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Rudy Giuliani

First Trump co-defendants booked in Georgia election case

The first co-defendants in the election racketeering case facing former president Donald Trump surrendered to the authorities in Georgia on Tuesday.

John Eastman, a former campaign attorney for Trump, and Scott Hall, a bail bondsman, were booked at the Fulton County jail, according to jail records.

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Former Trump attorney says 'no chance' he can comply with bail conditions — and he'll only get minor consequences

Former Donald Trump lawyer Michael Cohen doesn't think the ex-president will be capable of complying with the bail conditions set in Fulton County, Georgia. Still, he anticipates that Trump will only get a slap on the wrist.

CNN's Kaitlan Collins asked Cohen, "Do you think he can comply with" the demands?

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'Only goal should be to die a free man': Giuliani's former colleagues describe shock at 'fall from grace'

After his poor showing in the 2008 Republican presidential primaries, Rudy Giuliani went into a depression and started drinking heavily. One person who stepped to help him get back on track was Donald Trump, NBC News reported.

“It was Donald Trump who came to his rescue,” said journalist Andrew Kirtzman, who dished on the pair's relationship in his 2022 book, “Giuliani: The Rise and Tragic Fall of America’s Mayor.”

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'Terrifying': Election officials describe bombardment of threats after 2020 vote

Election officials from closely contested states around the country opened up to USA Today Monday about the racist and violent threats from Trump supporters that bombarded them in the aftermath of the 2020 presidential election.

This comes as former President Donald Trump is indicted in two separate cases relating to the plot to overturn the 2020 election, including a racketeering probe in Georgia that also charged several of his legal advisers and state Republican operatives.

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Busted: Indicted Trump advisor worked on this Pennsylvania GOP senate campaign

In the weeks before and after his loss in the 2022 race for the Republican U.S. Senate nomination, Dave McCormick’s campaign paid nearly $40,000 to a special assistant and political operative for former President Donald Trump.

Michael Roman, who reported to former White House counsel Don McGahn and served as Trump’s head poll watcher in 2020, is now accused with Trump and 17 others of a plot to overturn the results of Georgia’s presidential election.

Public records and published reports show Roman is one of five people with ties to McCormick and his 2022 Senate campaign who played roles in the so-called fake elector plan to disrupt the certification of electoral college votes for President Joe Biden on Jan. 6, 2021 by presenting slates of votes for Trump from seven battleground states.

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The Georgia indictments are the most likely to bring lasting change for local elections

A lot of ink has been spilled this week pointing out the differences and similarities between the two sets of indictments that former President Donald Trump faces for his efforts to subvert the 2020 election.

Special counsel Jack Smith’s federal case is highly narrative. He is creatively interpreting older law to apply to completely unprecedented behavior from a public official in the United States, requiring storytelling and chronological framing to explain the applicability of the laws. Fulton County District Attorney Fani Willis’s charges in Georgia — though vast in number and diverse in scope — have far less of that and don’t really require it. The crimes described by Willis, or at least most of them, are simply more straightforward than the crimes described by Smith.

And part of the reason for that relative simplicity is that elections are local and governed by local law. The offices that carry out elections are county and state offices, and the officials who can most meaningfully be influenced to violate their legally required duties are county and state officials. There are more applicable crimes in this space because there are more applicable laws in this space.

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Fulton prosecutors and Trump allies debate 'why the RICO statute was invented'

The high-profile 2020 election interference case presented by Fulton County District Attorney Fani Willis’ against former President Donald Trump and his 18 allies presents a unique set of challenges, according to prosecution and election experts.

On Monday, a Georgia grand jury indicted 19 suspects including Trump and his political supporters, on charges of racketeering and conspiracy. They were charged with crimes across several states for attempting to solicit elected officials, making false statements, and other charges related to the 2020 election interference.

Georgia’s RICO Act (Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations) is being used in the investigation of the former president and his inner circle, which is modeled after a federal law designed to target mafia leaders and other conspirators suspected of committing crimes.

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Rudy Giuliani claims new 'scientific evidence' will prove his innocence

Rudy Giuliani claimed on Sunday to have new "scientific evidence" to prove widespread election fraud and that he is innocent after being charged in Georgia.

On his Sunday WABC program, Giuliani responded to a caller who wanted to know how he could prove he was not part of a criminal conspiracy to interfere in Georgia's presidential election.

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Trump's refusal to pay Rudy Giuliani worse than we thought: report

Former New York mayor and ex-President Donald Trump attorney Rudy Giuliani, who is currently "having financial difficulties" according to his lawyer, has repeatedly requested compensation from the former president and been unsuccessful, The New York Times reports.

Giuliani, who was "once worth tens of millions of dollars" according to The Times, was one of the 19, along with Trump, indicted by a Fulton County Superior Court grand jury August 1 on charges related to their efforts to overturn the 2020 election.

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Ex-NYPD top cop Bernie Kerik fingered as co-conspirator in Trump’s Georgia election interference case

Disgraced one-time NYPD Commissioner Bernie Kerik has been identified as one of the 30 co-conspirators included in former President Donald Trump’s election interference case in Georgia’s Fulton County, an attorney for Kerik confirmed. Kerik, who served three years in federal prison for felony tax fraud, is the person identified as co-conspirator 5 in the case. The ex-top cop and longtimeally of Rudy Giuliani is accused of taking part in several meetings with lawmakers in Pennsylvania and Arizona as part of the effort to create slates of fake pro-Trump electors from states President Biden won in ...

Exposed: Giuliani shamed by RICO's author for mobster trial 'story'

The attorney who drafted the RICO statute fact-checked Rudy Giuliani's claim that he cooked up the idea as a way to bring down New York City's mobsters.

Giuliani has long claimed it was his idea to use the Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations (RICO) statute to prosecute 11 members of New York’s five crime families in 1985 after he read a memoir by crime boss Joe Bonanno describing the inner workings of the Mafia.

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Trump's 'getting cheap' with lawyers now will 'come back to bite him' in Georgia: legal analyst

A surprising and critical decision by a top Donald Trump adviser on which allies of the former president will get their legal fees covered by his PAC – and who is being excluded – could come back to haunt the now four-times indicted former president.

According to reports, Trump's Save America Pac has been shelling out millions to lawyers defending Trump associates who have been swept up in his alleged criminal activities that have him on the precipice of four separate trials in Manhattan, Florida, Washington D.C. and now Georgia.

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Trump 'definitely should lose' bid for immunity in Georgia case: legal expert

Donald Trump may be hoping the U.S. Supreme Court bails him out of his Georgia indictment.

Federal law allows U.S. officials to move state prosecutions to federal court if their actions are related to their work for the federal government, and Trump is likely to join former White House chief of staff Mark Meadows and the ex-president's former lawyer Rudy Giuliani in making that request, reported USA Today.

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