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Another state now considering 14th Amendment challenge to Trump’s ballot eligibility

Former President Donald Trump's legal team will soon have to make their case for Trump to be an eligible candidate on the 2024 ballot in yet another state.

On Friday, CNN reporter Marshall Cohen tweeted that the Massachusetts Ballot Commission has announced a meeting next Thursday to weigh a 14th Amendment challenge to the former president's candidacy in 2024.

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New Trump filing gives glimpse at ex-president's arguments in docs case: report

If the secret documents, that Trump is alleged to have lied about stashing at Mar-a-Lago in defiance of the law, compromised national security, his attorneys want to know about it.

The defense team is seeking from special counsel Jack Smith new information, assessment of any damage to national security, "tracking information," and more details to explain the nexus of how the docs in question relate to national defense, according to a New York Times report.

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Trump's fraud trial stunt was just used against him in another case: expert

Donald Trump may be proud of a stunt he pulled at his civil fraud trial during closing arguments, but one legal expert pointed out Friday that the former president is already paying a price in another major case.

Trump, who is currently facing several criminal indictments, had his day in court for his alleged civil fraud. During the end of that trial, however, he snuck his way into delivering parting words based on his political agenda, something Justice Engoron previously vowed he wouldn't let happen.

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Jack Smith allegations may present new obstacle for prosecuting Donald Trump

Donald Trump's attorneys suggested at his presidential immunity hearing this week they might take up a long-shot pot-shot at special counsel Jack Smith's eligibility to prosecute their client, a new report shows.

D.C. Circuit Judge J. Michelle Childs this week asked Trump's attorney to state his position on a challenge — filed with the Supreme Court last month by Reagan-era Attorney General Ed Meese — contending Smith's appointment was not constitutional, the Washington Times reports.

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Trump among those forced to cancel campaign events due to massive Iowa winter storm

As a brutal winter storm bears down on Iowa, former President Donald Trump is one of many candidates forced to cancel campaign events ahead of the caucuses next week, reported NBC News on Friday evening.

"Former President Donald Trump, former U.N. Ambassador Nikki Haley, Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis and former Arkansas Gov. Asa Hutchinson were all forced to cancel campaign events," said the report. However, businessman Vivek Ramaswamy is attempting to move forward with campaign events regardless.

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Trump's rant at end of trial could doom his appeal in fraud case: report

Donald Trump put his New York real estate empire in jeopardy when he broke into a 5-minute rant in the middle of his $370 million civil fraud trial, legal experts told the Messenger Friday.

That’s because, according to Columbia University Law Professor John Coffee, the case is most like headed to an appellate court that will likely be less than pleased with his closing argument antics.

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'You may have a point': Judge destroys Rudy Giuliani's defense in Trump criminal case

Rudy Giuliani's attorney crashed and burned in court Friday, as he tried to file a motion to raise concerns about double jeopardy — and was immediately swatted down as the judge poked a very simple hole in his argument, noted legal analyst Katie Phang.

Giuliani, a close associate of former President Donald Trump who served as a federal prosecutor and the mayor of New York City, is one of several co-defendants charged in the Fulton County, Georgia election racketeering case.

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Revealed: The Trump allies who reportedly raked in millions from Jan. 6 behind the scenes

A network of pro-Trump operatives made money off the election conspiracy theory rallies that led up to and inflamed passions of the attack on the Capitol on January 6, according to a new analysis by Mother Jones released on Friday.

"About 1,300 Americans have been charged with crimes for actions related to January 6," wrote Dan Friedman. "That includes Trump, whose false allegations of election fraud were the main cause of the attack. But the insurrection was made possible by another group of people — a web of political operatives ... who personally profited by helping to assemble and mislead the mob that subsequently attacked the Capitol. These operatives raised funds, rented buses, paid for porta-potties, and gave speeches at the January 5 and 6 rallies in Washington, where tens of thousands of Trump supporters demanded that the election results be thrown out."

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Donald Trump scores legal victory as lawsuit against his family is neutered: report

A lawsuit accusing Donald Trump of orchestrating a video cellphone scam on his reality television show “Celebrity Apprentice” has been effectively shredded by a New York federal court judge, records and reports show.

The pyramid scheme lawsuit — which accused Trump and his three oldest children of hawking dud “Iris 5000” video chatting phones to unsuspecting suckers — was divvied up into three chunks and set to three different state courts, federal court records show.

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GOP allegations against Fani Willis are about to get their own hearing: report

A state judge in Georgia is scheduling a hearing to investigate the new affair allegations about Fulton County District Attorney Fani Willis and special prosecutor Nathan Wade, The Messenger reported on Friday.

"Fulton County Superior Court Judge Scott McAfee said at a wide-ranging hearing Friday that allegations of impropriety made in a recent filing by Mike Roman, a co-defendant in the case, will be discussed in mid- to late-February," reported Alessandro Marazzi Sassoon and Steve Reilly. "Roman, former President Donald Trump, and the 13 other remaining co-defendants have all pleaded not guilty to all charges."

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Trump lawyer knocked back as he demands Fani Willis turn over already released documents

Donald Trump’s lawyers Friday demanded the Fulton County District Attorney’s office hand over documents crucial to their defense in the Georgia election-racketeering case.

There was just one problem, which special counsel Nathan Wade was quick to point out.

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Trump's fraud trial speech should set alarm bells ringing for Jack Smith: op-ed

Donald Trump's “defense strategy” that resulted in his impromptu speech at the closing of his fraud trial Thursday is likely to cause significant problems in the cases being overseen by special counsel Jack Smith — especially the D.C. Jan. 6 case, Slate reported.

The D.C. case is a jury trial, and jurors' ability to filter out Trump's histrionics is questionable, according to Slate's Robert Katzberg.

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Judge hits Trump with massive bill over failed attempt to sue New York Times

Former President Donald Trump has been ordered to pay nearly half a million dollars to The New York Times to cover legal fees involved in a lawsuit he filed against them, Times reporter Susanne Craig revealed Friday.

The lawsuit, which was filed against The Times, Craig and her fellow reporters David Barstow and Russ Buettner, along with the ex-president's niece Mary Trump, alleged that the paper conspired in an "insidious plot" to obtain Trump's tax returns.

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