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Senator wonders if Trump was trying to delay vote count until 'the mob could have its effect'

Sen. Sheldon Whitehouse (D-RI), a former prosecutor, brought up a previously undiscussed issue around the Jan. 6 attack on the U.S. Capitol and former President Donald Trump's role in phone calls to delay the vote.

While the insurrectionists were making their way into the building, Trump was on the phone to Sen. Mike Lee (R-UT) looking for Sen. Tommy Tuberville (R-AL). Rudy Giuliani had previously left a message on the wrong phone also looking for Tuberville. The goal was to get him to object to more states than what Republicans had intended while the electoral votes were being counted.

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Rachel Maddow mocks Trump for hiring lawyer who called him a ‘crook’

MSNBC host Rachel Maddow revealed at the top of her show Tuesday that in the middle of the second impeachment trial, that former President Donald Trump was still adding lawyers to his legal team. One of those attorneys, however, has some controversial things to say about his new client.

"Even as the trial is now underway. Yesterday, we learned that he had made a last-minute addition of a new lawyer named van der Veen, Michael van der Veen. The Philadelphia Inquirer reported today that Mr. van der Veen recently sued President Trump, really recently, in the lead-up to the 2020 election, he sued Trump, arguing Trump and his campaign were trying to suppress the vote in Democratic-leaning areas of Pennsylvania," said Maddow. "He also defended a college student who was prosecuted for trying to hack into an IRS database to obtain Trump's tax records. That student saying Mr. van der Veen described Trump to him as a quote, 'f---ing crook,' but he didn't just say 'F', apparently, he said it for real. And now, that man represents Donald Trump in his impeachment trial."

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'This was the Four Seasons Landscaping of the legal profession': Democratic Senator

President Donald Trump's lawyers didn't impress many in the Senate on Tuesday, even among those who will cast their ballots for the former president regardless of the arguments. But one Democrat described it using a unique analogy.

"These two guys -- this was the Four Seasons Landscaping of the legal profession," said Sen. Chris Coons (R-DE), joking about the former president's past lawyer Rudy Giuliani, who meant to hold a press conference at the Four Seasons hotel and booked a landscaping company's parking lot instead.

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'Get someone to investigate': Ukraine releases tape of Rudy Giuliani pressuring officials to probe Bidens

On Tuesday, TIME Magazine reported that they obtained a recording of former President Donald Trump's associate Rudy Giuliani pressuring Ukrainian officials to open investigations into Joe Biden's family in 2019.

"Let these investigations go forward," said Giuliani on the tape. "Get someone to investigate this."

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Fox News receives brutal fact-check for claim of ‘evenhanded’ election coverage

Fox News is having difficulty trying to repair its reputation after spending months airing the unfounded conspiracy theories of election fraud that culminated in the January 6th insurrection at the U.S. Capitol.

"In the days after the presidential election, an entire ecosystem emerged to bolster President Donald Trump's false claims that rampant fraud had mired the election results. No credible evidence of significant fraud existed at the time, just as no credible evidence to that end exists today. For Trump and his allies, though, hyping sketchy, unfounded allegations served to strengthen Trump's efforts to somehow overturn the will of the electorate and generated an enormous amount of attention from a Republican base eager to wrench victory from the jaws of reality," The Washington Post's Philip Bump explained Tuesday.

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Impeachment trial: Research spanning decades shows language can incite violence

Senators, acting in the impeachment trial of former President Donald Trump that begins on Feb. 9, will soon have to decide whether to convict the former president for inciting a deadly, violent insurrection at the Capitol building on Jan. 6.

A majority of House members, including 10 Republicans, took the first step in the two-step impeachment process in January. They voted to impeach Trump, for “incitement of insurrection." Their resolution states that he “willfully made statements that, in context, encourage – and foreseeably resulted in – lawless action at the Capitol, such as: 'if you don't fight like hell you're not going to have a country anymore.'"

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Rudy Giuliani associate gets sentenced to prison for ‘Fraud Guarantee’ scheme

A federal judge sentenced a Florida businessman to a year and one day in prison for "lying to federal election authorities and for duping investors in a fraud-insurance company" in a case that stemmed from a sweeping investigation involving several associates of Rudy Giuliani, the Wall Street Journal reports.

