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Rudy Giuliani

Arizona A.G. officially unveils 9 new felony charges against Trump’s former chief of staff

Arizona Attorney General Kris Mayes confirmed this week that Mark Meadows — who served as chief of staff in former President Donald Trump's White House — has been officially served on nine felony charges related to her office's ongoing fake electors investigation.

Legal news website Law & Crime reported Friday that the charges against Meadows have now been made public after it was previously reported that he and 17 others were the targets of a massive criminal probe. Meadows' attorney, George Terwilliger, called the indictment a "blatantly political and politicized accusation," and said the charges "will be contested and defeated." The ex-president has not been indicted, but has been confirmed to be an unindicted co-conspirator according to investigators.

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Hush money lawyer warned he could be disbarred for following Trump's orders

The lead attorney defending former President Donald Trump in his criminal hush money trial risks prison himself by taking his problematic client's advice, a fellow lawyer warned Wednesday.

Attorney Mark Herrmann issued his warning to Trump lawyer Todd Blanche in a Daily Beast column that begins with a classic set-up/punchline joke.

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Gateway Pundit warned by its own lawyer it was using 'a damned fraud' as a source: report

A new filing in a defamation lawsuit filed by Georgia poll workers Ruby Freeman and Shaye Moss against the conspiracy theory website Gateway Pundit reveals that workers at the site feared for their credibility, reported The Guardian — and their own attorney warned them that the source for their claims was not to be trusted.

The site's founder, Jim Hoft, has earned the nickname "The Dumbest Man on the Internet" for years of strange and sloppy claims. Despite this, former President Donald Trump has been reported to be an avid reader of the site.

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'Flabbergasted' Secret Service agent sues right-wing media for linking him to Hunter Biden

A former Secret Service agent has sued two right-leaning news organizations for publishing stories based on allegedly fabricated text messages linking him to Hunter Biden.

Robert Savage filed defamation suits against the New York Post and two of its reporters, as well as the Daily Mail, its owner and its publisher, alleging they recklessly disregarded information casting doubt on the veracity of the messages, which came from a laptop computer that purportedly belonged to President Joe Biden's son, reported NBC News.

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How Trump could run for president from jail

The notion was once unthinkable.

Now, with Donald Trump tethered to a New York City courtroom as the first U.S. president to stand trial on criminal charges, it’s entirely conceivable: Trump could be running for president, or even serving as commander in chief, from behind bars.

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'Rest of life in prison': RNC official frets about 'decades' in jail in fake elector case

Republican National Committee lawyer Christina Bobb, a former conservative news anchor and attorney for Donald Trump, said she expected to spend the rest of her life in prison if she is found guilty of trying to overturn the 2020 presidential election in Arizona.

During a Monday interview on Real America's Voice, host Steve Bannon asked Bobb what her punishment could be if she is found guilty on nine counts of trying to organize fake electors to hand the election to Trump.

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5 more Trump attorneys, aides publicly named in AZ fake elector indictment

Attorney General Kris Mayes has released the names of five more people who were indicted by a grand jury for the part they played in Arizona’s 2020 fake elector scheme to keep former President Donald Trump in the White House.

Mayes announced on April 24 that a grand jury had indicted 18 people, including all 11 fake electors, for their actions related to the fake elector plot. But she did not initially release the names of seven of the 18 since they had not yet been legally served, although it was easy to figure out who some of them were through statements describing them in the indictment.

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Trump allies expected to flip after new indictments leave them 'holding the bag': expert

The far-reaching felony indictments in Arizona for election tampering, combined with Donald Trump's own legal problems, could hasten one or more of the accused to flip on the former president in a race with their co-conspirators to secure the best deal.

According to former federal prosecutor Neama Rahmani, the 58-page indictment that names former White House Chief of Staff Mark Meadows, ex-Trump lawyer Rudy Giuliani and lawyer John Eastman among others came after too long a period of consideration, but is nonetheless solid.

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'What's wrong with these people?' Morning Joe ridicules fake electors for filming crime

Panelists on MSNBC's "Morning Joe" wondered how Donald Trump's allies would find attorneys willing take their case after being indicted in the Arizona fake electors scheme.

Rudy Giuliani, Mark Meadows and nine other Trump allies were indicted on multiple charges, including conspiracy and forgery to engaging in fraudulent schemes, and they recorded video of themselves signing phony documents on Dec. 14, 2020, certifying themselves as electors pledged to the former president despite his loss in the state.

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'They imperil Trump': Legal expert warns indicted lawyers likely to turn on ex-president

Donald Trump may have avoided indictment in the Arizona "false electors" case that became public record on Wednesday, but the others now facing conspiracy, fraud and forgery charges for scheming to send a set of bogus electors to Washington D.C. to keep their leader in office could still bring him down.

Legal analyst Harry Litman appeared on MSNBC's "All In" with Chris Hayes offering insight on how much damage some of the others formally charged, like Rudolph W. Giuliani, Mark Meadows, John Eastman Boris Epshteyn, Jenna Ellis, could cause "Unindicted Co-Conspirator 1" — otherwise known as Trump.

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Law professor flags 'conspicuous absence' of one Trump co-defendant in Arizona indictment

The Arizona indictment released on Wednesday for the fake elector scheme charges several of former President Donald Trump's lawyers and strategists, including Rudy Giuliani, John Eastman, Jenna Ellis, Christina Bobb, and Boris Epshteyn, as well as Arizona GOP officials like Kelli Ward, and names Trump himself as an unindicted co-conspirator — but there's a conspicuous hole in the indictments, as a major architect of the fake elector scheme, attorney Kenneth Chesebro, is missing.

That's not by accident, NYU Law professor Ryan Goodman wrote for his Just Security site.

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Arizona fake electors will be left 'holding the bag' even if Trump wins election: expert

While numerous people were charged in the Arizona fake elector effort to keep President Donald Trump in power back in 2020 — the former president, referred to as "Unindicted Co-Conspirator 1," so far gets to skate free.

Trump might not be indicted in the case yet, but it is another state indictment. And that means even if the 45th president wins the election come Nov. 5 and is able to serve out another term, he would be unable to pardon his cohorts like attorney and former New York City Mayor Rudy Giuliani and his former Chief of Staff Mark Meadows among others should they get convicted.

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'Very good news' for Jack Smith as Arizona indictment puts 'pressure' on Trump allies

The new indictments in Arizona against several of former President Donald Trump's allies is not just bad news for them, but a significant opportunity for special counsel Jack Smith in his prosecution of former President Donald Trump for the 2020 election plot, former federal prosecutor Andrew Weissmann said on MSNBC Wednesday.

The newly dropped indictment names a number of Republican officials and Trump strategists in an alleged criminal scheme to stop the electoral count in Arizona, including former White House Chief of Staff Mark Meadows, Trump-aligned lawyers John Eastman, Rudy Giuliani, Jenna Ellis, and Christina Bobb, and Trump strategists Boris Epshteyn and Mike Roman — many of whom were also charged in the Georgia election racketeering case. 11 GOP staffers in Arizona were also charged.

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