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‘This is crazy!’ Democratic lawmakers fear 'erratic and strange' Trump will blurt out top-secret intel in fit of rage

Democrats are increasingly concerned that Donald Trump will reveal top-secret intelligence during his ongoing public meltdown over the search of Mar-A-Lago.

FBI agents seized boxes of classified materials the former president had hoarded at his private resort in Florida, and lawmakers are worried that he might lash out against the government by blurting out top-secret information on his Truth Social account or during back-channel discussions with foreign leaders, reported The Daily Beast.

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Morning Joe offers Trump some free legal advice: 'Stop sending your lawyers on TV'

MSNBC's Joe Scarborough offered some free legal advice to Donald Trump after the Department of Justice found the top-secret documents he took home from the White House.

The former president's attorney Alina Habba admitted on Fox News that Trump "frequently" had guests in the office where he stored some of the classified materials he had refused to return to the government, and the "Morning Joe" host said the former president was being undermined by his own legal team.

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Trump should be seeking a plea deal — but his lawyers can’t protect him from himself: analysis

Legal experts panned Donald Trump on Wednesday for having the "worst lawyers" and explained why even the best attorneys in the land may be unable to save the former president from his legal woes.

Legal and political experts weighed in on Wednesday after the Department of Justice deployed a "legal battering ram" in a 36-page late-night court filing with 18-pages of exhibits.

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Trump lawyer told investigators she conducted 'diligent' search of Mar-a-Lago just days before DOJ issued subpoena

An attorney representing former President Donald Trump informed the New York Attorney General's Office earlier this year that she conducted a "diligent" search of Mar-a-Lago -- just days before the United States Department of Justice would issue a subpoena for missing top secret national security documents.

Politico reports that attorney Alina Habba, who prior to working for Trump served as general counsel to a parking garage company, told a court that she had scoured "all desks, drawers, nightstands, dressers, closets, etc." inside Mar-a-Lago for documents requested by the New York AG's office as part of a civil investigation into Trump's business practices.

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Trump added attorney named Jim Trusty to Mar-A-Lago legal team after seeing him on TV

Former President Donald Trump reportedly hired one of his lawyers who's defending him in the Mar-A-Lago search after seeing him on television.

The former president's legal team has drawn criticism for their work on the case, and they were assembled hastily and unconventionally, with little regard for their experience in national security matters and other relevant topics, reported Insider.

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‘Incomprehensible’: George Conway pans Trump’s unqualified legal team

Prominent conservative attorney George Conway had harsh words for Donald Trump's legal advisors during a Thursday evening appearance on CNN.

"Not long after the National Archives acknowledged in February that it had retrieved 15 boxes of presidential records from former President Donald Trump’s Mar-a-Lago residence in Florida, Trump began fielding calls from Tom Fitton, a prominent conservative activist," CNN reported. "Fitton, the longtime head of the legal activist group Judicial Watch, had a simple message for Trump — it was a mistake to give the records to the Archives, and his team should never have let the Archives “strong-arm” him into returning them, according to three sources familiar with the matter."

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'Going to get someone killed': Trump lawyer threatens to expose FBI agents even if DOJ redacts names

Trump attorney Alina Habba on Thursday suggested releasing surveillance footage of the FBI's search of Mar-a-Lago even though it could reveal the identities of agents who executed it.

Federal Magistrate Judge Bruce Reinhart, who signed off on the search warrant, on Thursday gave the Justice Department a week to propose redactions ahead of a possible release of the probable cause affidavit filed by the DOJ to get the warrant. The DOJ opposed releasing the affidavit at all, arguing that it could expose agents and witnesses and reveal the inner workings of an ongoing investigation. The DOJ is investigating Trump under the Espionage Act after he failed to turn over classified documents he had taken to his residence.

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‘You got problems’: Trump ridiculed over his inability to hire competent lawyers

Former President Donald Trump is having problems hiring attorneys as he faces investigations in Florida, Georgia, New York, and Washington, D.C. — and many find that to be hilarious.

"The struggle to find expert legal advice puts Trump in a bind as he faces potential criminal exposure from a records dispute with the National Archives that escalated into a federal investigation into possible violations of the Espionage Act and other statutes," The Washington Post reported. "'Everyone is saying no,' said a prominent Republican lawyer, who like some others spoke on the condition of anonymity to discuss confidential conversations."

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‘Parking lot mafioso logic’: Experts hammer Trump attorney for seeking to reveal Mar-a-Lago witnesses

Experts were stunned after Donald Trump attorney Alina Habba urged the Department of Justice to reveal the name of the witness who reportedly tipped off the FBI about the classified documents which were still at Mar-a-Lago when a search warrant was executed last week.

"The president's position, the same as what I would advise him, is to ask them to uncover everything so that we can see what is going on," Habba said on Newsmax. "I understand the witness protection issue, but at the same time, these witnesses are truly not going to be concealed for very long."

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Trump lawyer blows off witness protection concerns and demands to know who spilled beans on documents

Alina Habba, an attorney representing former President Donald Trump, blew off concerns about witness protection this week and demanded to know the names of people who spilled the beans to the Department of Justice about top secret documents being stashed at Mar-a-Lago.

During an appearance on Newsmax, Habba called for the DOJ to reveal all its cards in its probe of the former president, who is facing a criminal investigation for potentially violating the Espionage Act.

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Trump's own lawyer blows up his 'planted' evidence claims

Former President Donald Trump and his lawyers have baselessly peddled a conspiracy theory that the FBI may have "planted" evidence during its raid on Mar-a-Lago because "nobody" was allowed to watch. But Trump's lawyer admitted on Thursday that Trump and his family watched the "whole thing" go down from New York through CCTV footage from the resort.

Trump and his attorneys, Christina Bobb and Alina Habba, immediately claimed that the FBI may have "planted" damning evidence during the Mar-a-Lago raid on Monday without any proof, citing only the fact that Bobb was prevented from observing the search as is standard in such FBI operations. Trump, Bobb and Habba in numerous statements speculated about what the FBI may have done while "nobody" was watching.

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Trump lawyer sued for blasting raunchy hip-hop in the office and making racist remark against New York AG

One of Donald Trump's defense attorneys was sued by a Black former legal assistant for allegedly creating a hostile workplace.

The lawsuit alleges attorney Alina Habba and her new firm partner Michael Madaio regularly blasted hip-hop music and sang along with raunchy lyrics -- including the N-word -- that made legal assistant Na’syia Drayton very uncomfortable, reported The Daily Beast.

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New York judge lifts contempt citation against Donald Trump and orders him to pay accumulated fines

A federal judge has lifted a contempt order that he imposed upon former President Donald Trump on April 25th, The New York Times reported on Wednesday.

New York Supreme Court 1st Judicial District Judge Arthur Engoron told the ex-commander in chief on Monday that he has until May 20th to pay $110,000 in fines and comply with a subpoena for documents issued in December by Democratic New York Attorney General Letitia James, who has been conducting a civil bank and tax fraud investigation into the Trump Organization's business practices for nearly three years.

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