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Rudy Giuliani

The Trial: Expert makes the case against Donald Trump -- and says the story begins 6 months before January 6th

Opening Statement

"How did this happen in America?"

The answer led the House of Representatives to impeach then President Donald Trump by the largest bipartisan vote in American history. Today we continue the process of holding him accountable for incitement of insurrection against the government of the United States. The Trump Insurrection led directly to at least five deaths, injuries to 140 law enforcement officers and a scar on the heart of our democracy.

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Trump supporters are still fighting Arizona's election results — here's what we can learn from the fight

Maricopa County Supervisor Steve Gallardo had heard enough. More than a half-hour into the board's January 27 consideration of a "forensic" audit where two outside firms would assess if its voting system used in Arizona's 2020 presidential election had been infiltrated and the results altered, the former state senator said that his vote in favor of the audit "was a tough pill to swallow."

"We had our presidential preference election, not one complaint," Gallardo said. "We had our primary election in August. Not one complaint. Everyone was happy. We had our general election. No complaint, until a day or two after the general election, when some folks in our community and across this country started looking at the results."

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OAN slaps giant legal disclaimer on MyPillow CEO's election conspiracy special

Trump-loving One America News is airing a special the touts conspiracy theories being peddled by MyPillow CEO Mike Lindell -- but not before slapping it with a giant legal disclaimer.

Just before the start of Lindell's election fraud conspiracy special, OAN posted a lengthy statement emphasizing that the special is not based on OAN's own reporting at all and is completely the product of Lindell.

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Fox News in big trouble over false claims: 'That's why you have defamation lawsuits'

The $2.7-billion defamation lawsuit filed by a voting machine company against Fox News, Rudy Giuliani and Sidney Powell is anything but frivolous, according to legal experts.

The conservative broadcaster and three of its hosts -- Lou Dobbs, Maria Bartiromo and Jeanine Pirro -- were sued along with two of former president Donald Trump's legal representatives for making knowingly false statements about Smartmatic and its products in a case that legal experts say meets the textbook definition of defamation, reported CNN.

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Rudy Giuliani in ‘significant legal liability’ as lawsuits pile up: CNN legal analyst

On CNN Thursday, former federal prosecutor and legal analyst Laura Coates said that the new $2.7 billion lawsuit by voting technology company Smartmatic that names him as a defendant is a sign his legal problems are mounting.

"He's also being sued by Dominion Voting Systems for $1.3 billion," said anchor Erin Burnett. "He was pushing all sorts of lies about election fraud with that. You know, we heard the president of the United States do that with the secretary of state of Georgia. Right? All of this, again, was untrue at the time, proven to be untrue. How serious is Giuliani's legal liability in all of this?"

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Indicted Giuliani associates hit with SEC complaint

Two former associates of Rudy Giuliani were slapped Thursday with a Security Exchange Commission complaint detailing how they spent more than $2 million in investors’ money on fancy clothes, travel and other luxuries. David Correia and Lev Parnas allegedly promised investors their money would only go toward an insurance start-up ironically named “Fraud Guarantee.” Instead, the pair splurged at casinos, luxury clothing stores and nightclubs, according to the SEC complaint. The two men already face criminal charges for the alleged seven-year scam bilking investors in the company, as well as lyin...

Voting machine maker sues Fox News, Trump lawyers for $2.7 billion

Voting technology maker Smartmatic filed a $2.7 billion defamation suit on Thursday against three Fox News hosts and Donald Trump's lawyer Rudy Giuliani for promoting false claims that the company was involved in fraud in the November presidential election.

The complaint filed in New York State Court names the Rupert Murdoch-owned Fox Corp., the Fox News Network and Fox hosts Maria Bartiromo, Lou Dobbs and Jeanine Pirro as defendants.

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Fox News and pro-Trump lawyers hit with monster $2.7 billion lawsuit over election conspiracies: report

A voting technology company that was the target of baseless election fraud conspiracy theories filed a $2.7 billion lawsuit on Thursday against Fox News as well as pro-Trump attorneys Rudy Giuliani and Sidney Powell.

According to CNN, Smartmatic is alleging that Fox News personalities, along with Powell and Giuliani, coordinated to wage a "disinformation campaign" that has put the company in jeopardy.

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Seth Meyers mocks Trump’s White House meeting that was 'too insane for Rudy Giuliani'

"Late Night" host Seth Meyers addressed the shocking revelations about the Axios report on the "craziest meeting of the Donald Trump presidency." Like the beginning of a bad joke, the report says, "four conspiracy theorists marched into the Oval Office."

Meyers read the report that Trump lawyer Sidney Powell "proposed declaring a national security emergency, granting her and her cabal top-secret security clearances and using the U.S. government to seize Dominion's voting machines."

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How a radicalized mother of 8 became an infamous figure in the Capitol riots

Rachel Powell is a 40-year-old mother of eight from Western Pennsylvania who is being pursued by the FBI for her role in the Jan. 6 assault on the U.S. Capitol Building. An article by journalist Ronan Farrow for The New Yorker, published this week, describes Powell's path to far-right radicalization and includes an interview with Powell herself — who spoke from an undisclosed location.

"In her first public comments since the riot, Powell acknowledged her role in the events at the Capitol," Farrow reports. "During a two-hour telephone interview, she claimed that her conduct had been spontaneous, contrary to widespread speculation that she had acted in coordination with an organized group."

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Trump discussed declaring national security emergency powers he didn’t have to overturn the election: report

His Overriding Sentiment Was, Let's Give This a Shot'

President Donald Trump, weeks after losing the November 2020 election by more than 7 million votes and more than 70 electoral votes, discussed declaring national security emergency powers his White House attorneys told him he did not have.

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Trump Insurrection Timeline: First the coup — and then the cover-up

Trump's Original Narrative Collapses

The Department of Defense's January 8, 2021 initial press release purported to "memorialize the planning and execution timeline" of the deadly insurrection that it called the "January 6, 2021 First Amendment Protests in Washington, DC."

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Donald Trump is following the Confederate script for a 'Lost Cause' battle for cultural validation: historian

President Donald Trump has answered speculation about what he would do after his electoral defeat. His actions were his words of provocation. As pragmatist philosophers have pointed out, including William James, choices of words are important actions. Trump's script is akin to the story of the southern Lost Cause after the Civil War, when the defeated Confederacy turned military loss into cultural victory, as historian Karen Cox has observed.

The ridicule, fear, and anger circulating across the political spectrum are all valuable for Trump.

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