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Donald Trump is facing a number of legal problems that may have an impact on his electoral chances. AdvertisementAdvertisementSo eh, they all do that is the lens that will define the public perception of the Trump indictments. Ipsos has polled Americans on their thoughts following each of the indictments Trump has faces, and the apples-to-apples comparison here is very compelling. AdvertisementAdvertisementIn all but one case, most independents think he should be charged with a crime. Independents think it's bad, but not that bad, and it truly depends on how persuadable voters are when it comes to eh, they all do that.
Persons: Donald Trump, he's, Henry II, Eleanor of Aquitaine, Biden, The Hunter Biden, Trump, Stormy Daniels, Jane Rosenberg, Reuters Trump's, Ipsos, , coughed, Ron DeSantis Organizations: Service, YouGov, Reuters, GOP, Trump, Republicans, United States Capitol, Independents, Gov Locations: Wall, Silicon, New Jersey, Manhattan, New York City, U.S, Fulton
WSJ Opinion: The China, Russia Threat on Alaska's Coast
  + stars: | 2023-08-14 | by ( Wsj Opinion | ) www.wsj.com   time to read: 1 min
WSJ Opinion: The Trouble With the Latest Trump Indictment Review and Outlook: Special counsel Jack Smith's latest indictment is based on a broad and novel theory of fraud against the U.S. and serves the Democratic goal of making the 2024 election a referendum on Jan. 6, 2021. Images: Jane Rosenberg/Reuters/AP Composite: Mark Kelly
Persons: Jack Smith's, Jane Rosenberg, Mark Kelly Organizations: U.S, Democratic, AP
WSJ Opinion: Joe and Hunter Biden's Ukraine Entanglement
  + stars: | 2023-08-12 | by ( Wsj Opinion | ) www.wsj.com   time to read: 1 min
WSJ Opinion: The Trouble With the Latest Trump Indictment Review and Outlook: Special counsel Jack Smith's latest indictment is based on a broad and novel theory of fraud against the U.S. and serves the Democratic goal of making the 2024 election a referendum on Jan. 6, 2021. Images: Jane Rosenberg/Reuters/AP Composite: Mark Kelly
Persons: Jack Smith's, Jane Rosenberg, Mark Kelly Organizations: U.S, Democratic, AP
He had a blank expression as he was led out of the courtroom in handcuffs by members of the U.S. A July 20 article in the New York Times contained excerpts from Ellison's personal Google documents prior to FTX's collapse. She described being "unhappy and overwhelmed" with her job and feeling "hurt/rejected" from her personal break-up with Bankman-Fried. Sassoon said the defendant would be able to access an internet-enabled laptop there to review evidence to prepare for trial. Reporting by Luc Cohen in New York; Editing by Jonathan Oatis, Noeleen Walder and Rosalba O'BrienOur Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.
Persons: Sam Bankman, District Judge Lewis Kaplan's, Caroline Ellison, Kaplan, Ellison, Barbara Fried, nodded, Joseph Bankman, Fried, Jane Rosenberg Bankman, Palo, Mark Cohen, Bankman, Cohen, Danielle Sassoon, Sassoon, Luc Cohen, Jonathan Oatis, Noeleen, Rosalba O'Brien Organizations: U.S, District, New York Times, Alameda Research, U.S . Marshals, Stanford University, REUTERS, Prosecutors, Times, Brooklyn's Metropolitan Detention, Correctional, Thomson Locations: U.S, Manhattan, Alameda, United States, New York, Palo Alto , California, New York City, Brooklyn's, Putnam
Everybody Hates Mitch McConnell
  + stars: | 2023-08-08 | by ( Andy Laperriere | ) www.wsj.com   time to read: 1 min
Images: Jane Rosenberg/Reuters/AP Composite: Mark KellyIt has been an eventful and depressing few weeks. Donald Trump was indicted again. Hunter Biden ’s outrageous plea agreement blew up. Some Democrats now admit President Biden was probably involved in Hunter’s business dealings. But my thoughts keep going back to when Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell froze before the cameras.
