Robert De Niro crumbled under pressure after holding a car crash presser in New York City alongside January 6 cop turned failed Democrat congressional candidate Harry Dunn, getting into a shouting match with hecklers and then fleeing the scene.
“You are gangsters!” De Niro shouted at Donald Trump supporters in the Big Apple. The 80-year-old Meet the Fockers actor tried to play the tough guy when he was called out for being washed up, screaming “Fuck you!” at the crowd.
He wilted quickly under a torrent of New York vitriol. One heckler in a MAGA hat yelled, “You’re a sofie! You’re a nobody! Your movies suck! You’re trash! You’re done after this, my guy!”
A woman concurred: “You’re a punk! You’re only a wise guy in the movies!”
“Don’t start crying on us, now,” a third heckler chimed in as De Niro shuffled away, surrounded by bodyguards with their hands on his shoulder and arms around his waist.
De Niro, Dunn, and others had been delivering anti-Trump speeches as the former president’s Manhattan trial drew to a close. The actor wailed that a reelected Trump would “never leave” office and “could destroy the world” while being drowned out by a car alarm.
Even Ron Filipkowski, editor-in-chief of the Joe Biden-linked MeidasTouch hoaxer organization, appeared embarrassed by the De Niro presser. He said the actor should “Do something else somewhere else some other time.”
Robert De Niro clashes with Trump supporters outside Manhattan courthouse
Robert De Niro crumbled under pressure after holding a car crash presser in New York City alongside January 6 cop turned failed Democrat congressional candidate Harry Dunn, getting into a shouting match with hecklers and then fleeing the scene.
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The bodies of a young missionary couple from the U.S. who were fatally attacked by gang members in Haiti are expected to be returned to Missouri this week, a spokesperson for the families said Sunday. Davy and Natalie Lloyd, along with Jude Montis, the local director of Missions in Haiti Inc., were killed last Thursday. The incident occurred in Lizon, a community in northern Port-au-Prince, after the group left a youth activity at a church. Natalie Lloyd is the daughter of Missouri State Representative Ben Baker (R).
Cassidy Anderson, speaking on behalf of the Lloyd and Baker families in a Facebook post, announced that transport has been secured for the bodies to arrive in Missouri by this Thursday. Anderson noted that arranging the security for the transfer would be challenging. Port-au-Prince has been experiencing significant gang violence, with gangs controlling 80 percent of the capital. Authorities are currently awaiting reinforcement from a Kenyan police force as part of a U.N.-backed operation to address the violence.
In a statement on the Missions in Haiti page, it was detailed that Davy Lloyd and his wife were leaving the church when they were attacked by gang members in three trucks. Davy Lloyd managed to call his family after being assaulted and tied up by the attackers. As individuals near the scene helped untie Davy, another wave of gunmen arrived, escalating the situation. The victims then attempted to seek cover in a house associated with the mission, which the gang subsequently attacked.
Sen. Josh Hawley (R-MO) urged Joe Biden in a Sunday letter to ensure adequate security for the transport. Former President Donald Trump also extended condolences to the families while addressing the Libertarian National Convention in Washington, D.C., on Saturday.
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The bodies of a young missionary couple from the U.S. who were fatally attacked by gang members in Haiti are expected to be returned to Missouri this week, a spokesperson for the families said Sunday. Davy and Natalie Lloyd, along with Jude Montis, the local director of Missions in Haiti Inc., were killed last Thursday. The incident occurred in Lizon, a community in northern Port-au-Prince, after the group left a youth activity at a church. Natalie Lloyd is the daughter of Missouri State Representative Ben Baker (R).
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Defense attorney Randy Zelin voiced his belief that the prosecution in former President Donald Trump’s hush money case failed to meet its evidentiary burden during a segment on CNN Tuesday morning. The network’s Kate Bolduan interviewed Zelin ahead of closing arguments in the case.
“The burden of proof is an important one to remind everyone: It’s on the prosecution, right? They need to prove beyond reasonable doubt that he commit[ed] — that Donald Trump broke the law. And you think after listening to all of this, you think they fell short. How?” Bolduan asked Zelin.
“They fell way short, because let’s start with reasonable doubt,” the legal analyst replied. “What is reasonable doubt? And it’s not simply a doubt based upon reason. Any time a human being needs to make an important decision in life, if you have enough information, for example, doctor says you need open heart surgery. ‘Doc, go ahead and schedule. I don’t have a reasonable doubt.’ Conversely, if I say ‘I appreciate it, but I need a second opinion, I need more information,’ that is having a reasonable doubt. There is reasonable doubt all over this case.”
