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Jury selection continues Tuesday in Donald Trump's Manhattan hush-money trial. Trump gave reporters a preview of his potential defense before he entered the courtroom. Meanwhile, jury selection continued for a second day on Tuesday. AdvertisementNo jurors were selected during four hours of jury selection on Monday, a day that began with a half-day of arguments over pretrial motions. He has appeared to struggle to stay awake during the sometimes tedious jury selection process.
Persons: Donald Trump's Manhattan, Trump, , Stormy Daniels, Defendant, Michael Cohen, Juan Merchan, District Attorney Alvin Bragg, Donald Trump Organizations: Service, Trump Organization, Trump, District Attorney Locations: Donald, Manhattan
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
Donald Trump is in court for his first criminal trial. It is the grimy, hot, and poorly lit location of the first-ever criminal trial of a former US president. Monday marked the start of jury selection, presided over by Manhattan Supreme Court Justice Juan Merchan and expected to last up to two weeks. Just before the lunch break, Christopher Conroy, an assistant district attorney, accused Trump of violating the gag order. AdvertisementFormer President Donald Trump appears with his legal team at the start of jury selection in his criminal trial in New York City.
Persons: Donald Trump, Trump, , Juan Merchan, Stormy Daniels, Daniels, Michael Cohen, Merchan, Attorney Alvin Bragg, Christopher Conroy, Conroy, Cohen, Stephanie Clifford, — Trump, Jabin, Melania Trump, Trump's, there's, Joe Biden, Jean Carroll, Lewis Kaplan, Jack Smith, Fani Willis Organizations: Service, Manhattan Supreme, Trump, Manhattan, Attorney, New, Yorkers, Republican, US, Trump Organization, Justice Locations: New York County, Manhattan, Merchan, New York, America, New York City, Jabin, Mar, Fulton County, Georgia
Read previewThe judge presiding over Donald Trump's historic criminal trial has barred testimony that the former president's wife, Melania Trump, was pregnant at the time a former Playboy model says she had an affair with Donald Trump. Additionally, Steinglass explained that during the trial, he planned to bring into evidence how McDougal claims she had the affair with Trump while Melania Trump was pregnant with their now-18-year-old son Barron. AdvertisementThe McDougal-Trump narrative includes "that Karen McDougal was a former Playboy model," and that the affair began "when his wife, Melania, was pregnant with his child," Steinglass said. AdvertisementDonald Trump's lead attorney, Todd Blanche, argued strenuously against any evidence concerning a "literally just salacious with no value." Merchan ruled that he would allow prosecutors to talk about Trump's alleged affair with McDougal during the trial — but that he would not permit them to mention that Melania Trump was pregnant at the time.
Persons: , Donald Trump's, Melania Trump, Donald Trump, Joshua Steinglass, Juan Merchan, Karen McDougal, McDougal, Steinglass, Trump, Barron, Melania, Trump's, Stormy Daniels, Todd Blanche, Blanche, It's, Merchan, Daniels, Prosecutors, Michael Cohen Organizations: Service, Playboy, New, Business, Trump, American Media Inc, National Enquirer, AMI Locations: Manhattan
Donald Trump is in court for his first criminal trial. He stepped into Manhattan criminal court Monday morning, where jury selection will soon begin. It is the location of the first-ever criminal trial of a former US president. AdvertisementIn the hallway before walking into the courtroom, Trump criticized the case, telling journalists it was a "political persecution." Trump has been charged in three other criminal cases, none of which have firm trial dates yet.
Persons: Donald Trump, , Trump, Todd Blanche, Juan Merchan, Stormy Daniels, Daniels, there's, Joe Biden, Merchan, Manhattan DA Alvin Bragg, Jean Carroll, Lewis Kaplan, Jack Smith, Fani Willis Organizations: Service, Manhattan, Republican, Manhattan DA, US, New, Trump Organization, Justice Locations: Manhattan, York County, America, Merchan, New York, Mar, Fulton County, Georgia
Donald Trump's criminal trial may prevent him from attending son Barron's high school graduation. The judge has not yet decided on Trump's request to skip trial for the graduation event. AdvertisementDonald Trump may have to miss out on his son Barron's high school graduation ceremony next month due to the timing of the former president's first historic criminal trial. Trump's hush-money trial kicked off with jury selection on Monday in a Manhattan courtroom. As the court prepared for the first day of voir dire, New York Supreme Court Justice Juan Merchan said he received requests from Trump's attorneys for the former president to skip out on the trial on May 17 so that he could attend Barron Trump's high school graduation in Florida.
