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Trump impeachment: Senate falls short of majority needed to convict

Historic second Trump impeachment trial begins

Democrat Jamie Raskin opens the session by saying a president has to be accountable after leaving office
He says there is no room for a 'January exception' which enables a future president to hang on to power through violence
Raskin then played new, hard-hitting footage of Trump supporters ransacking the US Capitol on 6 January
Donald Trump faces a single charge of "incitement of insurrection" in a speech to supporters ahead of that deadly riot
It's his second impeachment trial - and the first time a president has gone on trial after leaving office
Trump's legal team has called the trial "absurd and unconstitutional" on the basis that he is now a civilian
Both sides will present arguments on the legality of the trial, with a vote on whether to proceed later on Tuesday

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Trump cannot be treated as a 'random' citizen

Impeachment manager David Cicilline. He was one of the two Democratic congressmen who began drafting the impeachment measure while sheltering in place during the riot.

Trump, Cicilline says, is not a "randomly selected private citizen" now being censured by lawmakers, but a former president, who is already treated differently as the one-time leader of the nation.

"For four years we trusted him with more power than anyone else on earth," he continues. "The former president who promised on a Bible to use his power faithfully. He can and should answer for whether he kept that promise while bound to it in office."

Cicilline adds that the danger of Trump has not "gone by".
 
The first full day of arguments in the Senate impeachment trial of former President Donald Trump were underway on Wednesday.

Tuesday’s proceedings focused on the constitutionality of holding impeachment proceedings for a former president, with the Senate voting 56-44 that the trial is legal.

The prosecution and defence will now have 16 hours each to present their case, with House impeachment managers going first.

They will argue that Trump’s campaign of misinformation to overturn the victory of President Joe Biden, and his comments to supporters before the US Capitol riot on January 6, amounted to ‘incitement of insurrection’.

After arguing that a president cannot be convicted in the Senate after leaving office, the defence is expected to focus on the argument that Trump’s statements are protected as free speech.

Neguse focuses on Trump phrases: ‘Election was stolen’, ‘stop the steal’, and ‘Fight like hell’

House manager Neguse said the prosecution will focus on three repeated phrases Trump used: The “election was stolen”, “Stop the steal”, and “fight like hell”.

Neguse called the riot “part of a carefully planned months long effort with a very specific instruction to show up on January 6, and get [his supporters] to fight the certification”.

“This mob was well orchestrated. Their conduct was intentional. They did it all in plain sight proudly openly and loudly, because they believed, they truly believed that they were doing this for him,” he said.

Neguse said Trump’s January 6 speech moments before the riot was a “call to arms. It was not rhetorical. Some of his supporters had been primed for many months.”

AL Jazeera
 
On day two of Donald Trump's Senate trial, the prosecutors had the spotlight to themselves.

The House impeachment managers presented new video footage as evidence of the brutality of what happened during the Capitol riots.

But Democrats made Donald Trump's Senate trial about more than just the events in Washington on 6 January.

They prosecuted a case against the president's conduct - in tweets and speeches - before, during and after election night 2020.

Here are some of the key takeaways.

'There was method to that madness'

Lead manager Jamie Raskin quickly picked up where he left off on Tuesday, using Trump's own words on the day of the Capitol insurrection to tie him to the unrest.

Trump was no "innocent bystander" on 6 January, he said, he was the "inciter-in-chief". Over many months, Trump had "praised, encouraged and cultivated violence".

The Democratic congressman said Trump's "remember this day forever" tweet while the Capitol was being ransacked were not words of sadness, but of celebration. Accusing the former president of watching the chaos unfold on TV "like a reality show", he went on to say: "This is a day that will live in disgrace in American history, unless you ask Donald Trump."

And if the Senate doesn't convict Trump and prohibit him from holding office in the future, Raskin concluded, such violence will happen again.

Key players in impeachment trialDid Trump's words at rally incite the riot?

From here, the managers laid out the details of their case, including more videos and accounts. But Raskin set the stage.

A full-bore attack on Trump's election claims

The Democrats want the senators to pass judgement on whether a president can call into question American electoral processes the way Trump did.

Such actions, Congressman Joaquin Castro said in his presentation, are dangerous to a democracy.

This is going to put Trump's legal team in a delicate situation.
 
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Democrats have concluded their arguments that Donald Trump incited the 6 January Capitol riot, warning "he can do this again" if he is not convicted.