Zelin further questioned the absence of key figures such as Keith Schiller and Allen Weisselberg in the proceedings. He also raised skepticism about the credibility of Michael Cohen, noting that Cohen had financial and personal motivations.
“Where is Keith Schiller? Where is Allen Weisselberg? How did Michael Cohen get away with stealing $30,000? Hold a pity party for him — made $4 million on this, thought he’d be chief of staff. He’s a fixer! If the plumber comes to my house to fix my leak, I could be home. That doesn’t mean I know how he’s doing it and what it’s taking to be fixed,” Zelin said.
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Defense attorney Randy Zelin voiced his belief that the prosecution in former President Donald Trump’s hush money case failed to meet its evidentiary burden during a segment on CNN Tuesday morning. The network's Kate Bolduan interviewed Zelin ahead of closing arguments in the case.
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Former President Donald J. Trump’s lead counsel, Todd Blanche, handled the defense team’s closing arguments on Tuesday. For over two weeks, a Manhattan jury has heard evidence from prosecutors and the defense alike regarding allegations that former President Trump allegedly made hush money payments to Stormy Daniels as part of an effort to influence the 2016 presidential election.
After long days of testimony and some fairly explosivemoments in the courtroom, Blanche’s summation began much like his opening argument a little over two weeks ago, stressing that the prosecution cannot meet the burden of proof.
‘THE BURDEN OF PROOF.’
“I started out by saying something that I’m going to repeat to you right now. It’s as true right now as it was on April 22. And that is President Trump is innocent,” Blanche told jurors. He added: “He did not commit any crimes, and the district attorney has not met their burden of proof — period. The evidence is all in.”
The Trump defense attorney stressed the weakness of District Attorney Alvin Bragg‘s case. Blanche told the jury, “The evidence should leave you wanting more. You should want and expect more than the testimony of Michael Cohen.”
“You should demand more than the testimony of Keith Davidson, an attorney who really was just trying to extort money from President Trump in the lead-up to the 2016 election,” the defense attorney added.
ALL ABOUT THE DOCUMENTS.
As he continued his closing argument, Blanche reiterated that at its core, District Attorney Bragg‘s case is one about documents and nothing else. He stressed that the testimony of Stormy Daniels has no bearing on the case or charges. “This case is about documents. It’s a paper case. This case is not about an encounter with Stormy Daniels 18 years ago,” he told the jury.
Blanche also stressed that the alleged encounter, according to former President Trump, never even occurred in the manner that Daniels claims.
Shifting back to Cohen, Blanche told the jury they must determine if the former President “had anything to do with how payments to Michael Cohen” were recorded or “booked on his personal ledger for his personal account at Trump Tower.” He reiterated to the jury that at the time, Trump wasn’t even living at Trump Tower but was instead serving as President of the United States and living in the White House in Washington, D.C.
“The invoices were all submitted by Michael Cohen,” Blanche argued. He continued: “You’re going to hear me talk a lot about Michael Cohen today, and that should not surprise you. You cannot convict President Trump of any crime beyond a reasonable doubt on the words of Michael Cohen.”
‘COHEN LIED TO YOU.’
While the defense’s closing began with a plodding start, Blanche finally delivered blows to Michael Cohen as the prosecution‘s star witness. “They were lies. Pure and simple,” he said of Cohen’s testimony. Blanche stressed that no evidence was presented that backed up Cohen’s assertions, and even more damning, there were no credible witnesses presented who could corroborate what Cohen claimed.
“There were key conversations, key interactions that he claimed he had with Dylan Howard, with Keith Schiller, Allen Weisselberg. Those are important,” Blanche told the jury before hamming home: “Keith Schiller, Dylan Howard, Allen Weisselberg were not witnesses in this trial.”
The defense attorney continued, explaining to jurors that to convict, the prosecution would have needed to demonstrate that there were false entries on the payment paperwork and that Trump had intended to defraud. “The records were not false, and there was no intent to defraud,” Blanche stressed.
“Cohen typically wrote ‘for services rendered.’ But here’s the thing, and I don’t even think there’s a dispute about this, Cohen was rendering services to Trump as his personal attorney,” Blanche contended. While acknowledging that invoices were at times stapled to checks presented to Trump to sign, the lead defense counsel added: “General practice is not proof beyond a reasonable doubt.”
“Cohen lied to you,” Blanche emphasized to the jury, pausing on each word before repeating: “Cohen lied to you.”
CATCH, KILL, & ELECTION INFLUENCE.