Persons: Donald Trump's, Barron's, , Donald Trump, Juan Merchan, Barron Organizations: Service, Barron Trump's Locations: Manhattan, New, Florida
Sam Bankman-Fried, former CEO of FTX, was sentenced to 25 years in prison on Thursday. US District Judge Lewis Kaplan said Bankman-Fried didn't express remorse for his crimes. download the app Email address Sign up By clicking “Sign Up”, you accept our Terms of Service and Privacy Policy . Speaking before the court, Bankman-Fried apologized for the pain caused to customers, maintaining that they could all be repaid in full. Prior to handing down the 25-year sentence, Kaplan called Bankman-Fried a "mathematical wizard," saying he essentially ran a cost-benefit analysis of getting caught versus getting away with fraud.
Persons: Sam Bankman, Lewis Kaplan, Bankman, , Fried, Joseph Bankman, Barbara Fried, Elizabeth Williams, Marc Mukasey, Nicolas Roos, villainizing, Roos, Kaplan Organizations: Service, AP Locations: Manhattan
Related storiesEven so, he said he did not think the story of why customers suffered "has been told or told correctly." Customers "could have been paid back" at 2022 prices or current prices, including inflation, Bankman-Fried claimed. Kaplan didn't buy the argument, calling it "speculative" and "misleading." Before handing down Bankman-Fried sentence, Kaplan said he wanted to prevent him from committing more harm, noting that he has previously marketed himself to the media to rebrand his image and version of events at FTX. Bankman-Fried faced a maximum of 110 years in prison following the collapse of FTX.
Persons: , Sam Bankman, Fried, Lewis Kaplan, It's, Sunil Kavuri, Adam M, Moskowitz, Kavuri, FTX, Kaplan, that's, Kaplan didn't, Fried perjured, didn't, it's, Prosecutors, Bernie Madoff, Damian Williams, " Williams, Williams Organizations: Service, Business, Southern, of Locations: Manhattan, FTX, of New York
Sam Bankman-Fried has been sentenced to 25 years in prison. US District Judge Lewis Kaplan sentenced Bankman-Fried Thursday to 25 years in prison. In his sentencing, Kaplan described Bankman-Fried as ambitious and deceitful, willing to gamble with his customers' livelihoods. He knew it was criminal," Kaplan said as Bankman-Fried slumped in his chair. AdvertisementNow that Bankman-Fried's sentencing is over, Kaplan, the judge, will likely swiftly order sentencing hearings for Ellison, Wang, and Singh.
Persons: Sam Bankman, Fried, , Lewis Kaplan, Bankman, Kaplan, Prosecutors, Bernie Madoff, Marc Mukasey, Mukasey, perjured, it's, FTX, Caroline Ellison, Gary Wang, Nishad Singh —, Ellison, Wang, Singh, Ryan Salame, I've, didn't, John J, Ray III, Ray, Joseph Bankman, Barbara Fried Organizations: Service, Justice Department, FTX, Alameda Research, Prosecutors, Detention, Federal Bureau of Prisons Locations: Manhattan, FTX, Bahamas, Washington , DC, Brooklyn's, San Francisco
Sam Bankman-Fried's lawyers claimed that FTX customers had "zero" losses when the exchange collapsed. Had Bankman-Fried held onto the company — and if Ray had listened to his advice rather than spurn him — FTX customers could have gotten their money back quickly, he claimed. In a recent proposal to be approved by the bankruptcy judge, credit would be determined by the value of each customer's assets at the time that FTX filed for bankruptcy. US District Judge Lewis Kaplan and Sam Bankman-Fried. AdvertisementKaplan said that, in any case, Bankman-Fried couldn't be credited for the bankruptcy debtors' work to get FTX customers their money back.
