RawStory

U.S. News

GOPer gets legal fund donation from same company that sparked ethics probe: report

A legal defense fund set up by a Republican congressman to pay for expenses related to an ethics probe accepted a $5,000 donation from the same company that had caused the investigation to be launched.

Republican Rep. Alex Mooney (WV) is under investigation over allegations he accepted a week-long paid vacation for his family to Aruba from a direct mail company his campaign began paying for services in 2020. The vacation cost about $10,000, with much of the bill allegedly being picked up by the company.

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Trump lawyers should stop citing Nixon to get ex-president out of trouble: legal analyst

MSNBC legal analyst Lisa Rubin had a suggestion for Donald Trump's lawyers: lay off the Nixon references.

Speaking to Alicia Menendez, Rubin explained that there are some "real doozies" in the Trump filing.

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Judge orders Rudy Giuliani to immediately pay defamed Georgia poll workers

Judge Beryl Howell ordered Rudy Giuliani Wednesday to immediately pay $148 million to two Georgia poll workers who successfully sued him for defamation, court records show.

In a scathing 13-page order, Howell demands immediate enforcement to shorten the odds that Giuliani dodge the judgment in favor of Ruby Freeman and Shaye Moss, explained legal analyst Harry Litman.

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Conservative judge hits back at Republicans calling Colorado ruling undemocratic

Republicans rushed to cameras and social media to complain that the Colorado Supreme Court is made up of partisan hacks who simply don't like Donald Trump. That's the reason, many of them claimed that the ruling that he violated the 14th Amendment and thus can't appear on a ballot was undemocratic.

Conservative former Judge Michael Luttig called the Republican claim absurd, saying that what is undemocratic is a president participating in an insurrection.

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Top California Dem wants to explore 'every legal option' to bump Trump from ballot

A top California lawmaker Wednesday urged her state to explore “every legal option” to bump former President Donald Trump from its ballot after Colorado’s high court issued its historic decision.

Democratic Lt. Gov. Eleni Kounalakis delivered this message to the California secretary of state in a letter Wednesday, one day after the Colorado Supreme Court ruled Trump was barred from the state’s 2024 presidential ballot under the 14th Amendment’s insurrectionist ban.

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'Not a serious argument': Legal analysts crush Trump's immunity defense to Supreme Court

Former President Donald Trump responded to special counsel Jack Smith's request to the Supreme Court that they respond to the "absolute immunity" defense that Trump has used to challenge his case around the 2020 election and the Jan. 6 attack. Smith bypassed the appeals court and went straight to the High Court citing the unusual nature of the case.

Trump's response begs the Supreme Court not to hear it just yet and argues that the request is all a partisan attack on him.

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Here's why Michigan might be the next state to remove Trump from the ballot

After the Colorado Supreme Court ruled that Donald Trump doesn't qualify for the 2024 ballots under the 14th Amendment's insurrection ban, speculation has begun about whether Michigan might make a similar move, reports show.

The Associated Press spoke with Derek Muller, an election law professor at the University of Notre Dame's Law School, who explained the court's decision could make for a "major threat" to Trump's 2024 campaign.

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Trump spent years calling for political candidates to be stricken from ballots

What goes around has come around for former President Donald Trump, who spent years arguing then-President Barack Obama and other Democrats didn't qualify for a place on American electoral ballots.

That's the latest reminder from the New York Times' "Trump whisperer" Maggie Haberman, published on the heels of a historic Colorado Supreme Court ruling banning Trump from the state's presidential ballot.

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Unsealed warrant for Guiliani associate Lev Parnas makes revelations about Ukraine scandal

A heavily redacted application for a search and seizure warrant was made public Tuesday detailing the request to search nine electronic devices belonging to Rudy Giuliani's former associate Lev Parnas on Oct. 21, 2019, shortly before he was indicted. The warrant was released after an application by the New York Times.

Parnas helped Giuliani connect to Ukranian figures in an attempt to dig up dirt on President Joe Biden's son, Hunter. He was convicted on several charges, including fraud and campaign finance violations. Biden at the time was considered Donald Trump's biggest election rival.

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Vow to make all Jan. 6 footage public has become major headache for GOP: report

CBS News reporter Scott MacFarlane noticed that its been a full month since Speaker Mike Johnson (R-LA) claimed he was releasing the Capitol videos from the Jan. 6 attack.

Earlier this year, before he was fired, Fox host Tucker Carlson selectively edited the Jan. 6 videos to show the empty hallways of the Capitol before and after the attack happened.

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Ex-FBI official warns of unprecedented violence from Trump's 'hardcore' supporters

Former FBI official Frank Figliuzzi cautioned that more than any time in recent history stopping far-right domestic terrorism has been incredibly challenging.

As the former assistant director for counterintelligence, Figliuzzi was among many of those who came together under former FBI Director Robert Mueller, who was in charge of changing the FBI after Sept. 11, 2001.

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Tommy Tuberville suggests he'll back down as Senate pushes on military promotions: report

Sen. Tommy Tuberville (R-AL) has staked his reputation on his protest against military promotions prompted by the Pentagon's abortion policy — but now there's a vote on it, he's suggesting he'll back down.

Tuberville was miffed that the military allows soldiers to have time off to have an abortion. They also pay for their travel if the medical procedure can't be done in the state where they are stationed, meaning pregnant soldiers seeking abortion services are allowed travel funds to go out of state.

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New report details Park Police clash after unruly MAGA arrest on Jan. 6

The U.S. Department of the Interior Inspector General produced a report Tuesday finding that some Jan. 6 protesters were threatening Park Police long before rioters stormed the Capitol on Jan. 6.

According to the document, National Park Service rangers and U.S. Park Police officers were staged at the Washington Monument in the early morning, when there were already hundreds of MAGA supporters gathered. The NPS attempted to close the area and asked people to leave.

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