Blanche stressed that the alleged “catch and kill” plot with David Pecker and American Media, Inc. (AMI) was anything but. “This is the same thing AMI has been doing for decades. They had been doing it for President Trump since the 90s,” Blanche argued. He added: “This was good business for them — a mutually beneficial relationship with celebrities.”
Noting that AMI’s flagship publication is little more than a supermarket tabloid, Blanche said: “The idea, even if there was something wrong with it, the idea that sophisticated people like President Trump and David Pecker believed that positive stories in the National Enquirer could influence the 2016 election is preposterous.” He emphasized that the total circulation of the National Enquirer in 2016 was just 350,000.
“Millions and millions of people voted in the 2016 election, so the idea that they really thought that this meeting in 2015 at Trump Tower would ultimately influence the election makes no sense,” Trump’s lead counsel contented before continuing: “The idea that the National Enquirer could criminally influence the election by republishing stories that had already been out there in other forms should make you shake your head. It makes no sense.”
Blanche, now showing the jury a PowerPoint presentation, outlined how the alleged “catch and kill” scheme was never discussed during the August 2015 meeting with David Pecker. “It wasn’t even discussed at the time the conspiracy was formed. No financial discussion. No discussion about catch and kill. Think about that,” he said.
‘AN AXE TO GRIND.’
Closing out his summation, Blanche took full aim at Michael Cohen‘s credibility. The defense attorney argued that Cohen had made the payments to Stormy Daniels of his own accord in a scheme to ingratiate himself with Trump in the hopes he’d receive a high-ranking position in the White House. Hitting on Cohen’s motivation to lie to a court again, Blanche argued: “He told you he didn’t want a job in the administration. But that was a lie, another lie.”
“Mr. Cohen had an axe to grind because he didn’t appreciate what President Trump did and did not do for him,” he added. After reviewing the testimony of Cohen’s former legal adviser, Robert Costello, Blanche told the jury: “I don’t know how many lies is enough lies to reject Mr. Cohen’s testimony.”
Next, Blanche reminded the jury of the pivotal moment where he exposed Cohen for having lied regarding his alleged phone call with Trump regarding the Daniels payment. “That was his sworn testimony. It was a lie… This isn’t a little lie. This was a lie about the charged conduct involving Ms. Daniels,” Blanche said, adding: “He told you he talked to President Trump on October 24 at 8:02 PM, updating him about the Daniels situation. That was a lie, and he got caught red-handed.”
“He’s repeatedly lied under oath. He’s lied to his family. He lied to his wife about the home equity line of credit … he lied to his banker,” Blanche said of Cohen, concluding: “He’s literally like an MVP of liars.”
TEN REASONS FOR REASONABLE DOUBT.
In the conclusion of his summation, Blanche laid out ten reasons for reasonable doubt to the jury that he had covered throughout his closing arguments. The list included:
Cohen created the allegedly fraudulent invoices, not Trump;
There’s no evidence Trump knew the invoices were sent;
There is “absolutely” no evidence that Trump had any intent to defraud;
The prosecution has not shown an attempt to commit or conceal another crime;
There is “absolutely” evidence of an agreement to influence the 2016 election;
AMI would have run the doorman’s story no matter what if it was true;
Karen McDougal did not want her story published. Thus, it was not a “catch and kill” plot;
Stormy Daniels‘s allegations were already public well before the 2016 election;
Prosecutors never present anything showing manipulation of evidence;
Cohen cannot be trusted: “He’s the human embodiment of reasonable doubt.”
MERCHAN INTEVENES.
Democrat-aligned JudgeJuanMerchan, for the most part, gave the defense enough room to make its case in its closing arguments. However, when Blanche, at the end of his summation, told the jury, “You cannot send someone to prison, you cannot convict somebody, based upon the words of Michael Cohen,” the prosecution was quick to object with an irate Merchan sustaining the objection.
“You know that making a comment like that is highly inappropriate. It is simply not allowed. Period. It’s hard for me to imagine that was accidental in any way,” Merchan said, scolding Blanche for making the “outrageous” comment at the end of his summation.
Prosecutor Joshua Steinglass told the judge he believed Blanche’s comments were “a blatant and wholly inappropriate” effort to influence the jury and gain sympathy for former President Trump. Judge Merchan told the court that he’d give a curative instruction to the jury regarding Blanche’s prison comments.
After lunch, Judge Merchan released the instruction: “In the defense summation, Mr. (Todd) Blanche asked in substance that you not send the defendant to prison. That comment was improper, and you must disregard it. In your deliberations, you may not discuss, consider, or even speculate as to matters related to sentence or punishment.”