Persons: Sam Bankman, , Lewis Kaplan, Bankman, Fried, Kaplan, John J, Ray III, Ray, FTX, Ray —, bitcoin, Jane Rosenberg Prosecutors, Nicolas Roos, Fried perjured Organizations: Service, Alameda Research, Alameda, , Enron, Residential Capital, REUTERS, FTX Locations: Manhattan, FTX, Las Vegas, Delaware
It's sentencing day for Sam Bankman-Fried
  + stars: | 2024-03-28 | by ( Dan Defrancesco | ) www.businessinsider.com   time to read: +6 min
In today's big story, disgraced crypto executive Sam Bankman-Fried finds out how long he's going to prison . Sam Bankman-Fried, the ex-CEO of FTX and former face of crypto, will be sentenced in a Manhattan courtroom today. An FTX debtor lawyer told the bankruptcy court that FTX customers and creditors "will eventually be paid in full." AdvertisementGetty Images; Alyssa Powell/BIBut according to some, FTX customers getting their money back is despite SBF, not because of him. Almost a third of young people reported using ChatGPT "for tasks at work."
Persons: , Sam Bankman, Fried, Chelsea Jia Feng, Lewis Kaplan, E, Jean Carroll, Donald Trump, Insider's Jacob Shamsian, FTX, Alyssa Powell, John J, Ray III, SBF, What's, Bernstein, Toni Sacconaghi, they've, Dan DeFrancesco, Hallam Bullock, George Glover, Grace Lett Organizations: Business, Service, Prosecutors, Big Tech, Companies, Pew, ChatGPT, Microsoft, League Baseball's Locations: Manhattan, New York, London, Chicago
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
An April 15 date has now been set for Trump's first criminal trial, his Manhattan hush-money case. At a pretrial hearing Monday, Trump watched as his lawyer asked for a long delay. "It's odd that we're even here," the judge told the lawyer, calling his delay bid unsupported. AdvertisementDonald Trump's lawyer asked a Manhattan judge on Monday to postpone his hush-money trial — but instead of a delay, the lawyer got a verbal drubbing. "The People went so far above and beyond what they were required to do that it's odd we're even here," Merchan told Blanche before calling a brief break in arguments.
Persons: Trump, , Donald Trump's, Juan Merchan, scowl, Todd Blanche, nefariously, Blanche, Merchan, Trump's, Michael Cohen, Susan Necheles, Emil Bove, Matthew Colangelo Organizations: Service, New, GOP, Manhattan District, Prosecutors, US Locations: Manhattan, Blanche, New York
Sam Bankman-Fried bilked FTX customers out of over $8 billion, according to prosecutors. AdvertisementAccording to federal prosecutors, Sam Bankman-Fried orchestrated one of the biggest criminal frauds in the history of the world. According to his lawyers, FTX's customers might get all their money back. According to prosecutors, Bankman-Fried was responsible for more than $11 billion in fraud overall between FTX customers and investors in FTX and Alameda Research. The recovered calculations, too, distort how much money customers are actually getting back.
Persons: Sam Bankman, , Fried, FTX, John J, Ray III, Ray, Lewis Kaplan, Kaplan, Sarah Krissoff, Cozen O'Connor, Krissoff, it's, Sarah Silbiger, Bankman, bitcoin, Rachel Maimin, Lowenstein Sandler, Barbara Fried, Mark Cohen, Jane Rosenberg Bankman, Maiman, Maimin, Caroline Ellison Organizations: Service, FTX, Bankman, Alameda Research, US, United States, Second Circuit, U.S . House Financial, Capitol, Reuters, K5 Global, Prosecutors, Wall, REUTERS, Business, of Prisons, Alemda Research Locations: FTX, Manhattan, New Jersey, New York, Washington , U.S
And at a criminal trial, causing a ruckus can bring its own consequences. In a criminal trial, Trump, along with his eager-to-please lawyers, must attend every day. he quipped in response to an argument from one of Trump's lawyers. Technically, Trump faces a maximum of four years in prison for each count he's charged with in his criminal case. The criminal trial will give Trump a chance to hold multiple campaign-boosting rallies before the hallway cameras each day.
