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'Partygoers started screaming': Giuliani served with indictment during his birthday party


Former New York City mayor Rudy Giuliani was officially served with a felony indictment on Friday night for allegedly interfering in Arizona's 2020 presidential election. Officials with the office of Arizona Attorney General Kris Mayes served Giuliani in front of nearly 100 guests at his 80th birthday celebration in the Palm Beach, Florida area.

The New York Post reported early Saturday morning that the former personal attorney to Donald Trump was in high spirits when he was served around 11 PM on Friday at the Lake Clarke Shores home of GOP consultant Caroline Wren. Prior to being served with felony indictment paperwork, Giuliani reportedly "belted" the song "New York, New York" by Frank Sinatra in front of what the Post said was between 80 and 100 guests. Some of the more high-profile attendees of the party were longtime Trump aide Roger Stone and former White House chief strategist Steve Bannon.

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Trump insider hands Dems roadmap for derailing ex-president's courthouse grandstanding

Anthony Scaramucci is well aware of how his name became a running D.C. punchline back in 2017. A "Scaramucci" or "Mooch" equals 11; as in the brief 11-day period where he served as former President Donald Trump's White House Communications Director.

But even though he holds such a record, he's versed in the Trump playbook.

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'Most succential': Trump ridiculed after speech in which he 'confused his criminal cases'

Donald Trump on Friday was ridiculed online following a Minnesota speech during which the former president is said to have confused his own criminal cases.

Trump began his GOP dinner keynote address with complaints about the teleprompters, which he said were "falling down," and continued by whining that the podium itself needed work as well. During the speech, the ex-president also said that Special Counsel Jack Smith was prosecuting him in New York. In reality, Smith's cases are in D.C. and Florida.

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Matt Gaetz revealed 'lack of belief in his own statement' as he defended Trump: analysis

Rep. Matt Gaetz (R-FL) and others played hooky from Congress to pledge fealty to defendant Donald Trump on a pivotal day in his criminal hush money trial.

But a savvy body language expert believes he found the Florida lawmaker's gestures to be hollow compared to the pounding words he used to defend the 45th president's innocence.

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'Botched' sentencing of man who attacked Nancy Pelosi's husband could lead to redo

A judge's process goof during the sentencing of the man convicted of kidnapping and assaulting then-House Speaker Nancy Pelosi's husband could force a do-over.

"Today in Court at sentencing, the defendant did not allocute," reads a document filed shortly after 44-year-old David DePape was sentenced to 30 years in prison by Judge Jacqueline Scott Corley during the formal proceedings on Friday. " Of course, he is not required to do so. However, the record does not state that he had the opportunity to do so."

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Moms for Liberty founder sent Florida GOP chair to bars prowling for hookups: police docs

Bridget Ziegler, the founder of the far-right, anti-gay Moms for Liberty group, sent out her husband, Florida GOP chairman Christian Ziegler, to bars to find women to bring home for sex, police documents reveal.

According to The Daily Beast, "Text messages quoted in a Sarasota Police Department (SPD) memo that was obtained by the Sarasota Herald-Tribune revealed how Ziegler sent her husband, Christian, hunting for a third sexual partner at local bars and directed him to send photos of possible hits. She allegedly told him to pretend to take pictures of his beer while photographing the women so he wouldn’t get caught sneaking pictures of them."

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Court analyst shreds Justice Alito's flag stunt: His 'brain has been pickled' by Fox News

Supreme Court Justice Samuel Alito's explanation for why a MAGA election denial upside-down flag was displayed at his house was completely unhinged, legal reporter Mark Joseph Stern told MSNBC's Alex Wagner on Friday evening — and his attempt to pin it all on his wife having a dispute over an anti-Trump sign with their neighbor was completely unconvincing.

Wagner opened with a passage from Stern's latest article for Slate, which read, "The sheer pettiness of these gripes — the fact that these men continue to filter justice through their small, round, grudge-colored glasses — is what is breathtaking here. If being an unelected, lifetime-appointed, unbound-by-rules jurist means anything at all, should it not mean that you perhaps rise above your grassy suburban neighborhood’s feelings wars? Apparently not. Apparently the life-altering principle of self-soothing your small injuries matters above all things."

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Trump starts speech by whining about teleprompter: 'They wonder why I don't pay the bill'

Donald Trump has consistently ridiculed President Joe Biden for using teleprompters, but the former president repeatedly complained about the fallen teleprompters at his Minnesota speech.

Trump on Friday gave the keynote speech at the Minnesota GOP's Lincoln Reagan Dinner, where the former leader started his speech with complaints about teleprompters.

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'It's not normal': Psychologists say Trump keeps proving his 'dementia' is getting worse

During a rally in Wildwood, New Jersey on May 11, former President Donald Trump praised fictional serial-killing cannibal Hannibal Lecter and confused President Jimmy Carter for tennis great Jimmy Connors.

All of these moments and more are explored in the podcast "Shrinking Trump," which is hosted by a doctor duo, psychologists Dr. John Gartner and Dr. Harry Segal, who examine the head of the 45th president and discuss his purported mental decline.

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Trump's 'circus clown' jury intimidation tactics could 'backfire': ex-GOP lawmaker

Former President Donald Trump's team of tag-along Republican senators and representatives traveling to New York City to rage against the criminal hush money trial and help him violate the gag order is not going to do him any real favors, argued former Rep. David Jolly (R-FL) on MSNBC Friday evening.

In fact, he told anchor Katie Phang, it could just end up hurting him with jury.

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Experts highlight 'serious problem' with Justice Alito's upside-down flag explanation

Supreme Court Justice Samuel Alito was missing one thing from his explanation of why an insurrectionist upside-down flag was displayed at his home around the time of Jan. 6, 2021, according to lawyers and strategists.

Alito, who has been under fire after blaming his wife for the insurrectionist display that flew in his front yard, has stated that the flag was only up for a short period of time. He also noted that it was during a time of political upheaval for the whole country, and a response to an anti-Trump sign belonging to one of his neighbors.

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Judge Cannon gives Trump permission to skip classified document hearing for New York trial

U.S. District Judge Aileen Cannon has given former President Donald Trump permission to skip a hearing in the Mar-a-Lago classified documents case in Florida, because of the ongoing criminal hush money trial in Manhattan.

According to Law & Crime, "Early Friday afternoon, the 45th president’s attorneys filed an unopposed motion seeking leave from the court to skip a May 22 hearing that is focused on two motions to dismiss the indictment filed by co-defendant Waltine 'Walt' Nauta, 41, Trump’s personal valet. The defense motion notes that Trump had 'previously scheduled travel outside of' southern Florida because he is 'on trial in Manhattan Supreme Court' over hush-money-related allegations."

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Michigan Republicans' Senate nominee petitions 'infected' with fake signatures: complaint

A complaint filed with Michigan election officials by Democrats urges an investigation of several Republican Senate candidates for alleged signature fraud, reported Bridge Michigan on Friday.

"In a Friday letter to the Michigan Board of State Canvassers, attorneys for the Michigan Democratic Party and the Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee asked election officials to investigate nominating petitions submitted by Republican U.S. Senate candidates Mike Rogers, Sandy Pensler and Justin Amash, as well as former candidate Peter Meijer," reported Lauren Gibbons. "The request claims that the candidates’ submissions appear to be 'infected' with potentially fraudulent signatures, pointing to instances of petition sheets that appeared to be filled out by only one person, voters’ names appearing across multiple petitions in different handwriting and mismatches in petition circulator handwriting as evidence that the petitions warrant further review."

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