THE PROSECUTION AT BAT.
Following Blanche’s summation, prosecutor Joshua Steinglass made his closing arguments before the jury. Unlike the defense’s closing, which lasted around two and a half hours, the prosecution announced that its summation would take four to four and a half hours. In reality, it went on for six, with much exasperation felt across the entire court, from jury to journalists, judge to stenographer.
“In his opening, Mr. Colangelo told you that this case, at its core, is about a conspiracy and a cover-up,” Steinglass told the jurors, adding: “We asked you to remember to tune out the noise and to ignore the sideshows. And if you’ve done that, you will see the people have presented powerful evidence of the defendant’s guilt.”
Steinglass’s opening was even slower and plodding than Blanche’s. His summation began with an extensive review of phone records and recall of alleged conversations that Michael Cohen had testified to. “Some of the conversations in this case took place in person, so there wouldn’t be a phone call or recording. The fact that there isn’t a record of a particular phone call does not mean a particular conversation did not take place,” the lead prosecutor told the jury.
THE COHEN PROBLEM.
Steinglass tried to patch some of the holes in the prosecution‘s case that had been exposed in Blanche’s closing. He told the jury that the District Attorney’s case wasn’t reliant on the testimony of disgraced attorney Michael Cohen. “The conspiracy to unlawfully influence the 2016 election — you don’t need Michael Cohen to prove that one bit,” Steinglass insisted.
Instead, the prosecutor told jurors that David Pecker‘s testimony — which was by no stretch a slam dunk for Bragg‘s team — was the truly “utterly damning” evidence. “Mr. Pecker has absolutely no reason to lie here; he still considers Mr. Trump a friend and mentor, and yet his testimony was utterly devastating,” Steinglass continued, claiming that Pecker’s words “eliminates the whole notion that this was politics as usual.”
STORMY DAMAGE CONTROL.
Shoring up another weakness in the prosecution’s case, Steinglass next addressed the testimony of Stormy Daniels. “To be sure, some witnesses want to see Donald Trump convicted,” he told jurors before excusing their motivation, stating: “They’ve been attacked by the defendant on social media.”
Continuing, Steinglass defended Daniels‘s credibility, telling the court: “They’ve shamed her. They’ve tried to suggest her story has changed over the years. It has not, at least not in any way that’s significant.” However, Steinglass conceded: “To be sure, there were parts of her testimony that were cringeworthy.”
Steinglass told jurors that some aspects of Daniels‘s story ring too true to have been fabricated. He pointed to the layout of the hotel room and alleged contents of former President Trump‘s toiletry bag.
THE UNDERLYING CRIME?
Once Steinglass believed he had done enough to put out the fires in the prosecution‘s case set by defense attorney Todd Blanche’s closing, he pressed into the core of Bragg‘s case against Trump.
For over two weeks, the prosecution has avoided describing the underlying crime allegedly committed by former President Trump. Steinglass finally broached the subject in his closing, though he still never exactly stated what federal infraction was committed.
“Michael Cohen is understandably angry. That to date, he’s the one who’s paid the price for his role in this conspiracy,” the prosecutor said. In this simple statement, Steinglass insinuated to the jury that former President Trump is guilty of the same crimes as Michael Cohen. However, while Cohen did plead guilty to a campaign finance infraction, his federal prison stint was due to tax fraud crimes he had committed in an unrelated case.
In essence, Steinglasss hoped to confuse the jury into believing the federal tax charges against Cohen were actually regarding the hush money payments to Stormy Daniels. “Anyone in Cohen’s shoes would want the defendant to be held accountable,” he told the jury, adding: “and when it went bad, the defendant cut him loose, dropped him like a hot potato and tweeted out to the world that Mr. Cohen was a scumbag.”
THE THIEF.
Shifting back to damage control, Steinglass addressed the shocking revelations that Michael Cohen had stolen upwards of $60,000 from the Trump Organization. “It’s true he was never charged with that. He’s also the one who brought it to everyone’s attention,” the prosecutor told jurors.
“Blanche said Cohen stole $60,000 because it was grossed up. So that means the defendant is trying to have it both ways, right? They’re denying the $420,000 was a reimbursement at all,” Steinglass argued. He continued: “Claiming payment for legal services rendered in 2016. But if that’s true, then there was no theft. He’s getting paid for legal services in 2017. They can call him a thief and claim this wasn’t really reimbursement, but not both.”