Impeachment prosecutors on Thursday used rioters' own words to link Mr Trump to the violence while arguing the riot had caused long-term harm as well.

Democrats also presented accounts from police, staff, intelligence officials and foreign media to pursue their case.

The former president's defence team will present their arguments on Friday.

The Democratic-led House of Representatives impeached Mr Trump last month, accusing him of inciting the riot. Lawmakers from the House have been presenting their case to senators this week.

Mr Trump's lawyers have argued he was using his right to freedom of speech when declaring last November's presidential election fraudulent.

A two-thirds majority is required to convict Mr Trump in the evenly split 100-seat Senate, but an acquittal looks likely as the vast majority of Republican senators have remained loyal to him so far.

If Mr Trump is convicted, however, the Senate could also vote to bar him from holding elected office again.

The violent riot at the US Capitol, which saw five people lose their lives, was an attempt by Trump supporters to stop the election result being certified.

On Wednesday the trial was shown new footage of the violence Mr Trump is accused of inciting. Democrats sought to detail how Mr Trump sparked the attack on the Capitol and took senators step-by-step through the events of 6 January.

On Thursday, they embarked on the final point of their prosecution: the harm they say Mr Trump caused to property, people and democracy.

"Because impeachment, conviction and disqualification [from office] is not just about the past. It's about the future," Congressman Ted Lieu told the trial, after arguing Mr Trump also showed no remorse for his actions.

"It's making sure that no future official, no future president does the same exact thing."

House prosecutor Joe Neguse made the case that Mr Trump was "not just some guy" making a controversial speech - he was a president addressing supporters who were "poised for violence [and] he struck a match".

Democrats showed clips of rioters themselves saying they had come to Washington DC because they believed that was what then-President Trump wanted.

Fellow House manager David Cicilline used video and court documents to illustrate the harm done to "Congress and the Democratic process".

He added that some rioters admitted they planned to murder Vice-President Mike Pence and House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, while others spoke of "sealing" lawmakers in the basement where they hid and "turning on the gas".

"Never did any of us imagine that we would face mortal peril by a mob riled up by the president of the United States," Mr Cicilline said.

He also shared accounts from staff who were in the Capitol during the riot. One staff member, he says, quit her job afterwards. Another employee, who is a mother of three, said "the insurrection shattered all my sense of security at work".

Impeachment: The basics

What is impeachment? Impeachment is when a sitting president is charged with crimes. In this case, former President Trump is accused of having incited insurrection

What has already happened? The House of Representatives voted to impeach Mr Trump for a second time on 13 January, a week before the end of his term. The Senate is now holding a trial

So what does it mean? As he is no longer president senators can vote to bar him from holding public office again - but only if he is convicted

Democrats also argued Mr Trump's conduct caused "long-term harm" to both domestic security and the nation's international standing.

Impeachment manager Diana DeGette argued threats from domestic extremist groups "were and are made worse by President Trump's refusal to take accountability and his refusal to forcibly denounce what his own FBI identified as some of the most dangerous elements of our country".

On the international level, Congressman Joaquin Castro said American allies were shocked by the attack while adversaries mocked the US.

"The world is watching and wondering whether we are who we say we are," said Mr Castro.

Lead impeachment manager Jamie Raskin concluded by outlining questions for Donald Trump's defence team, as Mr Trump himself has refused to testify:

Why did President Trump not tell his supporters to stop the attack on the Capitol as soon as he learned of it?
Why did President Trump do nothing to stop the attack for at least two hours after the attack began?
Why did he do nothing to send help to overwhelmed and besieged law enforcement officers for at least two hours after the attack begin?
On 6 January, why did President Trump at any point that day do nothing to condemn the violent insurrection and insurrectionists?

If a president incited a violent insurrection against our government, would that be a high crime and misdemeanour?

https://www.bbc.com/news/world-us-canada-56035408
 
The new footage is shocking. Pence, Pelosi, AOC were moments away from being killed.
 
The evidence is overwhelming. President Trump is without a doubt guilty of this incitement charge and he should be convicted. Moreover, he really should be permanently exiled to a Florida beach house and never heard from in public life ever again. Nevertheless, we all know that the spineless GOP Senators will see to it that he is acquitted for a second time.

In terms of Trump’s legacy presidential benefits, he should be kept under Secret Service protection to prevent any further calamity befalling him or the US, and he should also be permitted to collect his federal pension; but he should absolutely be refused any further intelligence briefings. He can no longer be trusted with sensitive national security information, even that which has not been deemed highly classified.

