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'Don't you want to know?' Missouri editorial vents frustration that Republicans aren't reading Trump's indictment

United States Justice Department special counsel Jack Smith's historic indictment of former President Donald Trump for allegedly executing an illegal plot to subvert American democracy after he lost the 2020 election is unprecedented. The forty-five-page document contains four charges against Trump, each of which are federal felonies:

  • Conspiracy to Defraud the United States
  • Conspiracy to Obstruct an Official Proceeding
  • Obstruction of and Attempt to Obstruct and Official Proceeding
  • Conspiracy Against Rights.

Trump maintains his innocence and repeatedly insists that Smith and President Joe Biden are victimizing him because he is leading in the polls for the GOP presidential nomination in 2024.

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WATCH: Man in giant inflatable Trump costume taunts former president outside DC courthouse

A critic of Donald Trump taunted the former president on Thursday by dressing up in a large, inflatable likeness of him and crying like a baby about the prospect of being sent to prison.

The anti-Trump protester arrived at the Prettyman federal courthouse in Washington D.C. and proceeded to start begging bystanders to help him escape a prison sentence for his alleged conspiracy to defraud the United States and illegally remain in power after losing the 2020 election to President Joe Biden.

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‘I need one more indictment’: Trump goes off-the-rails in pre-arraignment rant

Hours ahead of his Thursday afternoon arraignment in Washington, D.C., Donald Trump has been expressing his rage on social media, posting attacks on the Democratic Party, President Joe Biden, and his fellow Republicans – as well as fundraising off his latest indictment.

In one post Trump appeared to suggest when he becomes President he will use the U.S. Dept. of Justice to target President Biden and the Democrats. In another, he attacked fellow GOP presidential candidate Will Hurd, and Fox News.

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2020 election challenger faces arrest for unlawful possession of a voting machine

A lawyer who filed a lawsuit challenging the 2020 presidential election is facing multiple charges.

The Detroit News reported Stefanie Lambert was scheduled to be arraigned before Oakland County Circuit Judge Jeffery Matis on Thursday. Lambert previously announced she had been indicted.

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Transcript of GOP witness' 'bombshell' testimony shows Hunter Biden's calls to dad were about 'family' and 'fishing'

Witness testimony that Republicans claimed was "bombshell" evidence of President Joe Biden's involvement in a bribery scheme fails to show the president had any knowledge of the scheme, a transcript shows.

For months now, House Republicans, led by Reps. Jim Jordan (R-OH) and James Comer (R-KY), have been pursuing a theory that Biden was involved in a bribery scheme with his son Hunter to sell access and favors from the U.S. government during the Obama administration, particularly involving the Burisma energy company in Ukraine. At various points, they have also tried to claim Biden had a top prosecutor in Ukraine fired for investigating Burisma, which fact-checkers have repeatedly debunked.

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'Soon it will be our turn': Trump issues dark threat about 2024

The day after Donald Trump was on the receiving end of a third indictment, the second from special counsel Jack Smith, he took to his Truth Social account to complain about the massive legal fees he is racking up -- and he put his supporters on notice that he will seek to exact revenge if he is re-elected.

On Wednesday the Washington Post reported, "'The 45-page indictment filed Tuesday lays out the myriad ways Trump allegedly lied about mass voter fraud and tried to use those claims to get state, local and federal officials to change results to declare him the winner."

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Trump legal bills emptying campaign coffers

Donald Trump has been burning through millions of dollars as he faces an onslaught of legal bills from the investigations threatening his presidential election bid -- with some sources of funding drying up fast.

The former US president is hardly strapped for cash, as his joint fundraising committee brought in $54 million during the first half of 2023 -- more than any of his Republican primary rivals in next year's election.

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It’s already 2024 at the Capitol, and lawmakers are busy doing nothing

WASHINGTON — Your wall calendar may read “2023”.

But in the nation’s capital, 2024 is already raging. Election season firmly on lawmakers’ minds. Making laws? Not so much.

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How Michigan factors into Trump’s J6 indictment

As it has since his election in 2016, Michigan has again played a prominent role with the ongoing saga of former President Donald Trump.

In the 45-page indictment handed down Tuesday by a federal grand jury in Washington, D.C., Michigan is mentioned often among the charges leveled against Trump for his alleged role in the Jan. 6, 2021, attack on the U.S. Capitol.

According to the indictment filed by Jack Smith, special counsel for the U.S. Department of Justice, the former president faces four charges stemming from his actions, including conspiracy to defraud the United States; conspiracy to obstruct an official proceeding; obstruction of, and attempt to obstruct, an official proceeding; and conspiracy against rights.

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Pence rails against Trump and his 'crackpot lawyers' at Indiana State Fair campaign stop

Speaking at an Indianapolis campaign stop Wednesday, former Vice President Mike Pence further distanced himself from his previous boss, Donald Trump, as tensions continue to flare on the nomination trail.

Pence came to town to talk about the economy but Trump’s latest legal crisis pulled focus from that.

The former president was indicted on felony charges Tuesday for working to overturn the results of the 2020 election, just before the violent riot by his supporters at the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021.

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Text messages show RNC chair pushed indicted Trump's voter fraud conspiracy with AZ's Kelli Ward: report

Barely twenty-four hours after United States Justice Department special counsel Jack Smith indicted ex-President Donald Trump for allegedly masterminding a plan to subvert American democracy after the 2020 election, previously undisclosed text messages between high-profile Republican operatives indicate a vastly broader plot than what Smith outlines in his complaint, according to a new report.

The communications were allegedly obtained exclusively by Talking Points Memo investigative reporter Hunter Walker, who on Wednesday reported "paint a picture of what was going on behind the scenes in the White House during the crucial period the special prosecutor has zeroed in on. In particular, they reveal that Republican National Committee Chairwoman Ronna McDaniel and former Arizona Republican Party Chairwoman Kelli Ward were among those who played key roles in elements of the alleged conspiracy from the moment Smith said it began."

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How the 'fake electors' in seven states are central to the Trump Jan. 6 indictment

WASHINGTON — The federal indictment accusing Donald Trump of trying to stay in power after losing the 2020 presidential election includes detailed accusations of Trump and his alleged co-conspirators’ pressure on individual state officials.

The central plot to overturn the election, as described in the indictment a federal grand jury in Washington, D.C., handed up Tuesday, involved switching out legitimate slates of electors in multiple states Joe Biden had won with false electors recruited by Trump and his advisers.

The sweeping indictment also accuses Trump and six co-conspirators of using the U.S. Justice Department to falsely insinuate that there were legitimate concerns with the elections in each state and presenting dueling slates of electors to Vice President Mike Pence to create a false controversy about which electors to count.

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Jack Smith 'looks forward' to proving Trump knew he was lying: First Amendment lawyer

Former President Donald Trump has no leg to stand on trying to argue that the First Amendment protects him from the January 6 prosecution, constitutional attorney Floyd Abrams explained on CNN Wednesday evening.

"So the burden of proof is on Jack Smith, the special counsel, his team, to prove that Trump knew that these election fraud allegations were false," said anchor Jake Tapper. "Will that be difficult?"

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