Persons: , Donald Trump, they're, Trump, he's, Jean Carroll, Juan Merchan, Carroll, Roberta Kaplan, Carroll's, Arthur Engoron, shrewdly, TIMOTHY A, CLARY, Stormy Daniels, Melania Trump, Kaplan, Eliza Orlins, Orlins, there's, Susan Necheles, Steven Hirsch, Maggie Haberman's, huff, Lewis Kaplan, Alina Habba, Randy Zelin, they've, Engoron, Letitia James of, York —, Kaplan quizzed, Merchan, He's, Donald Trump's, Seth Wenig Merchan, Prosecutors, Zelin, OJ, I'm Organizations: Service, Secret Service, Business, Trump, New York, sophistry, Attorneys, Getty, Manhattan Criminal, Trump Organization, New York Times, Truth, New, AP, Merchan Locations: Manhattan, New York, New York City, Brooklyn, York, America, U.S, Trump
The most striking item on the list was going on then-Fox News host Tucker Carlson's show to "come out as a republican." "Talk about how the cartel of lawyers is destroying value and throwing entrepreneurs under the bus in order to cover up the incompetence of lawyers," Bankman-Fried memorialized. Numerous former executives and associates testified that Bankman-Fried commingled funds of FTX customers with Alameda Research, a cryptocurrency trading firm he also controlled. Bankman-Fried wrote that he could highlight that aspect of his political spending on Carlson's show. In another list, Bankman-Fried came up with a list of "Allies."
Persons: , FTX, Sam Bankman, Michael Lewis, Lewis, Tucker Carlson's, Fried, Bernie Madoff's, Lewis Kaplan, Carlson, they'd, ANGELA WEISS, Martin Shkreli, Cory Booker of, Matt Levine, Levine, Odd Organizations: Service, ABC, Business, Fox News, US, Office, Southern, of, of New York, Alameda Research, Twitter, Getty, Congressional, Allies, Bloomberg Locations: of New, Manhattan, Cory Booker of New Jersey
A judge issued a disqualification ruling in Fulton County DA Fani Willis from Trump's election interference case. AdvertisementA Georgia judge has ruled that Fulton County District Attorney Fani Willis can continue to oversee former President Donald Trump's historic state election interference case — but only if her top prosecutor steps aside. Related storiesThey both testified at a February 15 evidentiary hearing that the District Attorney has always been fiercely financially independent and paid her own way. The mere appearance of a conflict was strong enough to require removing either Wade or Willis from the case, he wrote. The judge gave District Attorney Fani Willis an option to recuse herself and her office, or for her top prosecutor to withdraw from the case.
Persons: Fani Willis, Willis, Mike Roman, , Donald Trump's, Scott McAfee's, Nathan Wade, McAfee, Wade, SADA Wade, Ashleigh Merchant, Trump's codefendant Mike Roman, Merchant, Trump, Terrence Bradley, Bradley, Terrance Bradley, John Merchant, Adam Abbate, Abbate Organizations: Fulton, Trump, Service, State, Attorney, Roman, DAs Locations: Fulton County, Georgia, Atlanta, Trump's Georgia
Read previewFormer President Donald Trump got a rare bit of good news on Wednesday as the judge overseeing his criminal case in Georgia dismissed three of the counts against him. And the judge did not dismiss the vast majority of the counts in the indictment, dismissing six out of 41 counts overall. So far, 10 criminal counts against Trump remain. Trump himself pressured Georgia Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger to "find" 11,780 votes that would flip the election results in his favor. He wrote that prosecutors didn't sufficiently explain how public officials would have violated their oaths of office if they allowed Trump a victory.