"David Correia pleaded guilty last fall to one count of making false statements to the Federal Election Commission about the source of a $325,000 donation to a pro-Trump super PAC and one count of conspiracy to commit wire fraud in connection with the fraud-insurance company, Fraud Guarantee," the WSJ report stated.

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Giuliani's spiral into 'shameless publicity seeker' was predicted in a 1993 opposition report he ordered on himself

According to a report in the Daily Beast from Eileen Markey, the man that Rudy Giuliani has become in the service of former President Donald Trump is exactly how New York City voters viewed him in a suppressed opposition report he ordered in 1993 to figure out his vulnerabilities prior to his run for New York City mayor.

As Markey notes, Giuliani ordered the report so that he could anticipate attacks that would come from his political foes digging for dirt after his service as a U.S. Attorney and in Washington.

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Washington Post makes the case for convicting Trump ahead of impeachment

The Washington Post editorial board issued a piece that makes the case to convict former President Donald Trump for the charges against him for his second impeachment.

Writing Monday morning, the Post board began the piece by saying anyone arguing that the impeachment of Trump is unconstitutional is "wrong." Trump was impeached on Jan. 13 by the House. Constitutionally, the Senate is responsible for the trial.

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GOP county will buy voting machines at heart of pro-Trump conspiracy theories — and voters are furious: report

On Monday, The Washington Post reported that tensions are flaring in Stark County, Ohio — a county that voted for former President Donald Trump — over the GOP county officials' decision to purchase equipment from Dominion Voting Systems.

"Two months later, Stark County has yet to replace its aging voting equipment while May primaries loom. The all-GOP board of commissioners has fielded an unprecedented deluge of upset callers and spent a recent meeting peppering election staff with doubts and questions. [Board of Elections Executive Director Jeff] Matthews says officials could go to court to push commissioners to make the purchase," reported Hannah Knowles. "A former Trump campaign strategist's video urging people to 'warn' Stark County authorities against moving ahead just fueled a new round of complaints, Matthews said, many of them from out of state."

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Trump's Capitol riot was 'a form of terrorism': FBI counter-terror expert

On Tuesday, Donald Trump's impeachment trial begins in the U.S. Senate. Last month, Trump was impeached by the House of Representatives for inciting an armed insurrection and attack on the Capitol that left at least five people dead (including one police officer). Two other Capitol police officers have subsequently committed suicide, apparently because of the trauma of that day. Dozens of other people were injured, (including at least 140 police and other law enforcement agents).

There is abundant public evidence of Trump's guilt, including the speech he gave at Ellipse Park in the hours before the assault in which he urged his followers to force Congress to change the outcome of the 2020 election. At the same rally, a Nazi-inspired propaganda video was shown that encouraged violence against Democrats and other Americans who do not support Donald Trump and the Republican Party.

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Trump campaign paid non-lawyer $6,037 for 'legal consulting' on overturning the election: report

Controversial Arizona state Rep. Mark Finchem was paid thousands of dollars by the Trump campaign as it sought to overturn the election results.

"Former President Donald Trump's reelection campaign reported paying $6,037 to a business owned by state Rep. Mark Finchem while the lawmaker pushed for the Legislature to overturn Joe Biden's victory in Arizona," the Arizona Republic reported Saturday. "The campaign reported in its latest financial disclosure that it made a payment on Dec. 18 to 'Mrk Finchem PLLC' and the address provided for the company is the lawmaker's home. The campaign labeled the expense as 'recount: legal consulting.'"

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Nearly 150 constitutional scholars sign letter dismantling Trump's 'First Amendment' impeachment defense

Former President Donald Trump is just days away from his second impeachment trial -- and nearly 150 U.S. Constitutional scholars are already pushing back against his defense.

According to Law & Crime, on Friday, Feb. 5, a host of legal professors and First Amendment litigators penned a seven-page letter arguing why the First Amendment does not apply when it comes to the deadly insurrection on the U.S. Capitol that Trump is being charged for inciting. Although the supporters of the letter did note that they do have differences in legal and political opinions, their stance on the Constitution and upholding the law are the same.

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