MAKING UP A CRIME.
Referring to the August 15 Trump Tower meeting, Steinglass said before the court: “The real game changer of this meeting was the catch-and-kill component. And that’s the illegal part. Because once money starts changing hands on behalf of a campaign, that’s federal election campaign finance violations.”
“Blanche said there is nothing wrong with trying to influence an election. It’s called democracy,” Steinglass said before contending: “In reality, this agreement at Trump Tower was the exact opposite. It was the subversion of democracy.”
“Once AMI purchased stories on the candidate’s behalf, those purchases became unlawful campaign contributions,” Bragg’s lead prosecutor said. In an incredibly bizarre moment, Steinglass insisted that the payment made by AMI for the Trump doorman’s false story “was overt election fraud.”
The prosecutor’s assertion mimics that which the American people have already seen with the Congressional Democrats‘ witch hunt against former President Trump over the Russia collusion hoax. They insinuate a crime where there is none and call it election interference. When in reality, the actual election interference is their frivolous prosecution of the former President.
COHEN’S CRIMES OR TRUMP’S?
The next phase of Steinglass’s closing returned to Cohen. Again, the prosecution deployed the strategy of arguing Cohen’s crimes were former President Trump‘s crimes despite never offering convincing evidence that the former President knew of Cohen’s activities.
Steinglass presented the jury with the false paperwork that Cohen had submitted to his bank in creating Resolution Consultants, LLC. The prosecutor told the jury that Cohen had used false business records to open the account. It is important to note that Blanche, in his closing, emphasized that the jury only had Cohen’s word, a serial perjurer, that former President Trump knew of Cohen’s actions.
Pressing further, Steinglass moved through a list of phone calls between Cohen and former Trump Organization CFO Allen Weisselberg. The prosecutor claimed before the court that these calls were evidence enough of the scheme unfolding — though again, Steinglass did not provide evidence connecting Trump to the calls.
Pointing to a single call between Trump and Cohen that occurred before Cohen opened the business account, Steinglass told jurors, “This is damning right here.”
‘BORING!’
When the court took a short break at 5:00PM, former President Trump took to Truth Social to give his review of the prosecution’s closing argument against him. “BORING!” he posted.
NO CRIME? NO PROBLEM!
Following the brief evening break, Steinglass returned to his closing arguments. He asserted the prosecution did not have to prove former President Trump himself knowingly created false business record entries.
“We don’t have to prove that the defendant made and created the false entries himself,” the prosecutor contended before adding that Trump is guilty of creating false business records by virtue of being a part of the “reimbursement scheme. That is causing false entries.”
He next moved to the defense’s claim that the handwritten notes between Weisselberg and Trump Organization controller Jeffrey McConney did not simply address legal services rendered by Cohen. Instead, Steinglass contended: “They are the smoking guns. They completely blow out of the water the defense claim that the payments [are for] legal services rendered. I’m almost speechless that they’re trying to make this argument.”
Again, the prosecution tried to flip the U.S. legal system on its head. Steinglass told jurors it was the defense who had to prove the notes weren’t regarding reimbursement for Cohen‘s hush money payments to Daniels. It is important to note that in U.S. courts, the burden of proof is on the prosecution, not the defense.
PROSECUTION LOSES THE PLOT.
Pushing past 6PM, Steinglass’s summation continued to meander, almost taking the form of a filibuster. He read extensively from books published by Donald Trump, citing quotes about loyalty. From there, the prosecutor then began reading Trump’s social media posts in an effort to highlight how the former President treats those he views as disloyal.
The prosecution has used the loyalty argument on several occasions to insinuate that Trump didn’t need to direct his employees to commit crimes but rather that he created an environment where they understood they needed to, at times, act illegally on his behalf without his direct guidance. Again, this line of argument does not meet the burden of proof required for a conviction in a conventional criminal trial.
Hitting the final stretch, Steinglass, for the third time in his summation, walked the jury through a timeline of events — perhaps this final time not simply to reiterate his point but to remind them of key points of the prosecution’s case in the event they forgot after nearly five hours of testimony. It is honestly impressive the jury was even awake at this point.
After a series of unwelcome jokes about the length of his closing arguments and almost another hour rehashing the prosecution’s case, Steinglass’s summation ended.
