP lawyers to states beyond the typical presidential battlegrounds. In addition to the case targeting Mississippi’s post-election day mail ballot receipt deadline, Republicans filed a lawsuit challenging the major expansion of mail voting enacted by New York lawmakers last year. To arrive at the claim that the states’ voter rolls are bloated, Republicans are using a formula that has previously been rebuked in federal court.
Persons: Donald Trump, baselessly, Trump, Mike Johnson, , ” Michael Whatley, that’s, ” Whatley, Whatley –, , Rick Hasen, don’t, ” Hasen, Derek Muller, ” Muller, litigators don’t, , Justin Levitt, Muller, CNN’s Ariel Edwards, Levy, David Wright Organizations: CNN, Republican, Republican National Committee, Mississippi Republican Party, Magnolia, GOP, Republicans, Democrats, Trump, Trump’s, Fox News, Republican Party, RNC, University of Notre Dame, Fox, New, National Conference of State Legislatures, Pew Research Center, Democratic, Pew, The New, The New York City Council, Vermont, Loyola Law School, Biden White Locations: Magnolia State, Pennsylvania, Ohio , Georgia, Florida, North Carolina, Wisconsin, , California, Colorado, Hawaii , Nevada , Oregon , Utah , Vermont, Washington, Mississippi, New York, Michigan , Wisconsin , Ohio, Arizona, New York City, United States, The New York, – Nevada, Michigan, Nevada
Read previewDonald Trump on Wednesday lost his 11th bid to delay his New York hush money trial, which now remains on track for jury selection Monday. AdvertisementWednesday's trip to an appellate court in Manhattan, for brief but earnest arguments by both sides, was Trump's third bid to pause the trial in as many days. One yet-decided defense motion asks Merchan to recuse himself from the case. AdvertisementThe other defense motion challenges Merchan's recent rule that neither side can file a new pretrial motion without first seeking his permission in the form of a one-page letter. AdvertisementTrump lost his 10th attempt to delay the trial on Tuesday, also in the appellate court in Manhattan.
Persons: , Donald Trump, Ellen Gesmer, Stormy Daniels, It's, Emil Bove, Juan Merchan, Merchan, Bove, Steven Wu, Trump Organizations: Service, Wednesday, Business, Prosecutors, Trump Locations: York, Manhattan
Former Trump Organization Chief Financial Officer Allen Weisselberg (C) arrives for sentencing at Manhattan Criminal Court on April 10, 2024, in New York City. Former Trump Organization Chief Financial Officer Allen Weisselberg on Wednesday was sentenced to five months in jail for lying under oath during the civil business fraud trial of Donald Trump. Weisselberg declined to speak before the judge in a brief hearing in Manhattan criminal court. He spent three months in jail at Rikers last year after pleading guilty to helping orchestrate a tax fraud scheme at the business. Weisselberg on March 4 admitted lying during his testimony in the civil fraud trial brought by New York Attorney General Letitia James against Trump, his two adult sons, his business and its executives.
Persons: Allen Weisselberg, Donald Trump, Weisselberg, Seth Rosenberg, Attorney Alvin Bragg, Trump, Letitia James Organizations: Trump Organization, Manhattan Criminal, Former Trump Organization, Attorney, Trump . New, New York Locations: New York City, Manhattan, Rikers, Trump . New York
The Department of Justice has weighed in on a court battle over an oil and gas pipeline in Wisconsin, saying that a Canadian oil company has been willfully trespassing on tribal lands in the state for more than a decade. On Wednesday, lawyers for the Justice Department filed a brief saying that the company, Enbridge, “lacks any legal right to remain” on the land, part of a reservation of the Bad River Band, an Ojibwe group. But the brief largely sidestepped the question of whether a 1970s treaty between the United States and Canada gives Enbridge the right to operate the pipeline indefinitely, as the company asserts. Enbridge is fighting demands by state, tribal and judicial authorities to shut down the pipeline known as Line 5, which crosses 645 miles of Wisconsin and Michigan, in lawsuits pending in federal appellate court in each state. Environmentalists in both states have raised concerns about the deteriorating condition of Line 5 and the company’s proposals to shore it up.
Persons: Enbridge Organizations: of Justice, Justice Department Locations: Wisconsin, Canadian, United States, Canada, Michigan
The Arizona Supreme Court ruled Tuesday that a 160-year-old near-total abortion ban still on the books in the state is enforceable, a bombshell decision that adds the state to the growing lists of places where abortion care is effectively banned. The ruling allows an 1864 law in Arizona to stand that criminalized abortion by making it a felony punishable by two to five years in prison for anyone who performs or helps a woman obtain one. The law — which was codified again in 1901, and once again in 1913, after Arizona became a state — included an exception to save the woman's life. The decision — which could shutter abortion clinics in the state — effectively undoes a lower court's ruling that stated that a more recent 15-week ban from March 2022 superseded the 1864 law. "Absent the federal constitutional abortion right, and because" the 2022 law does not independently authorize abortion, there is no provision in federal or state law prohibiting" the 1864 ban.