By the way, there are already rumours that the former President will run again in 2024 as a populist third-party candidate. (Of course, this move would likely split the Republican vote and ensure a second Biden term — or a first Harris term! — which might even be the endlessly disruptive Trump’s objective.)
 
Trump impeachment: Defence team set to present speedy case

Donald Trump's defence lawyers are set to present evidence in the US Senate, denying charges he incited insurrection in the Capitol riots of 6 January.

The team has indicated it may take up only four of its 16 hours, and so move the impeachment trial to a speedy end.

Democrats spent two days putting their case, including video footage of the violence and arguing acquittal could see a repeat of the attack on Congress.

Acquittal is the likely verdict though, as most Republicans remain unmoved.

A two-thirds majority is required to convict Donald Trump in the evenly split 100-seat Senate.

At least 17 members of Mr Trump's party would need to vote against him and although six have shown some movement that way, none of the others have, with many staunchly rejecting the accusation.

Donald Trump will not appear and testify in his defence on Friday.

If Mr Trump were convicted, the Senate could then vote to bar him from holding elected office again.

The Democratic-led House of Representatives voted to impeach Mr Trump last month - for a second time - accusing him of inciting supporters to attack the Capitol building to stop Joe Biden's election victory being certified. Five people lost their lives.

Over the course of two days of Senate evidence this week, the Democrats argued Donald Trump had shown a pattern of condoning violence, did nothing on the day to prevent the riot and had expressed no remorse.

https://www.bbc.com/news/world-us-canada-56038765
 
The trial of former President Donald Trump over the deadly 6 January attack on the US Capitol is to hear new testimony

In a dramatic twist, senators voted to allow witnesses - but then agreed to admit some evidence

It centres on a phone call between Trump and top House Republican Kevin McCarthy

The call appears to suggest backing by Trump for rioters who had breached the Congress building to stop the election result being certified

A verdict to convict or acquit Trump on a single charge of causing a deadly insurrection will follow
Seventeen Republicans will need to turn against the former president to convict him

But this appears to be unlikely. Their leader Mitch McConnell says he plans to acquit Trump
 
The trial of former President Donald Trump over the deadly 6 January attack on the US Capitol is to hear new testimony

In a dramatic twist, senators voted to allow witnesses - but then agreed to admit some evidence

It centres on a phone call between Trump and top House Republican Kevin McCarthy

The call appears to suggest backing by Trump for rioters who had breached the Congress building to stop the election result being certified

A verdict to convict or acquit Trump on a single charge of causing a deadly insurrection will follow
Seventeen Republicans will need to turn against the former president to convict him

But this appears to be unlikely. Their leader Mitch McConnell says he plans to acquit Trump

At this point, it’s just crying hoarse about the same crap over and over. We know he is a douche but nothing is going to come of it. He won’t be found guilty. They better put an end to this so the country can move on.
 
At this point, it’s just crying hoarse about the same crap over and over. We know he is a douche but nothing is going to come of it. He won’t be found guilty. They better put an end to this so the country can move on.

As expected he's been acquitted..

Republicans in real trouble though.
The 70m votes clouded their judgment.
 
US Senate votes 43-57 to acquit Donald Trump of single charge of impeachment related to Capitol riot.
 
Trump impeachment: Senate falls short of majority needed to convict

The US Senate has fallen short of the two-thirds majority needed to convict former President Donald Trump on a charge of incitement to insurrection over the Capitol riot on 6 January.

A majority of senators - 57 to 43, including seven Republicans - voted to convict Mr Trump, 10 votes short of the 67 required for conviction.

After his acquittal, Mr Trump released a statement denouncing the trial as "the greatest witch hunt in history".

This was Mr Trump's second impeachment.

If he had been convicted, the Senate could have voted to bar him from running for office ever again.

After the vote, the senior Republican in Congress, Senator Mitch McConnell said Mr Trump had been "responsible" for the assault on the Capitol and called it a "disgraceful, disgraceful dereliction of duty".

Earlier, he voted against conviction, saying it was unconstitutional now that Mr Trump was no longer president. Mr McConnell was instrumental in delaying Mr Trump's trial until after he left office, on 20 January.

However, Mr McConnell warned Mr Trump could still be held liable in court.

