What could happen to Donald Trump's court cases?Donald Trump is the first convicted felon to win a US presidential election - and he is currently facing more legal cases.Friday 8 November 2024 21:05, UK ShareThis is a modal window.
Smith is also overseeing a prosecution in a Florida federal court in which Trump is accused of mishandling sensitive government records after leaving the White House in January 2021. That case was dismissed in July by U.S. District Judge Aileen Cannon, who said in a 93-page order...
John Haltiwanger
How has Trump tried to claim immunity in his cases? On 1 July 2024, the US Supreme Court sent Trump's claim he is immune from prosecution for his actions while presidentback to a lower court. This relates to the 6 January case, where while still president he encouraged his supporters...
What does it mean for Trump?Trump is busily trying to turn the impending indictment to his advantage. Over the weekend, he claimed (with no evidence) that he would be arrested on Tuesday. (That didn’t happen, but the indictment could still come soon.) Since then, Trump and other ...
Trump is effectively running to stay out of prison. An electoral victory would eliminate that possibility in the short term, and possibly forever.
Trump is charged with 34 counts of falsifying business records in the first degree in a 16-page indictment that was unsealed Tuesday as Trump appeared in a Manhattan courtroom for his arraignment. The basis of the indictment is the falsification of business records when Trump reimbursed Cohen for...
What Trump's Court Pick Means for Liberty #特朗普提名卡瓦诺# #JohnStossel# #ReasonTV# http://t.cn/EvRq95B
It's a significant reversal from recent history: President Joe Biden is struggling with young voters but performing better than most Democrats with older ones.
Donald Trump could face up to 20 years in prison for a racketeering charge connected with his attempt to overturn Joe Biden's 2020 victory in Georgia. Trump is facing 13 charges altogether in the Georgia case, which include making false statements, forgery and soliciting a public off...