Persons: , Donald Trump, Trump, Scott McAfee, Fani Willis, Trump's, Joe Biden's, Brad Raffensperger, McAfee's, didn't, litigators, McAfee, Willis, Jean Carroll Organizations: Service, Business, Trump, United, Prosecutors, New York Attorney, Trump Organization Locations: Georgia, Fulton County, United States, Atlanta, Manhattan
Ghislaine Maxwell's lawyers are arguing for her release in a federal appeals court. The appeal focuses on a non-prosecution agreement between Jeffrey Epstein and federal prosecutors. A jury in Manhattan federal court found Maxwell guilty on sex-trafficking charges in December 2021, four days after her 60th birthday that Christmas. Alison Nathan, the judge who oversaw Maxwell's trial, sentenced her to 20 years in prison and issued a $750,000 fine. AdvertisementManhattan federal prosecutors have argued they were free from any restrictions set by the deal between Florida's federal prosecutors and Epstein.
Persons: Ghislaine, Jeffrey Epstein, Maxwell, , Ghislaine Maxwell —, Epstein, Alison Nathan, Nathan, Maxwell weaponized, Epstein —, isn't, Jeffrey Epstein's, Harvey, Rudy Giuliani, John M, Leventhal, Diana Fabi Samson, Maurene Comey, missteps, Scott David, Ghislaine Maxwell, Laura Menninger, Jane, Jane Rosenberg, Joe Biden, Cuban, Virginia Giuffre, JP Morgan Chase, Carolyn Andriano Organizations: Service, disbarment, Justice Department, US Department of Justice, Reuters, US, Appeals, ricochet, Deutsche Bank, US Virgin Islands, Prosecutors Locations: Manhattan, Tallahassee , Florida, New York, Florida, United States, Washington, US Virgin
Trump must stow $500M cash in a bank to cover the appeal bond for his NY fraud case, experts say. His next appeal bond will cost him far more. By posting another appeal bond. Similar to the more familiar jail bond, an appeal bond is a promise of payment that's backed by collateral, meaning cash or property. The premium on a half-billion-dollar appeal bond could run anywhere from $250,000 to north of one million dollars, just to purchase the bond, experts guestimated.
Persons: Trump, , Donald Trump, Jean Carroll, Letitia James —, Sheriff, Eric Snyder, Snyder, Arthur Engoron, Wilk Auslander, He's, Julie Alleyne, Carroll, Chubb, Evan G, Greenberg, Neil Pedersen, Pedersen, Alleyne, Cash, Jeff Bezos, Elon Musk, Christopher Kise, — Chubb, Letitia James, James, Roy Rochlin, Justin Sullivan Organizations: stow, Service, Trump, New York, New, NRA, Fox, Wilk, Fidelity Association of America, Federal Insurance Company, Chubb Group, Sons, Forbes, Bloomberg, ABC, Midtown, Financial, Getty Locations: NY, Manhattan, New York, New York City, Americas, Midtown Manhattan, New Yorkers
Read previewFormer President Donald Trump has posted a bond that will stop E. Jean Carroll from being able to collect $83.3 million from a defamation judgment against him. Trump agreed to the terms of the bond with the Federal Insurance Co. on Tuesday, according to documents filed in court Friday. Trump would have shopped around for the lowest premium, and there may have been more than one carrier competing for his business, Pedersen said. Mandatory costs and interest raise the bond by a standardized 111% above the original judgment in federal cases, Pedersen said. Trump has already put the $5 million in damages he owes in that case into a court-controlled account as he pursues appeals.
Persons: , Donald Trump, Jean Carroll, Trump, Chubb —, Chubb, Neil Pedersen, Pedersen, Lewis Kaplan, Kaplan, They're, Carroll Organizations: Service, Trump, Business, Federal Insurance Co, Sons, New Locations: Manhattan, New York
AdvertisementIn an overlooked lawsuit, Donald Trump's lawyers are exhibiting a habit from his White House days: Hunting for anonymous sources. At each turn, a lawyer for the Pulitzer Board members stopped their clients from answering. The journalists whom Trump's lawyers deposed did, however, offer some characterization of the "consultants" who conducted the reviews. The Pulitzer Prize Board is hosted by Columbia University, in Manhattan, which manages the small organization's payroll and offers institutional support. Chad Bowman, a Ballard Spahr attorney representing the Pulitzer board members, directed Business Insider to court filings.
