Alina Habba

'Very bright': Marjorie Taylor Greene gushes over Alina Habba at Trump victory party

Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-GA) heaped praise on attorney Alina Habba at a victory party for Donald Trump.

During a Super Tuesday event at Mar-a-Lago, Greene took a turn hosting for right-wing broadcaster RSBN.

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Trump demands judge give him a new trial in E. Jean Carroll case

Former President Donald Trump is demanding that he be given a do-over trial in the E. Jean Carroll defamation case.

According to CNN's Kara Scannell, "Trump argued that Judge Lewis Kaplan wrongly prohibited him from defending himself during his brief testimony and that warrants a new trial."

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‘It will not come today’: Judge Kaplan smacks down Trump

U.S. District Judge Lewis Kaplan, presiding over E. Jean Carroll's successful $83.3 million lawsuit against Donald Trump, issued a cautionary rebuke on Monday to the ex-president who was demanding an immediate ruling on his request to delay payment to the journalist whose lawsuit made him a legally adjudicated rapist.

It is Trump's third request, according to Law & Crime.

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Habba's smiling gaffe mocked: 'Sure looks happy after losing her client half a billion'

Former President Donald Trump's attorney Alina Habba smiled when she remembered the hoards of liberal women who cried when they learned he'd won the White House... she just forgot that he lost.

Habba appeared on Fox News Monday evening to share her views on women who do not vote Republican with a smile on her face.

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Trump is far weaker than we think: legal expert

Critics of former President Donald Trump were bitterly disappointed when the U.S. Supreme Court announced it would hear Donald Trump's presidential immunity argument — and set hearings for the week of April 22.

Those critics aren't so much angry with the High Court for hearing Trump's arguments but for waiting so long. Special counsel Jack Smith's cases against Trump can’t proceed until the question is resolved, which means the justices have greatly reduced the possibility of a trial starting before the 2024 presidential election.

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Trump again urges judge to delay $83.3 million payout to E. Jean Carroll

Former President Donald Trump is once again asking a court to delay the $83.3 million civil judgment against him in the defamation case brought by writer E. Jean Carroll.

According to Aaron Katersky and Peter Charalambous for NBC News, Trump's attorneys Alina Habba and John D. Sauer "renewed Trump's request that Judge Lewis Kaplan delay the judgment for 30 days after Kaplan resolves the post-trial motions, or that he permits Trump to post a reduced bond of $24.475 million."

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Rudy Giuliani threatens to punch Trump-endorsed candidate 'in the nose'

Former New York City Mayor Rudy Giuliani forcefully disagreed with former President Donald Trump after he endorsed Mike Sapraicone as the Republican choice to take on Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand (D-NY).

On his Sunday WABC radio program, Giuliani told Newsmax contributor John Tobacco that he was "angry" and "disappointed" by Trump's endorsement because Sapraicone had donated to Letitia James, the New York attorney general who sued Trump, his family and his business.

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Jeffrey Clark lawyer busted for trying to pull a fast one on judge during DA Willis attack

Appearing on MSNBC with host Yasmin Vossoughian, author and journalist Michael Isikoff accused the lawyer for Jeffrey Clark of lying about what is in his book "Find Me the Votes" as part of his attack on Fulton County District Attorney Fani Willis during a nationally televised hearing on Friday.

Speaking with the host, the journalist singled out Clark attorney Harry McDougal for waving around his book and "misrepresenting" what he wrote about Donald Trump's attempts to undermine the 2020 presidential vote total in Georgia that is central to the RICO case brought by Willis.

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'Tell me something you haven’t already said': Trump lawyer busted by judge in hearing

Buried in a deep dive into the problems Donald Trump is creating for his legal teams, the New York Times is reporting that the former president's lead attorney Todd Blanche, in the upcoming hush money trial is already off to a rough start with Judge Juan Manuel Merchan.

Trump's first criminal trial is slated to start on March 25 with jury selection for the case where the former president is charged with 34 felony counts of falsification of business records by Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg related to money paid to adult film star Stormy Daniels.

With the Times reporting that Trump is creating problems for his lawyers by interfering with their legal strategies, Trump's appearance in Merchan's courtroom is already causing worries about things going off the rails should he take the stand.

The new report states that Trump's lawyers fret he may want to take the stand, with the Times reporting, "Lawyers who have represented Mr. Trump view the prospect of him testifying before Justice Merchan as potentially disastrous. The judge is a no-nonsense jurist who presided over the conviction of Mr. Trump’s family business in a tax fraud trial."

Adding to that, Blanche has already been brutally rebuked by Merchan while he attempted to make a case for a delay in a pre-trial hearing.

ALSO READ: Alina Habba is persona non grata at her Pennsylvania law school

According to the report, "They [Trump lawyers Blanche and Susan Necheles] recently appeared before Justice Merchan at a pretrial hearing with their client mostly silent beside them, and seemed to test the tightrope he will walk during the trial. Mr. Trump wanted to delay it, but the judge promptly set a March date."