Persons: , Dobbs, Roe, Wade Organizations: Arizona Supreme Locations: Arizona
A New York appeals judge on Tuesday knocked down yet another long-shot bid by Donald Trump to delay his criminal hush money trial, this time by seeking a pause while he challenges his court-imposed gag order. The swift rejection marked Trump's second failed attempt in less than 24 hours to postpone the Manhattan Supreme Court trial, which is set to begin jury selection in six days. The gag order bars Trump from speaking about likely witnesses in the case, and from making certain statements about other related figures including lawyers, court staff and their respective family members. Presiding Judge Juan Merchan last week expanded the gag order to stop Trump from targeting the family members of the judge and the D.A. Those witnesses are publicly attacking Trump and he is unable to respond, Bove told the judge, according to NBC.
Persons: Donald Trump, Cynthia Kern's, Attorney Alvin Bragg, Juan Merchan, Emil Bove, Trump, Stormy Daniels, Michael Cohen, Trump's, Bove, Matthew Colangelo, Bragg, Steven Wu, Kern, Wu Organizations: Manhattan Supreme, Trump, Manhattan, Attorney, NBC News, NBC, Department of Justice Locations: York, Manhattan
Trump hoped to delay his first criminal trial by arguing that he needs time to fight his gag order. Trump is continuing to appeal his gag, which bars statements about witnesses, jurors, and others. AdvertisementDonald Trump lost his tenth attempt to delay his hush money trial on Monday — this time over his gag order. Trump had hoped to delay his first criminal trial long enough to mount a full appeal of the gag. Related storiesKern's written decision did not give a reason for the denial, which allows Trump's gag appeal — but also his April 15 trial — to proceed.
Persons: Trump, , Donald Trump, Cynthia Kern, Attorney Alvin Bragg, Juan Merchan, Stormy Daniels, Daniels Organizations: Service, GOP, Attorney, Manhattan Locations: Manhattan
A New York appeals court judge on Monday swiftly rejected a last-ditch bid by Donald Trump to delay his upcoming criminal hush money trial while he seeks to move the case to another court. Trump has frequently targeted both groups in the run-up to the Manhattan Supreme Court trial, which is set to begin jury selection next week. At a hearing Monday afternoon, defense attorney Emil Bove urged appellate Judge Lizbeth Gonzalez to delay the hush money trial, according to NBC. Wu added that Trump, who regularly rails against the case on social media and the campaign trail, is responsible for the media frenzy. He cannot drum up a media circus and then use that publicity to seek a change of trial venue, Wu told Gonzalez.
Persons: Donald Trump, LIV, Judge Lizbeth Gonzalez, Trump's, Trump, Stormy Daniels, Attorney Alvin Bragg, Emil Bove, Lizbeth Gonzalez, Bove, Steven Wu, Wu, Gonzalez Organizations: U.S, Miami, Trump National Doral Miami, NBC News, Trump, NBC, Manhattan Supreme, Attorney Locations: Doral , Florida, York, New York, Manhattan
CNN —A New York appeals court has denied Donald Trump’s petition to change the venue of his upcoming hush money trial. The former president’s attorneys on Monday had urged the court to postpone the trial so it could consider whether to change the venue, arguing that Trump cannot get a fair jury in New York. But Associate Justice Lizbeth González quickly denied the motion to stop the trial after hearing arguments Monday, and there is no further argument on the motion to change the venue. Trump’s attorneys had filed the petition in the state appellate court earlier in the day, one week before his trial is set to begin. At Monday’s hearing before the appeals court, Trump attorney Emil Bove rehashed a survey and media study referenced in the former president’s previous motion submitted to Merchan to postpone based on pretrial publicity.
Persons: Donald Trump’s, Trump, Lizbeth González, Judge Juan Merchan, Emil Bove rehashed, Merchan, ” Bove, Steven Wu, Wu, Defendant, ” Wu, Wu said Organizations: CNN, Trump, Attorney’s Locations: York, New York, New York County, Manhattan
Donald Trump leap-frogged to an appellate court Monday to challenge his Manhattan hush-money case. download the app Email address Sign up By clicking “Sign Up”, you accept our Terms of Service and Privacy Policy . AdvertisementDonald Trump rushed his lawyers to a Manhattan appellate courthouse on Monday in an 11th-house effort to delay his hush-money trial. The news that Trump intended to sue New York Supreme Court Justice Juan Merchan broke Monday morning. The legal effort, which comes one week before jury selection is scheduled to begin, shows Trump is amping up his efforts to delay his trial.