"He didn't get away with anything yet. Yet. We have a criminal justice system in this country, we have civil litigation and former presidents are not immune from being [held] accountable by either one," he said.

Source: https://www.bbc.com/news/world-us-canada-56056310.
 
As expected he's been acquitted..

Republicans in real trouble though.
The 70m votes clouded their judgment.

If anything it’s proves the US political system is a joke. Everything is done along party lines. If a common man commits even 1/10th of the crimes Trump has, he will be in jail for the rest of his life. And yet not only is he off Scot free, we all knew he would get away with it because none of the senators would vote for the right thing....

Oh well.. time to move on and put trump totally behind us. It’s about time we bury the last four years in the deepest hole we can find and try and forget about it.
 
Senate falls short of majority needed to convict

The US Senate has fallen short of the two-thirds majority needed to convict former President Donald Trump on a charge of incitement to insurrection over the Capitol riot on 6 January.

A majority of senators - 57 to 43, including seven Republicans - voted to convict Mr Trump, 10 votes short of the 67 required for conviction.

After his acquittal, Mr Trump released a statement denouncing the trial as "the greatest witch hunt in history".

This was Mr Trump's second impeachment.

If he had been convicted, the Senate could have voted to bar him from running for office ever again.

After the vote, the senior Republican in Congress, Senator Mitch McConnell said Mr Trump had been "responsible" for the assault on the Capitol and called it a "disgraceful, disgraceful dereliction of duty".

Earlier, he voted against conviction, saying it was unconstitutional now that Mr Trump was no longer president. Mr McConnell was instrumental in delaying Mr Trump's trial until after he left office, on 20 January.

However, Mr McConnell warned Mr Trump could still be held liable in court.

"He didn't get away with anything yet. Yet. We have a criminal justice system in this country, we have civil litigation and former presidents are not immune from being [held] accountable by either one," he said.

President Joe Biden said: "While the final vote did not lead to a conviction, the substance of the charge is not in dispute.

"This sad chapter in our history has reminded us that democracy is fragile. That it must always be defended. That we must be ever vigilant. That violence and extremism has no place in America. And that each of us has a duty and responsibility as Americans, and especially as leaders, to defend the truth and to defeat the lies."


The seven Republicans who voted to convict were Lisa Murkowski, Susan Collins, Ben Sasse, Bill Cassidy, Richard Burr, Mitt Romney and Pat Toomey.

Wxplaining her decision, Mrs. Collins said by "subordinating the interests of the country to his own selfish interests [Trump] bears significant responsibility for the invasion of the Capitol.

"The abuse of power and betrayal of his oath by President Trump meet the constitutional standard of 'high crimes and misdemeanours' and for those reasons I voted to convict Donald J. Trump."

What happened on Saturday?

In their closing statements, the Democratic House of Representatives lawmakers appointed to shepherd the process through the Senate warned that it would be dangerous to acquit Mr Trump.

"The stakes could not be higher because the cold, hard truth is that what happened on 6 January can happen again," Representative Joe Neguse said.

"History has found us. I ask that you not look the other way," Representative Madeleine Dean said.

However, Mr Trump's lawyer, Michael van der Veen, called the proceedings a "show trial" and said the Democrats were "obsessed" with impeaching Mr Trump.

"This impeachment has been a complete charade from beginning to end," he said. "The entire spectacle has been nothing but the unhinged pursuit of a long-standing political vendetta against Mr Trump by the opposition party."

Mr Trump himself said no president had "ever gone through anything like it" and that "the movement to Make America Great Again" had "only just begun".

At its most basic level, this is a win for the former president. He is still eligible to run for president again in 2024, if he so chooses. His base, by all indications, is still largely intact. Both in the House of Representatives and in the Senate, most Republican officeholders opposed the impeachment proceedings. Those who broke ranks are already facing ferocious criticism and, in some cases, formal reprimands from their Republican constituents.

Trump did not emerge from this impeachment trial unscathed, however. One of the most memorable portions of the prosecution case by the impeachment managers were the new videos of Trump's supporters, wearing Make America Great Again hats and waving Trump flags, ransacking the Capitol.

Those images will forever be associated with the Trump brand. Every rally he holds from here on will evoke memories of that riot. It may not cost him among the Republican rank and file, but independent voters - and moderates - are unlikely to forget.

Link: https://www.bbc.com/news/world-us-canada-56056310
 
Independent commission to investigate Capitol riots

US House Speaker Nancy Pelosi says Congress will establish an "outside, independent" commission to investigate the 6 January attack on the US Capitol by supporters of Donald Trump.