Persons: Jack Smith's, Jane Rosenberg, Mark Kelly, Donald Trump, Hunter Biden ’, Biden, Fitch, Mitch McConnell Organizations: U.S, Democratic, AP
WSJ Opinion: The Trouble With the Latest Trump Indictment
  + stars: | 2023-08-05 | by ( Wsj Opinion | ) www.wsj.com   time to read: 1 min
WSJ Opinion: The Trouble With the Latest Trump Indictment Democrats want Mr. Trump to be the Republican nominee, and Mr. Smith (whether he intends it or not) is making that outcome more likely. By WSJ Opinion Aug 03, 2023 11:59 pm Review and Outlook: Special counsel Jack Smith's latest indictment is based on a broad and novel theory of fraud against the U.S. and serves the Democratic goal of making the 2024 election a referendum on Jan. 6, 2021. Images: Jane Rosenberg/Reuters/AP Composite: Mark Kelly Read: Another Troubling Trump Indictment
Persons: Trump, Smith, Jack Smith's, Jane Rosenberg, Mark Kelly Read Organizations: Trump, Republican, U.S, Democratic, AP
Images: Jane Rosenberg/Reuters/AP Composite: Mark KellyChris Christie has a theory for how to defeat Donald Trump: Attack him. If that sounds like something out of “Elections for Dummies,” it remains mostly untested in the 2024 Republican contest, which Mr. Trump leads with 53% support, according to Friday’s RealClearPolitics average. “Nobody else in this race is willing to take him on,” Mr. Christie says. “They all are either playing for a position in a potential Trump cabinet, or they just don’t have the ability to do it. And there’s no way to beat this guy unless you beat him.”
Persons: Jack Smith's, Jane Rosenberg, Mark Kelly Chris Christie, Donald Trump, Trump, Mr, Christie, , Organizations: U.S, Democratic, AP, Republican, Trump
He may soon face more charges in Georgia, where a state prosecutor is investigating his attempts to overturn the election there. TRUMP STILL THE REPUBLICAN FRONT-RUNNER Trump's legal woes have done little to damage his status as Republican front-runner. The indictment describes a phone call in which Pence told Trump there was no legal basis for the theory that Pence could block certification of the election. Although Pence repeatedly told Trump he lacked the authority to reject electoral votes from certain states, Trump kept repeating the claim. On Jan. 6, as he spoke to his supporters before they attacked the Capitol, Trump said: "If Mike Pence does the right thing, we win the election."
Persons: Donald Trump, Jack Smith, Trump, Judge Moxila Upadhyaya, Joe Biden, Smith, Tanya Chutkan, Upadhyaya, Chutkan, John Lauro, Thomas Windom, Biden, Todd Blanche, Judge Moxila, Jane Rosenberg, Donald J, Fani Willis, Ron DeSantis, Mike Pence, Pence, Sarah N, Lynch, Jacqueline Thomsen, Andrew Goudsward, Luc Cohen, Jason Lange, Tim Reid, John O'Connell, Jeff Mason, Patrick McFarland, Joseph Ax, Scott Malone, Daniel Wallis, Howard Goller Organizations: U.S, U.S . Capitol, Republican, Democratic, Biden, America, Republicans, Secret, REUTERS, TRUMP STILL, Reuters, Trump, White, Justice Department, U.S . House, Capitol, Thomson Locations: Washington, Bedminster , New Jersey, Ukraine, American, United States, America, New York, Georgia, Atlanta, Florida
Nauta faces charges of helping Trump hide the documents from investigators after the former president left the White House in 2021. Nauta worked for Trump as a White House valet and has served as an aide since Trump left office. Prosecutors said Nauta moved boxes that contained classified documents so a lawyer for Trump could not find them and hand them over to federal investigators. Nauta and Trump are allowed to be in contact, but cannot discuss the facts of the case except through their attorneys. Legal experts have said the complexities surrounding the use of highly classified documents as evidence are likely to delay Trump's trial.
