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'He was used to getting his way': Stormy Daniels recalls Trump pressuring her

In a new documentary, adult film star and producer Stormy Daniels remarked that even before former President Donald Trump was elected to office, he took advantage of the imbalance of power between the two when they first met.

The Daily Beast's Laura LeMoon wrote Saturday that Daniels (whose givenname is Stephanie Clifford) delved into the details of her first encounter with Trump in the documentary Stormy, which is streaming on Peacock. The two met in July of 2006 at a charity golf tournament in Lake Tahoe, Nevada, when Daniels was just 27 years old and Trump was a wealthy 60-year-old businessman known at the time for his NBC reality show The Apprentice. Notably, that encounter took place just months after Trump's wife, Melania, gave birth to his third son, Barron.

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'Little chance' Trump will be saved by appeals court from asset seizure by Monday: report

Any hope that Donald Trump has that a judge in the New York State Appellate Division will give him more time to come up with the nearly half-billion dollar— or a reduced amount — he needs for his appeals bond related to financial fraud due on Monday should be put to rest.

According to a report from the Washington Post, with New York Attorney General Letitia James already poised to start grabbing Trump properties and raid his bank accounts if he misses his deadline, the former president is running out of time and the court's normal scheduling does not favor his immediate needs.

As the Post is reporting, "The appeals court generally issues rulings on Tuesdays and Thursdays, so there is very little chance it will act by Monday on Trump’s request to waive the bond requirement, adding, "If it doesn’t, and if Trump doesn’t post a bond by then, legal experts say there is nothing preventing James from calling on the New York City sheriffs or on city marshals to begin seizing his assets."

ALSO READ: Here's why conservative elites are bailing on Trump now

The report goes on to state that Trump's on-hand cash will likely be the first asset to be seized before the long arduous process of taking his properties and then auctioning them off is set in motion.

According to one expert, AG James will likely hold off on grabbing properties, waiting for the appeals court to weigh in.

As Nikos Passas of Northeastern University put it, "She doesn’t want to be accused of being overly aggressive and unfair.”

Stewart Sterk, a professor at Cardozo School of Law, added: "Once she has that judgment lien, what she can do is foreclose on that judgment lien and essentially mandate a sale of the properties to satisfy the judgment.”

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House GOP 'imploding'

The U.S. House of Representatives started a two-week recess on Friday, but not before a series of events that provoked fresh declarations of what has become a familiar phrase over the past few years: "Republicans in disarray."

Before leaving Capitol Hill, House members passed a spending package intended to prevent a partial government shutdown that could still occur unless the Senate acts. Fewer than two dozen Democrats and over 100 Republicans opposed the bill. Democratic opposition was largely related to Israel's war on the Gaza Strip.

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‘Handmaid of American fascism’: Ronna McDaniel’s new NBC News gig sparks fury

Exactly two weeks after her Trump-engineered exit as chair of the Republican National Committee, Ronna McDaniel has been hired by NBC News and MSNBC as a political commentator, fomenting fury among journalists, press watchers, and ordinary Americans.

Declaring that the network has a "crucial mission," which it "performs like no other," NBC News senior vice president of politics Carrie Budoff Brown announced McDaniel's hiring to employees in a memo Friday, which ws published by The Hollywood Reporter.

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'They can go after any assets': AG James to grab Trump’s bank accounts before real estate

New York Attorney General Letitia James has made it clear that if the courts don't intervene in her plans to seize former President Donald Trump's assets, she will begin that process as soon as Monday. And it's likely she'll start with his cash.

In a Friday report, Politico's Erica Orden broke down how James would begin with her asset seizure. Assuming Trump's appeal for a last-minute stay is unsuccessful, the New York Attorney General's office would then seek Judge Arthur Engoron's approval to access the former president's bank accounts.

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'He was lying to me': Trump biographer recounts how ex-president misled him about loans

He reportedly keeps lying and never learns his lessons.

Donald Trump biographer Tim O'Brien, appearing on MSNBC's "The Last Word" with Lawrence O'Donnell, recounted a time when he was walking and talking at Mar-a-Lago with former President Donald Trump more than decade before he'd run for office.

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'Excoriated': Judge reportedly has harsh words for Matt Gaetz and Marjorie Taylor Greene

Marjorie Taylor Greene and Matt Gaetz reportedly got some tough words from a judge who nonetheless allowed their lawsuit to move forward.

Greene and Gaetz, who have aligned on various far-right projects in recent months, filed a lawsuit against California cities that canceled their events. That suit was not dismissed on Friday.

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N.Y. jury won't consider Trump a 'sympathetic character': ex-prosecutor Preet Bharara

It's reportedly going to be tough for the court to find sympathy for Donald Trump.

Former United States Attorney for the Southern District of New York Preet Bharara joined CNN's Anderson Cooper to discuss the cash quagmire that the former president has found himself in.

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Trump just made it easier for Letitia James to go after his cash: legal expert

Donald Trump's recent cash flex could backfire bigly.

As the looming Monday deadline nears to pony up on a $464 million bond set in his civil fraud disgorgement trial loss, Trump went out on a bold limb to post a Truth Social all-caps screed declaring he was cash rich.

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'Not what adults in the room do': GOP lawmaker slams MTG for fundraising off speaker drama

Rep. Greg Murphy (R-NC) is beside himself with anger about Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-GA) and her threatened motion to remove House Speaker Mike Johnson (R-LA).

In an interview with right-wing Newsmax host Greg Schmitt, Murphy in particular attacked Greene for fundraising off her threat to remove Johnson and throw the House into chaos once again.

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Trump under fresh legal scrutiny as courts 'tighten the screws on him': MSNBC analyst

Former President Donald Trump is hoping that the Truth Social merger will give him a large enough wealth infusion to get a handle on his multiple legal judgments, at least as long as he can get them appealed — and he claimed on Truth Social that he has already come up with the half a billion dollars he needs in any case.

But the sheer amount of money he owes is only one of the problems for him, MSNBC reporter Adam Reiss told anchor Chris Hayes on Friday. Another is the eagle-eyed scrutiny and restrictions the courts have placed his real estate empire under.

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Mary Trump previews new book outlining 'cruelty that has come to define the Trump family'

Donald Trump's niece is spilling her family's beans.

Mary Trump, a psychologist by profession, has become known for her critiques of her uncle. Recently, she noted that the ex-president is being pushed "closer to the edge" due to the New York fraud case in which he was found to owe hundreds of millions of dollars.

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'Mirage': Conservative Charlie Sykes says Trump's control of GOP is showing cracks

Former President Donald Trump appears to have an insurmountable grip on the Republican Party, emphasized by his easy victory for a third presidential nomination earlier this month.

But look closer, argued Trump-skeptic conservative analyst Charlie Sykes for MSNBC on Friday: the former president's grip on power is shakier than it appears.

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