In a letter to lawmakers, she said the commission would be modelled on the inquiry into the 11 September 2001 attacks on New York and the Pentagon.

"We must get to the truth of how this happened," she said.

Former President Trump was acquitted by the Senate of inciting the violence.

But Democrats and some Republicans have backed an independent investigation into the riots, which left five people dead.

Mrs Pelosi said that retired US Army Lt Gen Russel Honoré had, over the past few weeks, been assessing the security needs of the Capitol in light of the attack.

The commission, she said, "would investigate and report on the facts and causes" of the attack; "the interference with the peaceful transfer of power"; and the "preparedness and response" of both the Capitol police and other branches of law enforcement.

She also said that, based on Lt Gen Honoré's initial findings, Congress needed to allocate additional funding to "provide for the safety of members and the security of the Capitol".

A group of House Republicans wrote to Mrs Pelosi on Monday complaining that their party had not been consulted about the general's security review.

In the letter, they also demanded to know what Mrs Pelosi knew and the instructions she gave to secure the Capitol ahead of 6 January.

Read more: https://www.bbc.com/news/world-us-canada-56077776
 
Donald Trump may have evaded an impeachment conviction for the second time, but the former president is still facing multiple lawsuits and civil and criminal investigations that call into question his conduct before and during his time in office.

Here are the pending cases against Trump.

The U.S. Capitol Riot

The most recent lawsuit filed against him, as of Feb. 18, stems from his alleged role in the deadly riot at the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 6.

Rep. Bennie Thompson, D-Miss., chairman of the House Homeland Security Committee, filed a federal civil suit alleging that Trump and his former personal attorney, Rudy Giuliani, along with the Proud Boys and Oath Keepers, two far-right groups, conspired to incite the mob that stormed the Capitol building while lawmakers were counting the Electoral College votes, according to court documents.

The Feb. 16 suit says the defendants tried to disrupt Thompson from discharging his duty to approve the count of votes cast by the Electoral College after the presidential election.

The riot was part of an ongoing effort by Trump and his co-defendants to undermine the election results and prevent President Joe Biden and Vice President Kamala Harris from being certified by Congress, the lawsuit claims.

Thompson wants to create the record that Trump violated the law, the lawmaker told MSNBC, and also set a standard for future political disputes.

“If you disagree in America on the outcome of an election, you don’t riot. You don’t do anything other than see that individual at the next election,” Thompson said. “If the Trump administration’s philosophy of engagement [like] what happened on Jan. 6 becomes the standard, then [in] every election you disagree with, you just go into the Capitol and tear it up.”


In a statement responding to the lawsuit, Trump spokesman Jason Miller pointed out that Trump was acquitted in the Senate in charges of inciting the riot, the Hill reported.

“President Trump did not plan, produce or organize the Jan. 6th rally on the Ellipse,” the statement said.

It remains to be seen whether Trump will face criminal charges in connection with the riot. Although he was acquitted at his Senate impeachment trial on Feb. 13, House Democrats spent days tying Trump’s comments at a rally before the Capitol riot and his false election theft claims to the violence on Jan. 6.

In a Jan. 11 interview with MSNBC’s Andrea Mitchell, D.C. Attorney General Karl Racine decried Giuliani and Trump’s comments made at a “Stop the Steal” rally before the riot. Giuliani called for “trial by combat” at the rally, and Trump urged his supporters to “fight like hell” to save the country.

“They really did encourage these folks and rile them up,” Racine said.

Asked if Trump, Giuliani and others could be prosecuted in connection with the riot, Racine said his office is looking into whether to pursue a charge of inciting violence, which according to D.C. Code falls under the misdemeanor offense of disorderly conduct and can lead to up to 90 days in jail. Racine added that he’s not specifically targeting Trump.

Thompson’s civil case against Trump cites a Reconstruction-era law passed by Congress in 1871 to combat terrorist organizations, specifically the Ku Klux Klan, a group that murdered and harassed Black Americans in the South.

The law, known as the Ku Klux Klan Act, “was intended to protect against conspiracies, through violence and intimidation, that sought to prevent members of Congress from discharging their official duties,” the lawsuit said. “The defendants conspired to prevent, by force, intimidation and threats, [Thompson], as a Member of Congress, from discharging his official duties to approve the count of votes cast by members of the Electoral College following the presidential election held in November 2020.”