Persons: Walt Nauta, President Trump, Wilkie D, Ferguson Jr, Jane Rosenberg, Donald Trump, Edwin Torres, Torres, Stanley Woodward, Trump, Woodward, Nauta, Prosecutors, Aileen Cannon, Jack Smith, Cannon, Jacqueline Thomsen, Andy Sullivan, Scott Malone, Howard Goller Organizations: United, Courthouse, REUTERS, MIAMI, White House, Trump, U.S, Prosecutors, Thomson Locations: Miami , Florida, U.S, Florida, Nauta, Newark, Miami, White, New York, York, Lago
Federal court records did not make clear whether Nauta had since retained a Florida lawyer and he could not be reached for comment. The front-runner for the 2024 Republican presidential nomination, Trump has pleaded not guilty both to the federal charges, which also include conspiracy to obstruct justice, and the New York charges. Prosecutors said Nauta moved boxes that contained classified documents so a lawyer for Trump could not find them and hand them over to federal investigators. Nauta and Trump are allowed to be in contact, but cannot discuss the facts of the case except through their attorneys. Legal experts have said the complexities surrounding the use of highly classified documents as evidence are likely to delay Trump's trial.
Persons: Walt Nauta, President Trump, Wilkie D, Ferguson Jr, Jane Rosenberg, Donald Trump's, Trump, Nauta, Edwin Torres, Prosecutors, Aileen Cannon, Jack Smith, Cannon, Jacqueline Thomsen, Scott Malone, Howard Goller Organizations: United, Courthouse, REUTERS, MIAMI, White, Trump, U.S, Prosecutors, Thomson Locations: Miami , Florida, U.S, Miami, Florida, White, New York, York, Lago
Former president Donald J. Trump outside Trump Tower in Manhattan, New York, prior to his departure to a two-day trip to Des Moines, Iowa, May 31, 2023. Kyle Mazza | Anadolu Agency | Getty ImagesDonald Trump is willing to put up $5.6 million as security while the former president appeals a civil verdict that he sexually abused writer E. Jean Carroll in the 1990s and defamed her decades later, a court filing Friday revealed. After a trial in May, a jury found that Trump, 77, was liable for sexually abusing Carroll — but not for raping her. Trump has asked the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 2nd Circuit to overturn the verdict. Separately, he has asked District Court Judge Lewis Kaplan to order a retrial solely on the questions of monetary damages.
Persons: Donald J, Kyle Mazza, Donald Trump, E, Jean Carroll, Trump, Carroll, Elle, Joe Tacopina, Jane Rosenberg, Reuters Carroll, Bergdorf Goodman, Carroll —, Lewis Kaplan Organizations: Trump, Anadolu Agency, Getty, Reuters, U.S ., Appeals Locations: Manhattan , New York, Des Moines , Iowa, U.S, Manhattan, New York
Miami CNN —Former President Donald Trump pleaded not guilty to 37 charges Tuesday in a brief but historic court appearance following his arrest and processing on federal charges. Trump is the first former president to face federal charges following last week’s indictment by special counsel Jack Smith. It underscored the fact that Trump’s legal turmoil is playing out amid a 2024 Republican primary where Trump’s legal troubles have been a central storyline, both for his campaign and his presidential rivals. We love the people, and you see where they are,” Trump said when asked how his court appearance went. Goodman concluded Tuesday’s hearing acknowledging his limited role in the Trump case.
Persons: Donald Trump, Trump, Jack Smith, , Smith, Grisham, Jonathan Goodman, Goodman, Walt Nauta, Nauta, Francis Suarez, ” Suarez, , , ” Trump, Stanley Woodward, Nauta’s, President Trump, Wilkie D, Ferguson Jr, Jane Rosenberg, Judge Cannon, Judge Goodman, Aileen Cannon, Cannon Organizations: Miami CNN, Republican, Trump, CNN, Southern District of, Trump’s Save, United, Courthouse, Reuters, Circuit, West Palm Beach Locations: Manhattan, New York, Fulton County, Georgia, Southern District, Southern District of Florida, Miami, Versailles, Washington, DC, Trump, Bedminster , New Jersey, Miami , Florida, U.S, Ft . Pierce , Florida, West Palm
Monday marked the end of a two-week trial of a lawsuit that Jean Carroll filed in 2022 against Donald Trump. Photo: JANE ROSENBERG/REUTERSLawyers for E. Jean Carroll and Donald Trump made their final pitches to a Manhattan federal jury Monday, clashing over whether evidence presented during the civil trial supported the writer’s account that the former president raped her in a department store dressing room in the 1990s. Roberta Kaplan, a lawyer for Ms. Carroll, noted that Mr. Trump hadn’t called any witnesses at trial.