Persons: Donald Trump, , Donald Trump's, Trump, Pulitzer, Robert Mueller, Quincy Bird, Katherine Boo, Boo, Chad R, Bowman, Ballard Spahr, don't, Marjorie Miller, Miller, Weber, Crabb, Wein, Neil Brown, David Remnick, Nicole Carroll, Lee Bollinger, Kevin Merida, Viet Thanh Nguyen, Lee C, Bollinger, David Ake Trump's, Gail Collins, John Daniszewski, Bird, Daniszewski, Dana Canady, doesn't, Bebeto Matthews, Collins, we've, John Durham, Hillary Clinton, James Comey, Brown, Chad Bowman, Ballard, Evan Vucci Trump, Christopher Steele, Jeff Gerth's, Gerth, You've Organizations: Service, Business, The New York Times, Washington Post, American, The Washington Post, Pulitzer, Times, Post, PAC Trump, Columbia University, Mar, Poynter Institute for Media Studies, Tampa Bay Times, New Yorker, Los Angeles Times, Associated Press, Global Enterprise, New, AP, Katherine Boo , New York Times, Trump, Republican, Columbia Locations: Russia, Chad, Manhattan, Florida, USA, New York City, Mar, Katherine Boo ,, New York, Palm Beach , Florida, United States, Washington, DC
Ron DeSantis signed a bipartisan bill into law that unearth more Jeffrey Epstein records. The law will allow for the release of records from a 2006 Florida grand jury. Victim advocates hope that the release of the Epstein grand jury records will shed light on why prosecutors brought limited charges, and what else they may have known at the time. The Associated Press reported that a state judge decided not to release the records Thursday morning, citing the impending law. The Palm Beach police chief was so outraged that the grand jury only charged Epstein with one count that the FBI got involved.
Persons: Ron DeSantis, Jeffrey Epstein, Epstein, , DeSantis, Julie K, Barry Krischer, Alex Acosta, Brown, Acosta, Donald Trump's, Ghislaine Maxwell Organizations: Service, HB, Prosecutors, Miami Herald, Associated Press, Palm Beach police, FBI, US Locations: Florida, Palm Beach, Manhattan, Miami
E. Jean Carroll's lawyers demanded Trump pay the $83.3 million defamation verdict against him. Carroll's lawyers say he needs to prove he has the money to pay. After that case, Trump put the funds in a court-controlled account while he appealed the case. Advertisement"In support of his position, he fails to cite a single controlling (or even persuasive) case," Kaplan wrote. "He provides no demonstration that any of these assets are readily collectible and will remain readily collectible throughout the pendency of an appeal," Kaplan wrote.
Persons: Jean Carroll's, Trump, , Jean Carroll, Donald Trump's, Carroll, Roberta Kaplan, defaming Carroll, Donald Trump, Michael M, Kaplan Organizations: Trump, Service, E, Carroll, New, New York, Getty Locations: New York, York
The ransom countdown timer for Fulton County disappeared from a hacking group's website. The hacking group, LockBit 3.0, had a timer set for 8:49 a.m. It posted a new countdown timer for the Fulton County documents initially set for March 2. Before the raid, the group said, they had been in negotiations over a ransom for the Fulton County documents. AdvertisementThe timer for Fulton County had previously disappeared from LockBit 3.0's site ahead of the February 20 raid.
Persons: Trump, , Donald Trump's, Georgia —, LockBit, Biden, Fani, It's, Brian Krebs, Dan Schiappa, Schiappa, George Chidi Organizations: Fulton, Service, FBI, Justice, Trump, Republican, Department of Justice, Fulton County, Atlanta Journal, Business Locations: Georgia, Fulton County, Mexico, Fulton, Atlanta
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