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'Five-alarm fire': Ex-Trump aide shows how ex-president will react to Colorado ruling

Trump's going to sound the alarms.

Shortly after Colorado's Supreme Court ruled that Donald Trump's name would be scratched from the state's 2024 presidential ballot, the spin wheels started turning for former White House Communications Director Alyssa Farah Griffin.

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Trump is blindsided by ballot ruling — and it could affect his criminal defenses: analyst

The Colorado Supreme Court ruled on Tuesday that former President Donald Trump is ineligible to appear on the state primary ballot under the Insurrection Clause of the 14th Amendment, partially reversing a lower court decision and all but guaranteeing the U.S. Supreme Court will have to step in on the issue and settle the matter.

This was not what Trump was expecting to happen, said reporter Hugo Lowell on MSNBC — and it could have bearing not just on his ballot eligibility, but on how he can defend against the criminal cases from the special counsel and Fulton County.

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Trump appears nervous about upcoming E. Jean Carroll case — here's why

Donald Trump seems to be running scared when it comes to his E. Jean Carroll case in New York.

The Daily Beast revealed Tuesday that Trump's lawyers are trying to stop an expert witness testifying at the trial. Ironically, it's the same expert who outlined the calculations necessary to understand the damages owed by Rudy Giuliani to Shaye Moss and Ruby Freeman.

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Colorado top court says Trump can't appear on ballot in insurrectionist ban challenge

Colorado's Supreme Court ruled Tuesday that Donald Trump's name cannot appear on the state's presidential ballot in 2024, reports show.

The court ruled for the watchdog group Citizens for Responsibility and Ethics in Washington, which challenged Trump's eligibility under the 14th Amendment's ban on insurrectionist from holding elected office, according to a court filing.

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Appeals court just signaled the 'end to Trump's dirty game of delay': legal expert

The federal Court of Appeals is blowing the whistle on Trump's legal slow-walking strategy to buy time until election day in November 2024.

Former federal prosecutor Glenn Kirschner marveled at the pace that the D.C. Court of Appeals, which he said is moving to essentially expedite Trump's federal election subversion case to keep to its March 4 start date.

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Trump loyalists fail to get Brad Raffensperger investigated over ex-president's 2020 loss

The Georgia State Election Board will not move forward with a push by GOP activists and Trump loyalists to investigate Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger, reported The Atlanta Journal-Constitution on Tuesday.

"The State Election Board deadlocked on opening an investigation of Raffensperger on a 2-2 vote, short of the majority required. The board then voted unanimously to ask the General Assembly to clarify whether it has the power to police Raffensperger, a Republican who certified the 2020 vote count," reported Mark Niesse.

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Ex-FBI official warns of unprecedented violence from Trump's 'hardcore' supporters

Former FBI official Frank Figliuzzi cautioned that more than any time in recent history stopping far-right domestic terrorism has been incredibly challenging.

As the former assistant director for counterintelligence, Figliuzzi was among many of those who came together under former FBI Director Robert Mueller, who was in charge of changing the FBI after Sept. 11, 2001.

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Ex-Proud Boy leader gets 3 years in prison for rioting on Jan 6: report

A former leader of the far-right group Proud Boys was sentenced to prison Tuesday for his role in the Jan. 6 Capitol riot, according to a new report.

Charles Donohoe, 35, was sentenced to three years and four months after pleading guilty to conspiring with other Proud Boy members to obstruct a joint session of Congress for certifying President Joe Biden’s victory in the 2020 election, according to the Associated Press.

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Ex-Republican lawmaker warns Fox News viewers Trump would ‘unravel the rule of law’

Fox News viewers received Monday night a dire warning from former Rep. Liz Cheney (R-WY) about America’s future should Donald Trump regain the White House.

“We know what he will do, he has already done it,” Cheney told host Bret Baier. “I think it’s a very real concern that he would take steps very quickly that would unravel the rule of law.”

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Jenna Ellis’ Georgia plea deal may not save her from disbarment

Like fellow co-defendants Kenneth Chesebro and Sidney Powell, attorney Jenna Ellis is avoiding state prison by agreeing to a plea deal in Fulton County, Georgia District Attorney Fani Willis' RICO/election interference case against former President Donald Trump.

But for these lawyers, there may be non-criminal repercussions to admitting that they lied when they promoted Trump's false claim that the 2020 presidential election was stolen from him.

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Ex-Fox host tries to strongarm Trump into dropping potential vice president pick

A former Fox network host is threatening to pull his support of Donald Trump if he doesn't meet certain demands.

In an interview with Tim Pool at the Turning Point USA conference, Tucker Carlson revealed that he wouldn't back Trump if Nikki Haley was the vice presidential running mate.

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GOP senator: 'I'm mad' Trump's Nazi-esque rhetoric 'wasn't tougher'

While many Republicans in the United States Senate expressed squeamishness about former President Donald Trump describing immigrants in the same way that Adolf Hitler once described Jews, Sen. Tommy Tuberville (R-AL) thinks the former president needs to go even farther than that.

In an interview with The Independent's Eric Michael Garcia, Tuberville said that Trump could have gone much farther than claiming that immigrants are "poisoning the blood" of America.

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Being linked to Trump has now cost his attorneys $150M: report

Donald Trump's attorneys have now been fined or penalized more than $150 million for participating in efforts to help the former president overturn his election loss, and many of them are still unable to pay ruinous legal fees.

Rudy Giuliani was ordered to pay more than $148 million in damages last week for defaming two Georgia election workers, and he had previously been ordered to pay more than $133,000 in legal fees in the case, and other attorneys for the ex-president have problems of their own, reported Forbes.

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