Donald Trump's lawyers have tried to undermine E. Jean Carroll, who accuses him of rape. Just moments later, Trump's lawyers rested their case as well, without presenting any evidence. Carroll and her friends, Trump's lawyers suggest, all have Trump Derangement Syndrome. According to Trump's lawyers, the whole lawsuit is a conspiracy schemed up by ardent Trump critic George Conway. AP Photo/John MinchilloTrump's attorney pointed out that Birnbach had said Trump and his allies had symptoms of Trump Derangement Syndrome.
E. Jean Carroll watches as former President Donald Trump’s video deposition is played in court. Photo: JANE ROSENBERG/REUTERSLawyers for E. Jean Carroll and Donald Trump rested their cases Thursday, clearing the way for a federal jury to deliberate next week whether the former president raped the writer in a Manhattan department-store dressing room in the 1990s. Mr. Trump’s lawyers previously said they wouldn’t call any witnesses in the case, and that the former president wouldn’t testify. On Thursday, after Mr. Trump’s lawyers rested their case, U.S. District Judge Lewis Kaplan said that if the former president changed his mind about testifying, he could make a motion to do so before 5 p.m. Sunday.
REUTERS/Jane RosenbergMay 2 (Reuters) - A friend of E. Jean Carroll on Tuesday backed up the writer’s account of being raped by Donald Trump, testifying during a civil trial that she received a phone call about the alleged attack minutes after it occurred. Birnbach, author of many books including "The Official Preppy Handbook,” said Carroll told her Trump slammed her into the wall, pulled down her tights and “penetrated her with his penis.”“I whispered, E. Jean, he raped you. Carroll told jurors last week that Trump put his fingers into her vagina, which she called "extremely painful," and then inserted his penis. Birnbach testified that Carroll refused to go to the police after the alleged rape and asked her to never tell anyone about the incident. Reporting by Jack Queen in New York; Editing by Noeleen Walder and Howard GollerOur Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.
A courtroom sketch shows Trump lawyer Joe Tacopina cross-examining E. Jean Carroll during a civil trial in New York. Photo: JANE ROSENBERG/REUTERSDonald Trump’s lawyer for a second day sought to discredit columnist E. Jean Carroll’s allegations that she was raped by the former president in a Manhattan department store, after a federal judge rejected Mr. Trump’s request for a mistrial in the civil case. Joe Tacopina, Mr. Trump’s lead attorney, suggested Ms. Carroll in the years since the alleged attack had acted in ways that were inconsistent with being a victim of sexual assault.
By the time he won an acquittal in a high-profile, 2011 Manhattan criminal trial, Tacopina had attacked what he called her "functional tolerance" for alcohol. She remembered in graphic detail being immobilized in her bed — too drunk to resist — as she was allegedly raped, she told jurors. "She called him a rapist," Tacopina told the jury in openings Monday. "I can dance backwards and forwards in four-inch heels," she told Tacopina when he questioned her dressing-room balancing act. "It caused me to realize that staying silent does not work," she told Tacopina of the courage she saw in that #MeToo wave.
A courtroom sketch shows Justice Juan Merchan instructing the jury in the Trump Organization’s criminal tax trial in Manhattan Criminal Court last year. Photo: JANE ROSENBERG/REUTERSNew York Supreme Court Justice Juan Merchan was assigned to preside over the hush-money prosecution of former President Donald Trump because he had experience overseeing previous litigation involving the former president and his company, according to people familiar with the process, but that history could complicate the proceedings and expose him to more of Mr. Trump’s attacks. Justice Merchan’s journey to the precedent-setting case began with an assignment to referee a subpoena dispute between the Manhattan district attorney’s office and the Trump Organization in late 2020, the people familiar with the matter said.
