By Lisa Willis | March 24, 2023
"Lawyers will find ways to adapt," said Alex Arteaga-Gomez of Grossman Roth Yaffa Cohen. "The question is, how will the victims adapt?"
By Ellen Bardash | March 21, 2023
Counsel for Fox News and its parent corporation Fox Corp. maintained coverage of tampering allegations around the 2020 presidential election was presented in the proper context.
By Colleen Murphy | March 21, 2023
Joseph Donohue, deputy director of ELEC, testified before the Senate Budget and Appropriations Committee last Thursday and stated that the bill does contain many of his agency's recommendations, including expanded disclosure for independent expenditure committees, stronger parties with higher contribution limits, and an expanded pay-to-play law.
By Jeff Amy | The Associated Press | March 20, 2023
The filing, made Monday in Atlanta, argues that the Georgia law that allows for special grand juries is unconstitutionally vague because it doesn't say whether such a grand jury is handing criminal matters or civil matters. The lawyers also argue that the grand jury didn't sufficiently protect Trump's right to due process.
By Colleen Murphy | March 16, 2023
"You can call this 'The Elections Transparency Act' only in the sense that it is obvious what its purpose is—to eliminate Jeff Brindle, the executive director," said Brindle's attorney, Bruce I. Afran.
By The Associated Press | March 16, 2023
The Atlanta Journal-Constitution reported Wednesday that it spoke to five special grand jury members who said they heard a recording of a phone call between Trump and Georgia House Speaker David Ralston that had not previously been reported and has not been made public.
By Jane Wester | March 14, 2023
Ex-campaign workers argued they relied on direct and public statements that they were told they would have the chance to work through the presidential election in November 2020 even if Bloomberg was not the Democratic nominee.
Daily Report Online | Commentary
By Laurie Webb Daniel | March 14, 2023
The "Martha Mitchell Effect" is a term coined by a Harvard psychology professor that applies when someone's accurate account of events is characterized as delusional, resulting in a medical misdiagnosis (usually of a woman). That is what happened to Martha Mitchell, though in her case the label was falsely given to her.
By Michael R. Sisak | The Associated Press | March 14, 2023
"This is not revenge," Michael Cohen said. "This is all about accountability. He needs to be held accountable for his dirty deeds."
By Nicholas Riccardi | The Associated Press | March 9, 2023
Jenna Ellis acknowledged making 10 "misrepresentations" on television and Twitter during Trump's fight to stay in power after losing the 2020 election to President Joe Biden, according to the censure from the office of attorney regulation counsel in Colorado, where she is from.
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