George Santos blasts colleagues for trading stocks — but is violating a financial law himself

Federally-indicted Rep. George Santos (R-NY) called out his stock-trading colleagues on Tuesday.

“One thing I’m certain of is that members of congress trading stocks is imoral [sic]!,” Santos posted on X, formerly known as Twitter, on Tuesday.

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Trump rages on social media at Judge Chutkan — and demands Jan. 6 committee be criminally charged

Donald Trump assailed Judge Tanya Chutkan in a social media rant Monday after the federal judge set the former president’s trial date in the 2020 election conspiracy case for March 4, 2024.

Trump’s lawyers had sought an April 2026 start for the election conspiracy case, while special counsel Jack Smith requested a Jan. 2, 2024 start date.

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Mark Meadows Georgia testimony implicates Trump

One of the things that Mark Meadows said in court on Monday could be a problem for Donald Trump's defense in Fulton County.

Testifying under oath, Meadows explained that the phone call he set up between Trump and Georgia Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger was about Trump hoping to figure out “a less-litigious way of resolving” his election concerns, CNN reported.

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Revealed: Prosecutor fired by DeSantis was on the verge of cracking down on crooked cops

A Florida prosecutor who was one of two fired by Gov. Ron DeSantis as part of his war on "wokeness" is questioning the timing of her dismissal while revealing that she was poised to bring charges against a bevy of crooked cops.

In an interview with the Daily Beast's Jose Pagliery, Orlando-based State Attorney Monique Worrell suggested that DeSantis -- who is running a faltering campaign to be the 2024 Republican Party's presidential nominee -- may have been giving a local sheriff an assist by removing her from her post.

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Combative Ramaswamy snaps at CNN's Bash after she calls him out for KKK smear of Black lawmaker

During a chaotic interview on CNN's "State of the Union," Republican presidential nomination contender Vivek Ramaswamy accused host Dana Bash of not being "intellectually honest" as she grilled him for equating Rep. Ayanna Pressley (D-MA) — who is Black — with "the modern grand wizards of the modern KKK."

Asking if he wanted to walk back his inflammatory comments, he refused and what ensued was a back and forth where he refused to stop talking as she attempted to follow up on what he was saying.

At one point, she asked, '"That is a debate that is based on nonviolent discussion which you just said, she's using rhetoric. There is — that's one thing, and another thing is to say that she represents and she is a modern version of a KKK, which as you know, was dedicated to the subjugation and violence against black people."

"How on earth is she a modern Grand Wizard of that kind of an organization?" she pressed.

POLL: Should Trump be allowed to run for office?

"Dana, let's be honest — let's be intellectually honest and get to the heart of what this debate ought to be about," he fired back. "There is a world view that says that the remedy to past discrimination is present discrimination; that if you're black or brown, you have to have a particular point of view. That's from Ayanna Pressley and Ibram X. Kendi, the people I quoted in my speech."

"But regardless when you accuse her of being a Grand Wizard of KKK? Can you have that intellectually honest discussion with that kind of rhetoric?" Bash managed to get in.

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'He can't control himself': Trump put on notice judges may be forced to jail him

During an appearance on MSNBC, former Watergate attorney Jill Wine-Banks warned Donald Trump he could end up in pre-trial detention if he doesn't tone down his rhetoric about his criminal indictments.

In a segment with host Ayman Mohyeldin on the former president's attacks on prosecutors, including Fulton County District Attorney Fani Willis and special counsel Jack Smith, Wine-Banks suggested sanctioning Trump financially would be ineffective since he would just pay the fines with his supporter's donations.

As the expert explained, Trump is putting the judges in a tough spot if they decide to jail the former president, but that he may leave them no choice.

According to Wine-Banks, Judge Tanya Chutkan, who is overseeing Trump's Washington D.C. federal trial, is "up to the task" of handling the former president's attacks.

POLL: Should Trump be allowed to run for office?

"I think that she can handle it, but she is in a very difficult position because putting him in custody has to be a last resort," she explained. "He may push her to that, but he will see it as a political advantage, and so she has to be careful not to give him that advantage. But there is a limit to what she can do to enforce his compliance with what her reasonable requirements for his release are."

"She can penalize him with a monetary fine but his supporters are paying his legal bills already so it doesn't hurt him and he doesn't care about them and their money," she added. "And so I don't know how much benefit in terms of his compliance it would be to fine him if he doesn't obey the fine. She said she would move to trial date up but she can only move it up so far without denying him due process and the adequate time to prepare, and he knows that and she knows that."

"So there's a very limited amount of things that she can do other than incarceration, and I think that that may have to be if he -- you know [political consultant] Stuart Stevens is right: he can't control himself," she elaborated. "And so if he goes way beyond the bounds and is clear in his threats and provoking his supporters to create violence in response to these threats, I think that he will have to be shut up by being incarcerated, and we have an example of Eugene Debs who ran for president from jail and so it is possible that he can continue his campaign from jail."