E. Jean Carroll testifies in federal court at the civil trial in which she has accused Donald Trump of assaulting her. Photo: JANE ROSENBERG/REUTERSA lawyer for Donald Trump sparred with E. Jean Carroll at a civil trial Thursday, questioning the writer over what he said were inconsistencies in her allegations that the former president raped her in a New York City department store in the 1990s. Ms. Carroll testified for a second day in a New York federal court, where a jury is considering a lawsuit the longtime columnist filed last year against Mr. Trump that seeks damages for battery and defamation. She alleged in a 2019 book that Mr. Trump raped her in a dressing room in an unattended lingerie section of Bergdorf Goodman. Mr. Trump has denied the allegations.
Donald Trump's lawyer grilled E. Jean Carroll about why she didn't scream as Trump allegedly raped her. "Some women scream. Joe Tacopina, one of Trump's attorneys in the case, asked Carroll why she didn't scream. Tacopina repeatedly asked about different reasons why she didn't scream to draw attention during the struggle. "I'm not beating up on you, Ms. Carroll," Tacopina responded.
"I'm here because Trump raped me," Carroll testified. Trump's posts mentioned two issues that Judge Lewis Kaplan had warned parties in the trial not to mention to jurors. Carroll alleges Trump assaulted her in a dressing room at the Bergdorf Goodman department store in Manhattan in or around 1996. In his first Truth Social post on Wednesday, Trump wrote, "The E. Jean Carroll case, Ms. Bergdorf Goodman, is a made up SCAM. "Just look at her CNN interview before & after the commercial break - Like a different person," Trump wrote, referring to an interview Carroll gave CNN about the lawsuit.
She told jurors they would also hear testimony from two other women who say Trump sexually assaulted them, which Trump denies. Trump's lawyer Joe Tacopina countered in his opening statement that the evidence will show the former U.S. president did not assault Carroll. Trump pleaded not guilty to 34 felony counts on April 4 at a New York state courthouse, a three-minute walk from Tuesday's trial. Trump did not attend the trial and is not required to, and according to lawyers from both sides is unlikely to testify. Carroll is also suing Trump for defamation after he first denied her rape claim in June 2019, when he was still president.
Guo Wengui Denied Bail While Awaiting Trial in New York
  + stars: | 2023-04-20 | by ( James Fanelli | ) www.wsj.com   time to read: 1 min
A courtroom sketch shows Guo Wengui at a courthouse in New York. Photo: JANE ROSENBERG/REUTERSA New York federal judge on Thursday ordered wealthy Chinese businessman Guo Wengui jailed while he awaits trial on fraud and money-laundering charges, calling him a flight risk and saying the Justice Department’s evidence against him was strong. Mr. Guo, who garnered attention by accusing Beijing of corruption from his Manhattan penthouse, was arrested and charged last month with a $1 billion fraud scheme. Federal prosecutors in the Manhattan U.S. attorney’s office alleged he took advantage of the hundreds of thousands of followers he amassed online by soliciting investments in a cryptocurrency he developed, a media company and other ventures. He spent some of the proceeds on lavish purchases, including a $26 million home in New Jersey, a yacht and a Ferrari, prosecutors allege.
REUTERS/Jane RosenbergNEW YORK, March 13 (Reuters) - Sayfullo Saipov, the man convicted of killing eight people in an attack on a Manhattan bike path in 2017, was spared the death penalty on Monday after a federal jury deadlocked on whether he should be executed. Saipov's case is the first federal death penalty trial since President Joe Biden, a Democrat, took office in 2021 after pledging during his campaign to abolish capital punishment. Jurors agreed that other aggravating factors weighed in favor of the death penalty, including that Saipov planned his attack in advance and carried it out to support Islamic State. Patton said in his closing argument that the death penalty was "not necessary to do justice." Prosecutors sought the death penalty despite U.S. Attorney General Merrick Garland's July 2021 moratorium on federal executions so the Department of Justice could review its use of the punishment.
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