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Former President Donald J. Trump's lead counsel, Todd Blanche, handled the defense team's closing arguments on Tuesday. For over two weeks, a Manhattan jury has heard evidence from prosecutors and the defense alike regarding allegations that former President Trump allegedly made hush money payments to Stormy Daniels as part of an effort to influence the 2016 presidential election. show more
The U.S. Secret Service has reportedly met with jail officials in New York to prepare for the possibility of former President Donald Trump being convicted in his ongoing hush-money case. According to a corrections source who spoke to CBS News, these preparations come as the Manhattan trial enters the final stages of closing arguments and jury deliberations.
If Trump is convicted, corrections officers would be responsible for protecting any Secret Service agents tasked with safeguarding him during any potential time behind bars. The location where Trump might serve jail time remains uncertain, though CBS noted that shorter sentences can be served at the Rikers Island complex, which has facilities often used for high-profile inmates.
Trump’s allies have expressed outrage over these developments, criticizing the case brought forward by Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg. They emphasized the political implications, noting that Trump is a presidential candidate.
“Today the government is trying to throw the leading candidate for President in prison on bogus charges in a city stacked with far-left jurors,” wrote political commentator Robby Starbuck on X (formerly Twitter). “If Biden puts Trump in jail, Trump will win in a landslide we haven’t seen since Reagan,” argued social media influencer Rogan O’Handley, known as “DC Draino.”
The case revolves around 34 felony counts of falsifying business records, allegedly to cover up damaging information in a scheme intended to influence the 2016 election. Trump, who has pleaded not guilty, is also handling other legal challenges while gearing up for a potential rematch against Joe Biden in the 2024 presidential election.
Should Trump be convicted, it is expected that the presiding judge, Juan Merchan, would schedule a separate hearing for sentencing. Merchan is a Biden donor with direct familial ties to the Democratic Party.
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The U.S. Secret Service has reportedly met with jail officials in New York to prepare for the possibility of former President Donald Trump being convicted in his ongoing hush-money case. According to a corrections source who spoke to CBS News, these preparations come as the Manhattan trial enters the final stages of closing arguments and jury deliberations.
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Failed Libertarian Party presidential candidate Dr. Michael Rectenwald admitted he consumed an edible before delivering a speech attacking Donald Trump. Following Trump’s appeal to convention attendees to back him and defeat Joe Biden and the radical left together, Rectenwald joined fellow candidates on stage and claimed the America First leader perpetrated “egregious offenses against our freedom.”
“How high are you?” heckled a member of the audience, with many convention attendees having been won over by Trump’s pledge to commute the sentence of Silk Road founder Ross Ulbricht if reelected.
“Not high enough! Hey, I’m living liberty today!” Rectenwald replied, later confirming to the press he had taken a cannabis edible before his speech.
“This was not some sort of a major political scandal, okay. I wasn’t found in bed with Stormy Daniels,” he joked, lamely.
Reporters noted Rectenwald performed poorly on stage alongside rival candidates Mike Ter Maat and Chase Oliver.
Oliver, a former Democrat who supports Drag Queen Story Hour, gender transitions for children, and open borders, ultimately won the nomination.
Trump told convention attendees they should nominate or at least vote for him, saying it was “time to be winners.”
“Maybe you don’t want to win,” he told some attendees who howled at his proposal. “If you want to lose… keep getting your three percent every four years,” he added.
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Failed Libertarian Party presidential candidate Dr. Michael Rectenwald admitted he consumed an edible before delivering a speech attacking Donald Trump. Following Trump's appeal to convention attendees to back him and defeat Joe Biden and the radical left together, Rectenwald joined fellow candidates on stage and claimed the America First leader perpetrated "egregious offenses against our freedom."
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Closing arguments in former President Donald Trump‘s Manhattan “hush money” trial begin today, and the judge gave the jury the green light to convict him without agreeing on the underlying ‘predicate’ crime he committed.
First, into the legal weeds: Trump’s being charged for labeling “hush money” payments to adult actress Stormy Daniels as “legal fees.” That alone is just a misdemeanor crime, and the statute of limitations has already expired.
In order to revive this expired offense, Soros-back Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg combined the bookkeeping crime with a “predicate” crime — a separate alleged felony related to the 2016 election.
However, throughout the trial, the prosecution has not outlined what the alleged felony is.
Cue the corrupt judge:Judge Juan Merchan sided with the prosecution and ruled that the jury does not need to agree on the alleged felony in order to find Trump guilty.
Big picture:Trump faces 34 felony charges, potentially leading to 136 years in prison, hinging on whether the jury will believe he committed the predicate felony.
