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Trump presidential portraits paid for by super PAC — not the former president

Former President Donald Trump and former first lady Melania Trump will have their portraits for the Smithsonian National Portrait Gallery along with previous presidents, but those paintings were paid for by a super PAC instead of the former president, or donations from fans of the former president.

According to Business Insider,, Trump's super PAC, Save America PAC, reported a $650,000 donation to the Smithsonian for the artwork.

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Ethics board: Kristi Noem may have 'engaged in misconduct' getting her daughter a real estate license

After an investigation, the South Dakota Government Accountability Board on Monday ruled that Gov. Kristi Noem (R-SD) may have "engaged in misconduct" when she used her power as governor to score a real estate appraiser license for her daughter.

According to the Associated Press, the board found enough information to conclude that the application for the real estate license was approved as a result of the governor's intervention.

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Police capture suspected Atlanta shooter after 3 people shot

UPDATE: police have announced that they caught the suspected shooter.

The Atlanta Police Department is reporting an active shooter in Midtown Atlanta, according to a tweet from the department's account.

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Scientists are putting rats in cars to learn more about human mental health

Richmond (United States) (AFP) - The girls can't hide their excitement as they're brought out to the racing arena.

"Black Tail" is up first, taking a few seconds to sniff her surroundings before placing her paw on a lever and zooming away.

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Legal expert explains why Fox will probably settle the infamous Dominion lawsuit

Former federal prosecutor and law professor Joyce Vance thinks that the Fox network will likely look to settle their lawsuit from Dominion Voting Systems over the false portrayals of them on numerous shows after the 2020 election.

Speaking to host Ayman Mohyeldin on MSNBC Saturday, Vance explained that defamation lawsuits are incredibly powerful and that it's unusual to see one that is as one-sided as Dominion's.

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Mehmet Oz attacks John Fetterman saying he'll 'befriend Bernie Sanders in the Senate'

PHILADELPHIA — Mehmet Oz has a recurring nickname for his Democratic Senate opponent: Bernie Sanders. As the general election campaign enters its second full month, Oz, the Republican nominee, along with members of his party, have increasingly tried to connect Lt. Gov. John Fetterman to Vermont Sen. Sanders in fund-raising emails, news releases, and digital ads. “John Fetterman will befriend Bernie Sanders in the Senate,” Oz tweeted last week. “He will follow Bernie’s lead and be his sidekick. PA and America cannot afford to have another ‘Bernie’ in the Senate.” Republicans have been quick to ...

Meta/Facebook flees progressive conference after protests erupt over the company's conservatism

Facebook and its parent company Meta left the progressive conference Netroots Nation after protesters didn't give them the warm welcome they anticipated.

Attendees and 101.1 The Wiz radio station revealed that the Facebook Users Union organizers attacked the company's signs with their own, attacking them for collecting private and sensitive data from those seeking abortions.

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Police in New Jersey charge Gary Busey with a felony sex crime

Police on Friday charged a 78-year-old Malibu, California, man identified as Gary Busey with three counts of sex crimes that they said took place during a Monster-Mania convention in a hotel in Cherry Hill, New Jersey, earlier this month, authorities said in a news release. Police in Cherry Hill were not available to answer questions on Saturday, but the actor Gary Busy, who is 78 and lives in Malibu, attended the fan event, according to photographs of him there and postings about his attendance on social media. The news release said the suspect had been charged with two counts of fourth-degre...

John Dean throws cold water on Trump lawyers' demand that the full search affidavit be released publicly

The judge in the Mar-a-Lago document search is giving the Justice Department until Thursday to turn over their redactions of the affidavit for the search warrant of the president's club. Analysts are anticipating that the redactions won't deliver much information, particularly if the DOJ can make an argument that the safety of the informants is at stake.

Watergate witness John Dean walked through some of the complexities of the case and the need for the public to understand the reasons for doing the search and the need to protect informants inside Trump's universe. Trump's lawyers have said that the affidavit will either be released in its entirety or they'll redact it because they don't want to tip their hand to the fact that they "don't have anything." Dean had another approach.

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Steps continue to raise sunken boat with diesel and oil from seafloor near Washington state's San Juan Island

SEATTLE — Response teams continue to take gradual steps to remove the Aleutian Isle from the seafloor after the 49-foot fishing vessel sank last weekend west of San Juan Island. Teams are moving forward with a plan to remove the whole commercial vessel and have it placed onto a barge, where contaminants can be safely removed, according to a Friday news release from the U.S. Coast Guard 13th District Pacific Northwest. “This is the best course of action to ensure the removal of as much pollutants and contamination as possible from the environmentally sensitive area,” the statement said. Unified...

Why Trump's demand for a 'special master' to review documents will probably never happen: analysts

Trump's team is saying this week that they have to ask for a "special master" to sift through the documents taken from Mar-a-Lago to determine whether possession of them can be used in a criminal investigation. The problem with that is that it isn't likely to happen.

According to The Guardian's reporter Hugo Lowell, lead Trump attorney Jim Trusty, and two other sources, say that Trump wants an independent court person to decide if the FBI took privileged documents. Trump has claimed as much over the past few weeks. At one point, he said that the documents taken were part of attorney/client privilege.

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Kyrsten Sinema 'made us wait two years': Joe Manchin rants about Dem senator who refuses to be a team player

Joe Manchin is not happy about his colleague Kyrsten Sinema after she forced Democrats to wait for two years before they could pass the light version of Joe Biden's "Build Back Better," which garnered no Republican support.

“We had a senator from Arizona who basically didn’t let us go as far as we needed to go with our negotiations and made us wait two years," ranted Manchin in a video at a roundtable Friday. "Those type of things — I don’t question anybody, everyone’s responding to their own constituent base. But we did get something. And it’s the first time we made a positive move in that."

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Here's how Rick Scott has blown millions meant for Republican Senate candidates

This week it was revealed that Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-KY) was dumping in tons of money into Republican candidates that are currently losing in an election where they thought it would be a walk.

But there's an organization in place to help senate candidates for the GOP and typically the money goes to ads and other money funds to help candidates with expenses like opposition research that the whole party can share.

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