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Things go 'terribly awry' after Rudy Giuliani runs into Michael Cohen at ritzy NY restaurant: report

Two "dueling former personal attorneys" for Donald Trump had an "awkward run-in" at a high-profile New York restaurant. According to Page Six, the encounter between Rudy Giuliani and Michael Cohen left onlookers wondering if "hell had finally froze over."

The staff at Fresco by Scotto had planned to seat the two far from each other at opposite ends of the restaurant, but the plan went "terribly awry", according to Page Six.

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Ridiculed Michigan voting conspiracist could be headed to a seat on the state legislature: report

According to the former chair of the Michigan Democratic Party, a woman who became a star witness in her state for insisting the presidential election was stolen from Donald Trump -- and subsequently became an object of ridicule after Saturday Night Live mocked her unhinged rant -- has a decent shot at becoming a state lawmaker.

Melissa Carone, a contractor for Dominion Voting Systems, who ranted in a televised hearing on voter fraud that ballots were being smuggled in to be counted in food carts -- putting the number at over 100,000 -- is running for a seat representing Macomb County, which is such a deep red district that the Democrats have not even offered up a candidate.

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House investigators 'have the tools' to work around Giuliani's claims of executive privilege: reporter

According to Guardian reporter Hugo Lowell, the fact that Donald Trump lawyer Rudy Giuliani is still speaking with the House select committee investigating the Jan 6th insurrection could mean some accommodation could be reached for his testimony despite his relationship with the former president.

Speaking with host Alex Witt, Lowell explained one big roadblock is Giuliani will likely balk at testifying by claiming executive privilege since he was the former president's attorney on Jan 6th.

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Judge says Swalwell lawsuit against Trump can move forward: 'Words of incitement not protected by First Amendment'

U.S. District Court Judge Amit Mehta on Friday ruled lawsuits against Donald Trump can move forward because the former president’s speech at the Ellipse on Jan. 6 “plausibly” could have led to the violent and deadly insurrection.

Trump’s speech likely constituted “words of incitement not protected by the First Amendment,” Judge Mehta added, and could have directed attendees to break the law, the Associated Press reports.

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Trump ‘has a lot to worry about’ from Capitol riot lawsuits: MSNBC analyst

Former president Donald Trump "has a lot to worry about" after a federal judge on Friday allowed civil lawsuits against him over Jan. 6 to move forward, according to former acting U.S. solicitor general Neal Katyal.

In a 112-page decision, U.S. District Judge Amit Mehta rejected Trump's effort to dismiss the lawsuits filed by two police officers and members of Congress.

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Here's what the Jan. 6 committee can learn from Trump's White House visitor logs: CNN reporter

On Wednesday's edition of CNN's "OutFront," congressional correspondent Ryan Nobles walked through how the White House visitor logs former President Donald Trump unsuccessfully sought to block from being turned over to the House January 6 Committee could further the investigation into the attack on the Capitol.

"Tell me what you are learning from the committee, what they want from this," said anchor Erin Burnett.

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Trump ally hit with Jan. 6 subpoena as committee digs into GOP's phony electors scheme

The House committee investigating the Jan. 6, 2021, attack on the U.S. Capitol and efforts to overturn the 2020 election issued subpoenas for six more people Tuesday, including state Sen. Doug Mastriano, R-Franklin.

Mastriano, an ally of former President Donald Trump and Pennsylvania GOP gubernatorial candidate, attended the “Save America” rally, the morning precursor to the deadly riot. He has denied engaging in violence, but the state senator appears to have been much closer to the Capitol than he initially claimed, according to video footage.

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Jan. 6 panel subpoenas six people tied to pro-Trump fake electors plan

The select committee investigating the Jan. 6 attack on the U.S. Capitol issued subpoenas Tuesday for six people — including prominent Republicans in Arizona, Michigan and Pennsylvania — involved in planning slates of fake electors for former President Donald Trump.

Chairman Bennie G. Thompson said in a statement the panel is “seeking records and testimony from former campaign officials and other individuals” who had relevant information about plans to select alternative electors. Those bogus electors claimed Trump won states he had, in fact, lost.

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WATCH: Giuliani calls Jan. 6 committee and its subpoenas ‘illegal’ in off the rails rant

Former Trump attorney Rudy Giuliani appeared on the far-right media outlet Newsmax Tuesday night and declared the House Select Committee on the January 6 Attack – along with its subpoenas – "illegal."

The Committee has subpoenaed Giuliani, a former GOP presidential frontrunner, mayor of New York City, and U.S. Attorney, and says it fully expects him to cooperate. In its legal subpoena, the Committee asked Giuliani last month to turn over documents by February 1 and testify by February 8.

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Jan. 6 Committee subpoenas six new witnesses — including Giuliani ally and Arizona fake audit architect

Six new witnesses were called by the House Select Committee investigating the Jan. 6 attack on the U.S. Capitol. Among those were Trump allies Lara Cox, Douglas Mastriano, Michael Roman and Gary Michael Brown.

Cox was a witness of note because, as the committee explained, she engaged with Rudy Giuliani in the Michigan efforts to recruit phony "alternate" electors.

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Trump supporters invoke Beelzebub to argue against Michigan GOP's plan to count ballots: report

Trump supporters in Michigan invoked one of the seven princes of Hell to argue against the state Republican Party's plan to count ballots from 3,000 to 4,000 delegates at its upcoming endorsement convention.

"Conspiracy theories peddled by some Michigan Republicans and allies of former President Donald Trump about voting machines in 2020 have come home to roost," the Detroit Free Press reported Tuesday. "For years, the party has used voting tabulators to count the ballots at its conventions. GOP leaders advocated for the continued use of tabulating machines. But Republicans who champion debunked theories about voting machines — fantastical claims of vote switching, counting half of a vote or hacked tabulators — want the ballots counted by hand this time. The party is compromising: they’ll use tabulators, but a newly created 27-person audit committee will review the results by hand immediately after the machine count."

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Vindman lawsuit could open the floodgates to more civil suits against Trump: legal expert

Writing for MSNBC, legal analyst and former U.S. Attorney Joyce Vance claimed that the civil suit filed against Donald Trump and two members of his inner circle by former military official Alexander Vindman is both a courageous act and also could be a precursor to a flood of more civil lawsuits against the former president if it proves to be successful.

As NPR reported on Feb 2, the National Security Council advisor's suit filed in federal court in Washington, D.C. "...accuses the defendants [Trump, Rudy Giuliani, Dan Scavino] of engaging in an 'intentional, concerted campaign of unlawful intimidation and retaliation' against him for testifying before Congress in 2019."

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