The last word goes to Donald Trump, who wrote on Truth Social: “The reason the Radical, highly Conflicted Judge Juan Merchan had to come up with three FAKE options for the jury to choose from, without requiring them to be unanimous, which is completely UNAMERICAN AND UNCONSTITUTIONAL, is because the Corrupt, Soros backed D.A., Alvin Bragg, couldn’t come close to proving that any crime was committed. THERE WAS NO CRIME… This is nothing but an Election Interfering Witch Hunt, and the American People know it! MAGA2024.”
Closing arguments in former President Donald Trump's Manhattan "hush money" trial begin today, and the judge gave the jury the green light to convict him without agreeing on the underlying 'predicate' crime he committed.
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Donald Trump reached out to the Libertarian Party conference at the weekend, urging them to lend him their votes to stop Joe Biden, Marxism, and communism, saying: “It’s time to be winners.” The former president won over many at the conference with a pledge to commute the sentence of Silk Road founder Ross Ulbricht. After the conference, the party leadership may have driven more Libertarian voters into Trump’s arms by selecting former Barack Obama and John Kerry supporter Chase Oliver as their nominee instead.
A review of Oliver’s social media history shows he holds several extreme left-wing views.
IMMIGRATION.
Oliver supports fully open borders or “free immigration.”
“Economic freedom demands the unrestricted movement of human as well as financial capital across national borders,” he declared in 2021, reiterating in 2023 that “If you support free markets, you should support freeimmigration.”
Economic freedom demands the unrestricted movement of human as well as financial capital across national borders.
Despite Libertarians’ traditional stance against big central government, Oliver supports the federal government imposing abortion “until the point of viability” in all 50 states.
“Viability” is a slippery standard, generally set at 24 to 26 or occasionally 28 weeks, although premature babies have survived as early as 21 weeks and a day.
DRAG QUEEN STORYTIME.
As an LGBTQ activist, Oliver has posted frequently about attending Pride and drag events. “I actually went to a ‘drag queen storytime’ event in Rome GA, [Marjorie Taylor Greene’s] district in NW Georgia,” he posted in 2022. “You know what I saw? Nothing controversial[.] A person in a big brightly colored costume reading a book about how people are special and unique and that’s a good thing,” he suggested.
“I went to a Pride event featuring a Drag Queen Storytime [a]nd there was no ‘grooming’ or sexualization. Just happy kids hearing a story about rainbows,” he claimed in another post.
He has also compared drag queens to Barney the Dinosaur and the Sesame Street Muppets, arguing they are “basically no different.”
TRANSITIONING KIDS.
Oliver does not believe children should be protected from social or medical gender transitions, saying he opposes taking “decisions away from parents, doctors, and patients.”
He has regularly claimed minors are never or at least seldom subject to transgender mutilation surgeries, which he terms “gender-affirming care,” but he is not opposed to them, saying: “At the end of the day, keep the state out.”
Oliver identifies as a “cisgender” gay man and Christian, claiming God “designed” him to be homosexual.
I trust the parents of trans/non binary people and their doctors more than I trust the state and it's bureaucracy.
Listen to actual parents and kids and doctors, not those who seek to use the power of the state to have their will be done.
Oliver is against “banning trans girls” — i.e., biological males — from competing against girls in school sports, calling this “big government.”
“It’s a shame and will harm the small number of trans athletes,” he complains.
Oliver has also claimed a “gender non-binary” child was “beaten to death in the girl’s bathroom” during an argument on X (formerly Twitter), telling his interlocutor, “maybe get your facts straight before commenting” on the case.
He was referring to Nex Benedict, who was not killed in the restroom fight nor from injuries resulting from it.
VAX MANDATES.
Despite being “vaccinated and boosted,” Oliver says state vaccine mandates are “wrong.” He supports corporate vaccine mandates, however, arguing bosses should have the right to fire unvaccinated workers and deny service to unvaccinated customers.
He has also advocated for at least some state support for corporate vaccine mandates, arguing governors should not be “giving unemployment benefits to people who decided to quit rather than abide by private businesses… requesting workers be vaccinated or tested regularly.”
CHINA FIRST.
Like many Libertarian ideologues, Oliver opposes protecting American workers from unfair competition with sweatshop economies, including explicitly anti-Libertarian states such as Communist China.
“[A] a tariff is a tax on all consumers and raises prices that we all pay,” he insisted in one pro-China rant, branding Trump — a billionaire business tycoon — a “failed businessman” and “economically illiterate.”
He believes all tariffs on imports should be removed, even from countries that impose their own tariffs against America.
WAR CRIMINAL TRUMP?
At the Libertarian convention, a highly agitated Oliver told National Pulse reporter Will Upton that Trump is a “war criminal” who engages in “authoritarian rhetoric.”
