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'Where are all the Trump defenders now?': former Republican Party chairman

Former Republican Party chair, Gov. Michael Steele (R-MD), covered for Jonathan Capehart on MSNBC Sunday as Donald Trump's classified document scandal grows worse and more serious.

"A hearing is scheduled for Thursday. This course comes after a redacted copy of the FBI affidavits which was used to justify the search of Mar-a-Lago, Trump's Mar-a-Lago 'home,' which was unsealed on Friday," Steele said. "Beginning that the FBI uncovered 184 classified documents back in January, including some marked top secret. There is one looming question here: where are all the Trump defenders now? I am old enough to remember when some Republicans were shouting in from rooftops, that the search was an abuse of power. According to Axios, there is a growing feeling among Trump's allies that the search was justified. Just listen to a GOP strategist Karl Rove had to say."

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Legal experts bash 'pandering' judge running to Trump's defense — and predict he'll be charged with obstruction

Former prosecutors Cynthia Alksne and Glenn Kirschner sounded the alarm about the judge who granted Donald Trump's demand for a "special master" to review the documents at Mar-a-Lago for any possible attorney-client privilege, while speaking to MSNBC fill-in host Michael Steele.

Kirschner pointed out that never in his 30 years practicing law has he ever seen a judge make a ruling before she'd heard from the opposing side.

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Kevin McCarthy's future in doubt as the GOP's hopes for the midterms fade: report

Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy (R-CA) has had the ambition to be Speaker of the House since the he joined the so-called "Young Guns" of conservatives. Those dreams are quickly evaporating in the 2022 summer drought, CNN reported Sunday.

"House Republicans are starting to grow pessimistic about their chances of winning a massive majority in the midterm elections, putting some allies of GOP Leader Kevin McCarthy on edge over his future," the report explained.

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More Trump advisers called to testify in Fulton County

Fulton County, Georgia District Attorney Fani Willis revealed that three additional advisers to former President Donald Trump are being called to answer questions about the attempt to overthrow the 2020 election results in the state.

According to Politico, Mark Meadows, Sidney Powell and Phil Waldron are the three new witnesses who are being asked to answer questions before the special grand jury.

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What one legal expert anticipates won't be redacted in the affidavit for Trump's Mar-a-Lago documents

Former acting solicitor general Neal Katyal on Thursday explained what information could be released from the Mar-a-Lago documents investigation. The affidavit that will be released will be redacted in keeping with what the Justice Department has asked for.

"I wouldn't be remotely surprised if they weren't blocking out huge chunks of the affidavit because it would be irresponsible for them to risk the disclosure of key witnesses or grand jury information or anything like that at this point in the investigation," he explained. "So, now what happens here is the Justice Department could appeal because there is a principle at stake which is: 'We don't release affidavits, period.' When that is basically the Department's general position, as you said, it's incredibly rare for any sort of release and even a partial release to happen. But sitting in the chair of the solicitor general, and I don't think I would appeal this and the Justice Department got everything they wanted and as Carol says it's an unprecedented investigation."

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Jeffrey Epstein associate Steven Hoffenberg found dead in his Connecticut apartment

Steven Hoffenberg, who previously owned the New York Post in the early 1990s and was an associate of Jeffrey Epstein, was found dead in his apartment in Derby, Connecticut, the Daily Mail reported Thursday.

The 77-year-old disgraced financier announced that he had been diagnosed with the Omicron strand of COVID-19 about a month prior.

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Fence jumper arrested at Chicago FBI office

ABC7 in Chicago reported Thursday that a man was arrested this morning after jumping the fence at the FBI headquarters there. Once he breached security, the man began throwing rocks at the building.

Robert Sperling, spokesman for the Federal Protective Service said that the incident happened around 11 a.m. and comes two weeks after an attack on the FBI headquarters in

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'Like a criminal citing a criminal statute they violated': Legal expert mocks Trump's social media meltdown

Former President Donald Trump has spent the past weeks since a search warrant was executed at Mar-a-Lago raging on his social media website. One comment this morning was an all-caps declaration: "PRESIDENTIAL RECORDS ACT!"

"The Radical Left Democrat prosecutors are illegally trying to circumvent, for purely political gain, the Presidential Record’s Act, under which I have done absolutely nothing wrong," Trump wrote. "It can not be circumvented, for me or any other President. They illegally Raided my home, and took things that should not have been taken. They even broke into my safe, an unthinkable act!"

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Court rules Arkansas can't ban gender-affirming treatment for transgender youth

Arkansas attempted to pass legislation that targeted transgender children by blocking their access to gender-affirming treatments.

According to the three-judge panel at the 8th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals, however, Arkansas was shut down.

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House Republican said it would be a 'serious violation' if Trump had classified intel — but he’s suddenly very quiet

A top House Republican on the Intelligence Committee first saw the news that Trump stole documents to take back with him to Mar-a-Lago two weeks ago and made it clear that it could be bad.

It was two weeks ago that Rep. Chris Stewart (R-UT) took the mishandling of sensitive classified documents very seriously. Lately, however, he's been quiet.

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Republicans are the ones behind the latest evidence against Trump: columnist

Former conservative Jennifer Rubin noted in her Washington Post column Thursday that it seems like lately, it's Republicans who are providing the evidence against former President Donald Trump.

Sen. Lindsey Graham (R-SC), for example, is trying to dodge testifying before the Fulton County DA as part of the ongoing probe into whether former President Donald Trump did anything illegal when he demanded that the government find 11,780 votes so he could win the state.

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Could the Manhattan DA add charges for Allen Weisselberg after the Trump Org trial?

Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg's tenure began with resignations from top prosecutors in the office. When they spoke out, it was because Bragg wasn't going to charge Donald Trump with criminal fraud over the same civil case being heard at the state level. The prosecutors maintained that there was more than enough there to charge Trump.

Former FBI legal counsel and prosecutor for special counsel Robert Mueller, Andrew Weissmann, explained at Just Security, that Bragg has already been criticized based on his Day One memorandum, which was so flawed that it had to be withdrawn just as quickly as it was released. Even after Bragg has been in office for eight months, everything he's done has been viewed through the lens of that first misstep.

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Former ethics czar blows up on Bill Barr for ‘distorting’ the case against Trump in the Russia probe

Former White House Ethics Czar and impeachment lawyer Norm Eisen criticized former Attorney General Bill Barr on Thursday after the Justice Department released the memo regarding whether or not Donald Trump should be charged for violating the law in the Russia investigation.

"Barr made up his mind in advance that he was going to give his patron, Donald Trump, a pass on these obstruction charges," Eisen explained. "There was powerful evidence here! On the fact! The memo soft pedals Donald Trump's dangling pardons, it says, 'Oh, he had some disagreements with witnesses.' No, Poppy! He was dangling pardons! He was engaging in conduct that any other — he was intimidating witnesses! Conduct that would have led to any other American who didn't work in the White House being prosecuted, on the law!"

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