The KKK law was also cited in a complaint against Trump, his campaign and the Republican National Committee after the presidential election. The lawsuit was filed by the NAACP Legal Defense and Education Fund on behalf of the Michigan Welfare Rights Organization and three Detroit residents over Trump’s apparent efforts to sway local officials in Wayne County, Mich., and state legislators to hold off on certifying votes or interfere in the electoral process.

“The Ku Klux Klan Act prohibits persons from conspiring to deny ‘either directly or indirectly, any person or class of persons of the equal protection of the laws,’” the complaint says, “or ‘to prevent by force, intimidation, or threat, any citizen who is lawfully entitled to vote, from giving his support or advocacy in a legal manner, toward or in favor of the election of any lawfully qualified person as an elector for President or Vice President.'”

Trump is under criminal investigation in Atlanta for a Jan. 2 call he made during which he pressured Georgia Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger to “find” enough votes to overturn Biden’s win in the state, according to a leaked recording of the call that was first reported by the Washington Post.

During the call, Trump insisted that he won the state and told Raffensperger he just wants “to find 11,780 votes,” according to the Post’s transcript of the conversation. Biden won Georgia by 11,779 votes.

The call was among several heavy-handed attempts from Trump and his allies to cast doubt on the election results in key states won by Biden and attempt to be declared the winner despite failing to secure enough Electoral College votes. Georgia’s top Republican officials, including Raffensperger, quickly fell out of Trump’s good graces when they indicated they would not go along with his attempts to undermine the results.

Now prosecutors are looking into whether the phone call violated state law, according to the New York Times.

In a Feb. 10 letter to Republican Georgia Gov. Brian Kemp, Fulton County District Attorney Fani Willis said that her office has opened an investigation “into attempts to influence the administration of the 2020 Georgia General Election.”

The letter adds: “This investigation includes, but is not limited to, potential violations of Georgia law prohibiting the solicitation of election fraud, the making of false statements to state and local governmental bodies, conspiracy, racketeering, violation of oath of office and any involvement in violence or threats related to the election's administration.”

The letter didn’t name Trump but the Democratic prosecutor acknowledged in an interview with MSNBC’s Rachel Maddow that the investigation includes but isn’t limited to Trump’s call with Raffensperger.


Former Elle columnist E. Jean Carroll sued Trump in New York state for defamation in 2019, after she accused him of sexually assaulting her in a dressing room in the 1990s. Trump responded by calling Carroll a liar in an interview with the Hill.

The last major development in the case came in September, when the Justice Department sought to replace Trump’s lawyers to defend him in the lawsuit, according to federal court documents. The agency argued that Trump was acting as president when he allegedly made the remarks deemed defamatory by Carroll, so he should be allowed to use government lawyers for his defense.

A judge denied the department’s request in October, court records show. The agency then appealed in the Second Circuit, according to a notice filed Nov. 25. It’s unclear how the Department of Justice under Biden will proceed on this pending request.

Carroll is among more than a dozen women who have accused Trump of sexual misconduct. Another woman, Summer Zervos, alleged that Trump groped and tried to kiss her in 2007, the Associated Press reported. She sued Trump for defamation in state court after he denied the allegations, according to AP.

Adding to Trump’s legal woes are two separate investigations by New York Attorney General Letitia James and Manhattan District Attorney Cyrus Vance over alleged financial improprieties related to Trump’s corporate dealings, Yahoo Finance reported.

James is investigating the Trump Organization’s financial activities, according to the attorney general’s office, and whether Trump inflated the value of his assets in his financial statements to get better terms for loans and insurance coverage. That investigation could lead to civil charges.

Vance’s investigation, which is criminal, is looking into whether Trump committed financial crimes through the Trump Organization, the New York Times reported. The Wall Street Journal recently reported that Manhattan prosecutors are examining loans worth hundreds of millions of dollars that Trump took out on various properties in the city.

Vance’s team recently added Mark Pomerantz, a former federal prosecutor and prominent defense attorney, the Times reported on Thursday. A spokesman for Vance told CNN that Pomerantz was sworn into office this month.

Family drama

Trump’s niece Mary, who penned a revealing book about the former president in July, sued Trump and his siblings in September, alleging they scammed her out of money that she said she should have inherited, CNN reported.

https://news.yahoo.com/legal-troubles-loom-over-trump-after-presidency-021009145.html
 
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