Watch below or at the link.

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'Why do we do this?': Unused government fund gets $3M cash influx from taxpayers

An unused government fund intended to pay for presidential elections grew by more than $3 million between May 1 and June 30 — the latest influx of taxpayer-funded money that will now likely sit a bureaucratic black hole for what could be years or even decades, according to a Raw Story analysis of U.S. Treasury records.

The Presidential Election Campaign Fund has now ballooned more than $445.6 million through of June 30, growing by about $2 million in May and just under $1 million in June, Treasury records show.

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‘Joy Reid and Rachel Maddow’ didn’t indict Trump, ‘regular people’ did: Fox News host destroys ‘two-tiered’ justice claims

A Fox News host destroyed conservative claims that Donald Trump's criminal indictments show there's a "two-tiered" system of justice being used against Republicans.

Jessica Tarlov, the lone liberal co-host on the conservative cable channel's popular afternoon show, "The Five," reminded her right-wing counterparts on Friday that Trump was indicted in four different jurisdictions by "regular people," while pointing to a new poll that finds majorities of Americans believe he is guilty of the federal crimes he has been charged with and if convicted believe he should be imprisoned.

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Charges filed against neo-Nazi ally who harassed drag shows and attacked the U.S. Capitol

William Beals, a violent Three Percenter who was involved in the Jan. 6 attack at the Capitol, went on to link up with neo-Nazis in Tennessee to harass drag shows.

More than two years later, the FBI has arrested Beals, Raw Story has learned.

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Trump’s PAC-funded Smithsonian portrait remains on track — despite jailhouse mugshot

WASHINGTON — On Thursday, former President Donald Trump got a new mugshot.

His official presidential portrait, destined for a Smithsonian Institution museum, remains on track, too, Raw Story has learned.

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Feds crack down on ‘rolling coal’ — a troll-tastic pastime of some Trump supporters

The federal government is going after “rolling coal,” the noxious obnoxiousness favored by certain supporters of fossil fuel-loving presidential candidate Donald Trump.

Rolling coal is the illegal manipulation of emission controls allowing a diesel engine to emit thick bursts of black soot. During the Trump presidency, it became a means of harassing protesters and drivers of clean-energy cars, and generally expressing disdain for liberals.

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Trump's call to Raffensperger should get him off the hook for crimes: former president's ex-lawyer

Donald Trump's infamous phone call to Georgia Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger has been widely seen as damning evidence in his 2020 election criminal case – but the former president linked to a contrarian legal analysis that argued it was actually good for him.

The former president was recorded on the Jan. 2, 2021, call asking Raffensperger to "find" precisely the number of votes he needed to overcome his election loss. But on Thursday, Trump linked to a Daily Caller report in which Trump's ex-lawyer Alan Dershowitz claims that evidence would get him off the hook in Fulton County.

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Legal expert raises red flag for Trump after new last minute lawyer chaos

Reacting to a report that Donald Trump abruptly changed the lead lawyer who will defend him in Georgia on racketeering charges just hours before turning himself into an Atlanta jail, CNN legal analyst Elie Hoenig suggested the former president is creating chaos for his legal team with the constant turnover.

Early Thursday morning CNN reported, "Drew Findling, the lawyer who has led Trump’s defense in Georgia, is being replaced by Steven Sadow, an Atlanta-based attorney."

Sadow issued a statement explaining, "I have been retained to represent President Trump in the Fulton County, Georgia, case. The president should never have been indicted. He is innocent of all the charges brought against him. We look forward to the case being dismissed or, if necessary, an unbiased, open-minded jury finding the president not guilty. Prosecutions intended to advance or serve the ambitions and careers of political opponents of the president have no place in our justice system.”

POLL: Should Trump be allowed to run for office.

Asked for comment, Hoenig first said the choice of Sadow was a good move but then added a caveat.

"Yeah, so it's a smart move," he began. "You need a local lawyer and this case is going to play out in Georgia. It's smart to get someone who knows the court system and who really frankly can relate to the jury. Juries look for that and they can sense is this person from here? Is this someone we are going to inherently believe? That's a factor."

"Donald Trump does have to make sure — he has four pending cases — he has to get his legal team in order," he cautioned. "You can't shuffle in and out lead lawyers on each case sort of on a whim, you know, the way some White House staff were shuffled in and out on a whim."

"This is different," he elaborated. "Those lawyers are going to spend hundreds, thousands of hours getting to know all of the nuances of this case. If you just cashier one to another, you are setting yourself up for a major failure. If I was advising him on all of these I'd say pick your lead guy on each case, stick with him, let him do his job."

Watch below or at the link.

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