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'He is in serious jeopardy': Legal expert warns Trump his back is against the wall

Should Donald Trump fail a second time to be re-elected he faces the very real possibility of jail time and massive financial penalties due to the sheer volume of criminal cases and civil lawsuits that are on hold until after the election.

That is the opinion of Syracuse University law professor Greg Germain who explained in an interview with Newsweek that the former president's only path to get out from under the federal cases he now faces is to beat Vice President Kamala Harris in less than two weeks and then push the Department of Justice to drop the cases filed against him.

As Germain stated, the multiple federal cases Trump is facing are solid and his only path to victory may be having them shut down.

ALSO READ: 'People have had enough': Here are the 3 'big-picture' reasons why Kamala Harris will win

Speaking with Newsweek's Sean O'Driscoll, Germain pointed to the stolen government documents case filed by special counsel Jack Smith that Trump-appointed Judge Aileen Cannon has dismissed, with her ruling currently under appeal.

"If Trump loses the election, he is in serious jeopardy in the federal criminal cases, especially the documents case if Judge Cannon's dismissal under the appointments clause is reversed, or corrected by the Justice Department, following the appeal," he explained.

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Watch: Trump's much-anticipated podcast with Joe Rogan

Donald Trump made a stop on the Joe Rogan Experience on Friday during a swing through Texas.

The former president sat down with the podcast host for the much-anticipated, wide-ranging interview that lasted nearly three hours.

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Jeff Bezos just taught American businessmen a 'lesson': Bulwark editor

Billionaire CEO Jeff Bezos’ decision to scrap the Washington Post's 36-year tradition of endorsing a presidential candidate is a lesson for business leaders around the world seeing him “getting in line” with the former president, a columnist wrote Friday.

The editorial referred to it as “signaling his submission” to Donald Trump,

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'Imminent catastrophic public danger': Hundreds of doctors sound new alarm about Trump

Less than two weeks before voters head to the polls to choose between Donald Trump and Vice President Kamala Harris, a concerned group of mental health experts issued a new warning about the former president.

Operating under "Duty to Warn," 233 mental health professionals signed off on a letter to be published in the New York Times, calling Trump an "imminent catastrophic public danger" to the world should he be re-elected based upon recent evidence on display in his public appearances.

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'Insane': Ex-Republican stunned over failed GOP 'gambit' involving Aileen Cannon

Florida Attorney General Ashley Moody's "apparent gambit" to shove an anti-Justice Department lawsuit in front of a Trump-appointed judge has spurred accusations of corruption from a former Republican lawmaker.

Moody appears to have sought out Aileen Cannon, the federal judge who dismissed former President Donald Trump's classified documents case, by filing to her division a demand to investigate his accused attempted assassin Ryan Routh, Politico reporter Josh Gerstein said Thursday.

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'Fixated': Fox News diss has reportedly left Trump obsessing over low-level Harris aide

Donald Trump and his camp of aides has become “fixated” on a barely-known Kamala Harris aide who criticized him on Fox News, the Washington Post reported Wednesday.

The low-level adviser has been attacked more than three dozen times in just three weeks, the report states.

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Controversial Ohio AG announces six voter fraud indictments two weeks from Election Day

Ohio Attorney General Dave Yost announced six indictments for voter fraud Tuesday stemming from referrals made by Secretary of State Frank LaRose earlier this year. Even as Yost insisted on the importance of the investigations and prosecutions he sought to calibrate the scope of the issue.

Voting is a “sacred right” Yost insisted, and the six charges represent less than 1% of the referrals made by LaRose’s office. The AG added he doesn’t expect jail time in any of the cases and expressed minor frustrations with the quality of referrals.

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'This election is different': Bill Gates leaps into 2024 race with massive donation

After decades of staying out of politics, billionaire Microsoft co-founder and global philanthropist Bill Gates is reportedly getting involved in the 2024 election — with a $50 million contribution to the effort to elect Vice President Kamala Harris.

According to The New York Times, Gates, who is typically withdrawn and secretive about his politics and has not made a public endorsement in the election, meant for the contribution to be kept out of the public eye, contributing the funds to a so-called "dark money" political nonprofit, Future Forward USA Action.

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Allies urge battleground GOP-controlled legislatures to guarantee a Trump win

Far-right allies of former President Donald Trump are calling on the state legislature in North Carolina and other closely contested presidential battleground states where Republicans hold control to short-circuit the popular vote and directly award the state’s 16 electoral votes to Trump.

Ivan Raiklin, a retired Army lieutenant colonel known for pushing a similar plan four years ago to pressure then-Vice President Mike Pence to throw the 2020 election, made the pitch during an appearance at the final stop of the ReAwaken America Tour, a roadshow that mixes evangelical Christianity, conspiracy theories and slavish devotion to Trump, on Oct. 18.

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'He’s mentally ill:' NY laughs ahead of Trump's Madison Square Garden rally

KINGSTON, NY — Former President Donald Trump’s upcoming Madison Square Garden rally is a joke, if a “depressing” one, to many New York business owners.

Tuesday, as the sun was still rising on a brisk, windless fall morning at the Wiltwyck Golf Club, down-ballot congressional candidates made their clunky pitches to local business owners, who sometimes found themselves more fixated on the buffet of eggs, bacon and quasi-fresh fruit laid out for them than on the politicians at the lectern.

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'What gives?' Conservative points to Trump internal polls that raise red flags

Former President Donald Trump's campaign recently released internal polls showing their candidate winning by an average of two points in major swing states.

However, The National Review's Henry Olsen peeked a bit behind the curtain of the polls and found that some of the numbers simply do not add up.

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New GA rules still in play with Harris-Trump election showdown now fast and furious

The ongoing fight over the recent attempted makeover of how counties run elections by the Georgia State Election Board could be left up to the state’s highest court to decide whether the panel overstepped its authority.

The Georgia Republican Party and the National Republican Committee are requesting the Georgia Supreme Court to make a final call on whether a slew of new requirements will be enforced by the state with just over two weeks until Election Day. The GOP’s lawyers aim to overturn a Fulton County judge’s ruling Wednesday that blocks the State Election Board from enacting several new rules for the Nov. 5 general election unless the state Supreme Court rules otherwise.

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'His brain is so broken': Trump labeled 'not well' after new verbal slip-up at town hall

Trump repeatedly insisted on Sunday that he has "no cognitive," failing to complete a sentence that was almost certainly intending to say he had no cognitive problem, leading to intense mockery online.

Trump over the weekend held a town hall in Lancaster, Pennsylvania, where he delivered remarks while sitting. After that event, the 78-year-old former president was ridiculed for saying, "I'm not 80 and I'm not that close to 80," in the course of insulting President Joe Biden about his age.

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