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Hope Hicks makes witness box confession in Trump hush money trial: 'I'm really nervous'

MANHATTAN CRIMINAL COURT — Hope Hicks, the former White House spokesperson for then-president Donald Trump, took the witness stand Friday in his criminal hush money trial.

A timid Hicks gave her name and place of residence to prosecutors, readjusted the microphone, then made a confession.

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Scowling Trump tosses file in front of lawyer questioning witness about evidence tampering

MANHATTAN CRIMINAL COURT — Donald Trump started the 11th day of his criminal trial visibly annoyed with his lawyer.

From inside the courtroom, Raw Story observed Donald Trump throwing a file in front of his lawyer, Emil Bove, as he questioned an investigator about his messages taken from his ex-attorney Michael Cohen's cell phone.

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Trump Media auditor slapped with 'massive' fraud charges by SEC

The auditor being used by the parent company of President Donald Trump's Truth Social platform has just been hit with allegations of what the Securities and Exchange Commission describes as "massive" fraud.

CNN reports that BF Borgers, a Colorado-based firm that counts Trump Media and Technology as one of its clients, was accused by the SEC on Friday of committing "deliberate and systemic failures to comply with Public Company Accounting Oversight Board (PCAOB) standards in its audits and reviews incorporated in more than 1,500 SEC filings from January 2021 through June 2023."

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Hope Hicks' friend wants Trump to know 'she's being forced' to testify against him

It's not clear what longtime aide Hope Hicks might tell the jury in Donald Trump's hush money case, but a close friend made clear that she's not eager to testify against her former boss.

The former White House official could testify as early as Friday, and while she hasn't given details about what she'll say, several sources close to her made clear that she was frustrated and angry about being called to testify — and described the trial as a waste of time and money.

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'Swarming in lies': Scholar panics that latest Trump comments show him 'dangerously unfit'

Donald Trump's recent sit-down with Time Magazine for a wide-ranging interview under the title "If He Wins" provides clues that he has become increasingly "unfit" to hold office again, according to a professor from Arizona State University.

In his Substack column, author and scholar Steven Beschloss claimed every voter should be alarmed by the former president's answers, including suggestions that he is not averse to violence similar to the Jan. 6 Capitol riot if he fails to win re-election in 2024.

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Judge fact-checks Trump to his face after rant over gag order

MANHATTAN CRIMINAL COURT — Donald Trump's judge launched into Friday's hearing by fact-checking the former president's claim that a gag order was stopping him from taking the stand in his own defense.

Trump had made the complaints in front of TV cameras as he left the courtroom after proceedings closed in his hush money trial Thursday.

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Trump complains about 'salacious' coverage after tawdry tabloid dealings revealed in trial

Donald Trump complained about the "salacious" coverage of his hush money trial involving adult film actress Stormy Daniels.

The former president posted his complaint Friday morning at 9:15 a.m., just as he arrived in the courtroom, after cable news covered testimony from the previous day from Daniels' lawyer, who described his involvement in other celebrity scandals involving actor Charlie Sheen and reality star Tila Tequila.

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'Just not accurate': Trump's latest falsehood about gag order shut down by CNN reporter

CNN's Alyana Treene on Friday quickly slapped down a false claim by former President Donald Trump about the gag order in his hush-money trial.

Shortly after Trump entered court on Friday, Treene was asked to comment about Trump's claims earlier this week that Judge Juan Merchan's gag order prevents him from testifying in his own trial.

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'Brazenly unethical' secret recording made by Cohen could clear Trump of crimes: expert

A “bizarre and brazenly unethical” secret recording of Donald Trump made by his then-lawyer Michael Cohen could be the weapon that clears the former president in his hush money case.

Former prosecutor Elie Honig said the recording, found during an FBI search of Cohen’s office and catching a September 2016 conversation in which Trump and Cohen discuss payments to adult movie actress Stormy Daniels, not only damages the ex-lawyer’s credibility — it could also absolve Trump of involvement in a crime.

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Failed 'ringmaster' Marjorie Taylor Greene puts GOP majority 'in jeopardy': Ex-RNC chair

Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene's (R-GA) refusal to back down from her plans to force the ouster of House Speaker Mike Johnson (R-LA) will cause a rupture in the Republican Party that could ensure a loss of the House in November.

That is the opinion of former Republican National Committee chairman Michael Steele, who scorched the Georgia lawmaker for lacking a basic understanding of how being the majority party is supposed to work.

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Revealed: Kristi Noem just met with Louisiana governor's cabinet

South Dakota Gov. Kristi Noem, who’s in the midst of a controversy over admitting to killing her dog, was in Baton Rouge to meet with Gov. Jeff Landry’s cabinet Thursday at the Capitol, multiple attendees at the meeting confirmed to the Illuminator.

Noem is reportedly still in consideration to be former President Donald Trump’s running mate in this fall’s election despite her recent revelation that she killed her dog Cricket with a shotgun. She spoke to Landry’s cabinet about lessons she has learned during her time as governor, according to sources inside the meeting.

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'No way': Foreign policy experts question Noem’s 'dubious' account of meeting Kim Jong Un

South Dakota Gov. Kristi Noem's hopes of becoming presumptive GOP presidential nominee Donald Trump's running mate may have been destroyed by the puppy shooting controversy. Noem has been drawing widespread criticism — even among fellow Republicans — for an anecdote in her new book "No Going Back: The Truth on What’s Wrong With Politics and How We Move America Forward" in which she describes taking a dog to a gravel pit on a farm, shooting it and killing it.

Although that anecdote is receiving a great deal of attention, it is only one of the many things Noem talks about in her book. Noem, who served in the U.S. House of Representatives for eight years before becoming South Dakota governor, also talks about her foreign policy experience.

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Appeals court hears Kari Lake election case, has to remind her lawyer how appeals work

Appellate judges listening to arguments Thursday in Kari Lake’s challenge to her 2022 election loss had to keep reminding her lawyer how appeals courts work.

“I’m sure you’re aware we’re not a fact finding court — we’re a court that decides questions of law, primarily,” Judge Peter Eckerstrom told Kurt Olsen, Lake’s attorney, shortly after he began his arguments.

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