Former President Trump back in court for closing arguments in NY civil fraud case Former President Trump's attorneys will make their final case, hoping to sway the judge on what penalties Trump, his family and their business should face.
In her own statement, Baldwin told Fox News Digital, "Donald Trump had his day in court. A jury of his peers saw that there was evidence beyond a reasonable doubt he was guilty. No one, including a former president, is above the law." National Republican Senatorial Committee (NRSC) spoke...
The former president faces 37 counts related to his alleged mishandling of classified documents and obstructing the investigation. CBS2's John Dias has the details.
But that "speedy" trial (which was originally scheduled to begin in a federal courtroom in Washington, D.C. tomorrow) ran into a roadblock earlier this year, after Trump's lawyers made a claim that echoed one made by a former president 50 years ago, when Richard Nixon told interviewer Dav...
5:30 p.m.After Trump appeared in court earlier Tuesday afternoon, the former president’s legal team spoke to reporters about the “insufficiency” of the case against him. “Today’s unsealing of this indictment shows that the rule of law died in this country,” said attorney Joe Tacopina...
The courthouse in New York's Bowery district - aka 'Skid Row' before its gentrification - has seen its share of society's sad cases through the years. A former president could hardly fall any further. And yet its to this setting that Donald Trump will...
The court in Atlanta sat beyond usual working hours as a grand jury decided whether or not to charge the former president. Trump narrowly lost toJoe BideninGeorgiaand his lawyers, including Giuliani, made false claims of election fraud.
Former President Donald Trump stands next to his attorney Todd Blanche during his plea hearing before Magistrate Judge Moxila Upadhyaya on charges that he orchestrated a plot to overturn his 2020 election loss, at federal court in Washington, D.C., Aug. 3, 2023, in a courtroom sketch. ...
When he silently walked into a Manhattan courtroom Tuesday afternoon, it was with a title neither he nor any former president in American history has had: criminal defendant. Though flanked by more than two dozen court officers and Secret Service agents, Trump was otherwise like an...
and whatever their proximity to sensitive domestic and national-security projects, the President does not have the power to excuse him or her from taking an action that the law requires," Judge Ketanji Brown Jackson of the U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia wrote in a 118-pag...