In fact, Trump is the first U.S. President since the 1970s not to lead the country into any new wars. He has also argued consistently for de-escalation and a peace deal to end the Ukraine war, while Oliver has argued for allowing American citizens to travel to Ukraine to join the conflict “unfettered” while permitting unlimited Ukrainian, Iranian, Yemeni, and even Russian asylum immigration to the U.S.
Libertarian Presidential candidate Chase Oliver goes on a rant calling Donald Trump a war criminal for defeating ISIS. pic.twitter.com/oI1a3HYNQz
Donald Trump reached out to the Libertarian Party conference at the weekend, urging them to lend him their votes to stop Joe Biden, Marxism, and communism, saying: "It's time to be winners." The former president won over many at the conference with a pledge to commute the sentence of Silk Road founder Ross Ulbricht. After the conference, the party leadership may have driven more Libertarian voters into Trump's arms by selecting former Barack Obama and John Kerry supporter Chase Oliver as their nominee instead.
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Texas House Speaker Dade Phelan, who is facing off against David Covey in today’s primary run-off election, was arrested for driving while intoxicated (DWI) in 1999, newly released court records obtained by The National Pulse have revealed.
Phelan infamously appeared to be intoxicated on the floor of the state legislature last year shortly before the anti-Trump Republican pursued an impeachment action against the state’s attorney general, Ken Paxton.
According to the records, Phelan was arrested in Travis County, Texas, in October 1999 for drunk driving. The future Texas House Speaker refused a breathalyzer test. As a result, Phelan — then 24 years old — had his driver’s license suspended and was ordered to complete the Texas Drug and Alcohol Driving Awareness Program. Despite having his license suspended, Phelan applied for and received an occupational driver’s license, allowing him to drive between the hours of 7AM and 7PM for his work as a real estate agent.
Phelan is perhaps best known as the Texas Republican who led the impeachment against the state’s conservative Attorney General Ken Paxton, a staunch ally of former President Donald J. Trump. Despite the Texas Speaker’s best efforts, Paxton survived the dubious impeachment after the case against him collapsed during the trial in the State Senate.
Several witnesses brought by Phelan’s impeachment managers either recanted their prior statements entirely or admitted that they had no evidence of the accusations they leveled against Paxton. Attorney General Paxton credited The National Pulse with helping expose the false charges against him.
In addition to his attacks on Paxton, Phelan has also scuttled several conservative legislative efforts undertaken by Governor GregAbbott (R-TX). In one instance, he blocked a 2023 effort to enact school choice despite it being a top issue for Abbott and receiving the backing of the Republican-controlled State Senate.
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Texas House Speaker Dade Phelan, who is facing off against David Covey in today's primary run-off election, was arrested for driving while intoxicated (DWI) in 1999, newly released court records obtained by The National Pulse have revealed.
Judge Aileen Cannon has denied Special Prosecutor Jack Smith‘s proposed gag order against former President Donald Trump, citing Smith‘s failure to adhere to “basic requirements.” Judge Cannon also wrote that Smith may face sanctions should he refuse to comply with certain requirements moving forward.
“Upon review of the Motion 581 [581-1], Defendant Trump’s procedural opposition 583, and the attached email correspondence between counsel [583-1], the Court finds the Special Counsel’s pro forma ‘conferral’ to be wholly lacking in substance and professional courtesy,” Cannon wrote. “It should go without saying that meaningful conferral is not a perfunctory exercise,” Cannon continued.
“Because the filing of the Special Counsel’s motion did not adhere to these basic requirements, it is due to be denied without prejudice,” she wrote.
Judge Cannon further declared that any future non-emergency motion “shall not be filed absent meaningful, timely, and professional conferral.” She laid out specific requirements for all certificates of conferral moving forward and declared that “[f]ailure to comply with these requirements may result in sanctions.”
Judge Cannon has become increasingly frustrated with Smith throughout his prosecution of Trump for the alleged mishandling of classified documents. Cannon recently blasted Smith for inconsistencies on his position regarding the sealing of evidence.
BREAKING: Judge Cannon, as expected, denies Jack Smith's proposed gag order, warns sanctions could be next if he keeps violating the rules. pic.twitter.com/T2Yxb1zvm6
Judge Aileen Cannon has denied Special Prosecutor Jack Smith's proposed gag order against former President Donald Trump, citing Smith's failure to adhere to "basic requirements." Judge Cannon also wrote that Smith may face sanctions should he refuse to comply with certain requirements moving forward.
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