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Former President Donald Trump has made more than 100 public threats “to investigate, prosecute, imprison or otherwise punish his perceived opponents,” NPR reported Tuesday. Earlier this month ...
Missouri Republicans celebrated the win for Trump, with Secretary of State Jay Ashcroft touting his part in a coalition of 10 secretaries of state who signed an amicus brief supporting the former ...
A potential government witness in the Mar-a-Lago classified documents case against former President Donald Trump has received online threats that are now under federal investigation, special ...
The standard definition of a true threat does not require actual subjective intent to carry out the threat. [72] A defendant's statement that if they got the chance they would harm the president is a threat; merely because a threat has been conditional upon the ability of the defendant to carry it out does not render it any less of a threat. [8]
Threats against federal judges and prosecutors have more than doubled in recent years, with threats against federal prosecutors rising from 116 to 250 from 2003 to 2008, [50] and threats against federal judges climbing from 500 to 1,278 in that same period, [51] [52] prompting hundreds to get 24-hour protection from armed U.S. marshals.
[7] [4] Republicans and Trump's allies circulated the photos immediately after the event; some had used the photos as "an opportunity to tout conspiracy theories and stoke political tensions". [5] The photographs appeared on newspaper front pages in the United States, United Kingdom, and Australia. [4]
D. John Sauer, who previously served as Missouri solicitor general, and Will Scharf, who ran for attorney general, will have jobs on Trump's team.
USA TODAY 12 hours ago Judge temporarily blocks Trump policy that aimed at freezing federal grant funding. Advocacy groups for nonprofits, health care and small business fought to block the memo they argued could lead to 'catastrophic' harm cutting funding.