"Mr. Blanche lodged objections, none of which swayed Justice Merchan, who quickly bridled. 'Tell me something you haven’t already said today,' the judge said," the report states before adding, "Shortly thereafter, Justice Merchan asked Mr. Blanche if he was done talking. He was not, but the judge cut him off, instructing Mr. Blanche to 'please have a seat.'"

You can read more here.

'He needs to be aggressively muzzled': Insiders say Trump's killing defense lawyers' work

Donald Trump's interference behind the scenes and in courtrooms is severely impacting his lawyers' ability to defend him adequately which is leading to harsher-than-expected verdicts, according to insiders who have watched him in action.

With most of Trump's civil suits behind him, combined with a financial fraud trial, that have resulted in over a half billion dollars in penalties, the former president now enters a more perilous stage as his criminal trials loom that could send him off to prison.

According to a report from the New York Times, Trump's appearances in court, his grandstanding, his decision to take the stand and his very presence is making his lawyers' lives a living hell as they are forced to bend to his demands — many of them that are detrimental to the case at hand.

In an interview with the Times, former Trump lawyer Ty Cobb had some simple advice for the lawyers handling the Manhattan hush money case slated to start later in March: "I would expect Trump to try to act up. He needs to be aggressively muzzled by the lawyers if he is to avoid offending the jury.”

ALSO READ: Alina Habba is persona non grata at her Pennsylvania law school

As the report notes, that has been a continuing problem when the former president is sitting in on trials at times when he doesn't have to be there.

The Times is reporting, "Typically, defendants play a role in preparing their cases, and sometimes an important one. Seldom, though, do they formulate, let alone dictate, trial strategy or make spontaneous tactical decisions from the defense table. In two of his recent losing civil cases Mr. Trump did exactly that. The major questions in the cases were essentially decided by the time Mr. Trump arrived, but the trials were held to determine what penalties he’d face."

Adding to his woes is his presence in the courtroom that has led his attorneys to "grandstand" before the court to make him happy which has led to admonishments from the bench, most notably in the battles between attorney Alina Habba and Judge Arthur Engoron.

Trump's decisions to testify — sometimes over his lawyer's advice — has also come back to haunt him with the financial fraud trial as exhibit A.

"After the trial, the judge came down hard on Mr. Trump, imposing a $355 million penalty that, after interest, has climbed to more than $450 million. In his ruling, Justice Engoron singled out Mr. Trump’s testimony — Ms. James called him as a witness — writing that when he took the stand, he 'rarely responded to the questions asked,' behavior that 'severely compromised his credibility.'"

The report adds, "Mr. Trump also undercut his lawyers in his other recent civil trial, in which the writer E. Jean Carroll asked a jury to penalize him for defaming her. The former president attended nearly every day of that trial, badgering Ms. Habba, who led his defense. Mr. Trump audibly exhorted her to 'get up' to protest something said by the judge, a witness or Ms. Carroll’s lawyers, at one point banging Ms. Habba’s arm with the back of his hand. Sometimes she took his directives; other times she shook her head lightly, apparently brushing him off."

You can read more here.

'Except he doesn't': MSNBC host roasts Alina Habba's brag that Trump has a 'lot of cash'

Former President Donald Trump and his attorney Alina Habba got a vigorous roasting on MSNBC's "The Beat" Friday, with anchor Ari Melber highlighting their proud boasts they could afford to pay any civil judgment, only to backtrack and frantically try to delay even putting up the bond to appeal their $464 million civil fraud case.

"I want to put the context out here: if a truly multi-billionaire person were facing this type of legal problem, say Elon Musk, they wouldn't be haggling with the courts about a partial bond or delaying putting up the money," said Melber, himself an attorney. "Elon Musk wouldn't have a problem of putting up this bond for the purposes of appeal, what we're talking about. And not only that, but Trump's problems this week, where his lawyers are saying, we don't have it, we'd have to sell property, we don't have that kind of money lying around, that directly contradicts what his lawyers said as recently as last week about Trump's supposed net worth."

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Trump's 'desperation for cash' on full display after $100 million offer flops: biographer

According to investigative reporter and Donald Trump biographer David Cay Johnston, the former president's attempt to post an appeals bond that was not even one-fourth of the amount he needs to put up as he fights a $464 million judgment is more proof that he is not nearly as rich as he has claimed for years.

The Pulitzer Prize-winning Johnston noted in a column for MSNBC that Trump has a rich history of inflating his wealth and it has finally caught up with him after Judge Arthur Engoron dropped the hammer on him for committing financial fraud and writer E. Jean Carroll prevailed in two lawsuits against him to the tune of over $93 million.

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'Not Trumpian': Steve Bannon blasts Alina Habba after Trump struggles to find cash

Conservative podcast host Steve Bannon took a shot at Donald Trump's legal team, including Alina Habba, after the former president failed to come up with more than $400 million to pay a cash bond in his New York fraud case.

Bannon reacted Thursday after lawyers for Trump asked to stay Justice Arthur Engoron's decision ordering the billionaire to pay a $454.2 million judgment in a fraud case brought by New York Attorney General Letitia James.

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