Persons: Donald Trump, , Trump, Juan Merchan Organizations: Service, New, Business Locations: Manhattan
By failing to report the offer, Trump's legal team may have violated ethics rules, ProPublica found. "I saw that they were rejected by everyone, and I said, 'Gee, that doesn't seem like a difficult bond to post,'" Hankey told ProPublica. However, legal experts told Business Insider, that if his lawyers knew about the offer and failed to notify the court, they may have violated ethics rules. However, he noted it would be difficult to prove what Trump's lawyers knew and when they knew it. The Trump campaign, lawyers representing the former president in his civil fraud case, and Knight Specialty Insurance Company representatives did not immediately respond to requests for comment from Business Insider.
Persons: ProPublica, , Donald Trump's, he'd, Don Hankey, Gee, Hankey, Trump, Neama Rahmani, Andrew Lieb, " Lieb Organizations: Service, Trump, Knight Specialty Insurance, New York, Bar Association, NY, Division, Supreme, Business, Knight Specialty Insurance Company Locations: ProPublica
I won the case, because I won it in the Appellate Division. …I won the case because it’s called statute of limitations. The appeals court never said he won the case. The cutoff date would’ve been February 6, 2016, for any defendants Engoron decided weren’t covered by the agreement.) After Trump wrongly claimed to reporters, following the first day of the trial, that “about 80% of the case is over” because of the appeals court ruling, Engoron said in court the next day: “This case arrived at the App.
Persons: Donald Trump, , ” Trump, Letitia James, Arthur Engoron’s, Trump, , it’s, , ’ He’s, He’s, he’s, Ivanka Trump, general’s, Engoron, that’s, Rather, , Alan Garten, ” James ’, ” Engoron Organizations: Washington CNN, New, Division, Trump, Trump Organization, SFC Locations: New York, Wisconsin,
Donald Trump on Thursday afternoon lost two separate attempts to dismiss criminal charges against him in his Florida and Georgia cases. In Florida federal court, Judge Aileen Cannon rejected Trump's bid to drop charges against him related to his alleged mishandling of hundreds of classified documents after he left the White House. In a brief order, Cannon wrote that Trump's argument, which hinged on his interpretation of the Presidential Records Act, was an insufficient basis for dismissal. That ruling came about two hours after Fulton County Superior Court Judge Scott McAfee denied Trump's attempt to dismiss his Georgia election interference case on the grounds that it violated his free speech rights. The twin losses came one day after New York Supreme Court Judge Juan Merchan denied a request by Trump to delay his upcoming criminal hush money trial.
Persons: Donald Trump, Aileen Cannon, Trump's, Cannon, Scott McAfee, Juan Merchan, Trump, Cannon's, Jack Smith, Smith Organizations: White, Presidential Records, Fulton, New York, Records Locations: New York City, Florida, Georgia
If she does not course-correct, she’s headed for another shellacking by the circuit – and possible removal from the case. That statute outlines the parameters between a president’s official and personal records, and sets up processes for how official documents are preserved. If this were true, the mere fact that Trump took the documents with him from the White House would inherently turn them into personal records. Importantly, Smith asked Cannon to let both parties know “promptly” how she viewed the law. Ejecting her from the case would be extremely unusual and Smith does not mention seeking it in his papers.
Persons: Norman Eisen, Trump, Danya Perry, Perry Guha, Joshua Kolb, Jack Smith, Donald Trump’s, Smith, Aileen Cannon, Donald, Cannon, she’s, counterarguments, Cannon’s, , fashioning, Organizations: Democrats, Brookings, New, Public, CNN, Appeals, Circuit, Trump, Records, National Archives, Records Administration, White Locations: Lago, Bedminster , New Jersey
In an unusual order last month, Cannon asked attorneys on the classified documents case to submit briefs on potential jury instructions defining terms of the Espionage Act, under which Trump is charged over mishandling 32 classified records. Specifically, Cannon asked the special counsel and defense attorneys to write two versions of proposed jury instructions. Trump’s attorneys claim he did have that authority and have asked the judge to throw out the criminal charges. “Medical science has not yet devised an instrument which can record what was in one’s mind in the distant past,” Trump’s attorneys wrote. Cannon appeared skeptical that the charges should be outright dismissed during the hearing, but she said that Trump’s attorneys were making “forceful” arguments that may be appropriate to present to a trial jury.
Persons: Aileen Cannon, Donald Trump, Jack Smith, ” Smith’s, Cannon, Trump, , Organizations: CNN, Presidential Records, White, , , Prosecutors, Trump, National Archives, Mar Locations: Lago
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