Tag Archives: testify

Elon Musk expected to testify in Tesla takeover trial | Elon Musk

Elon Musk is expected to testify as early as Friday in a jury trial over his 2018 Twitter post that he had “funding secured” to take Tesla private, which shareholders allege cost them millions in trading losses.

The class action trial in San Francisco federal court centers on allegations that the Tesla CEO lied when he sent the tweet, costing investors. It resumed on Friday morning with investor Timothy Fries telling the jury how he lost $5,000 buying Tesla stock after Musk sent the tweet at the center of the lawsuit.

Musk, known for combative testimony, is expected to address why he has insisted he had Saudi investor backing for the deal, which never came together, and whether he knowingly made a materially misleading statement with his tweet.

The case is a rare securities class-action trial and the plaintiffs have already cleared high legal hurdles, with the US judge Edward Chen ruling last year that Musk’s post was untruthful and reckless.

Fries told the jury that funding secured meant to him that “there had been some vetting, some critical review of those funding sources”.

Musk’s attorney, Alex Spiro, told the jury in his opening statement on Wednesday that Musk believed he had financing from Saudi backers and was taking steps to make the deal happen. Fearing leaks to the media, Musk tried to protect the “everyday shareholder” by sending the tweet, which contained “technical inaccuracies”, Spiro said.

Guhan Subramanian, a Harvard Law School professor, told the jury that Musk’s behavior in 2018 lacked the hallmarks of traditional corporate dealmaking by tweeting his interest in Tesla without proper financial or legal analysis.

“Compared to the standard template it’s an extreme outlier,” said Subramanian, who called Musk’s approach “unprecedented” and “incoherent”.

A jury of nine will decide whether the tweet artificially inflated Tesla’s share price by playing up the status of funding for the deal, and if so, by how much.

The defendants include current and former Tesla directors, whom Spiro said had “pure” motives in their response to Musk’s plan.

Reuters contributed to this report

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Sam Bankman-Fried to testify to Congress over FTX failure

FTX founder Sam Bankman-Fried will testify next week at a US congressional hearing on the collapse of his crypto group, in a U-turn that will mark his first public contact with US officials about the events surrounding its bankruptcy.

Maxine Waters, chair of the US House committee on financial services, on Friday announced Bankman-Fried’s participation in the first hearing on the topic scheduled for December 13. Just hours before the entrepreneur said he was “willing to testify”.

The panel is investigating the collapse of FTX as lawmakers try to piece together how Bankman-Fried’s once-$32bn crypto empire imploded, leaving potentially millions of creditors including retail investors with losses.

The 30-year-old has been on a media blitz since FTX filed for bankruptcy last month, providing interviews to numerous outlets against the advice of his lawyers in an apparent attempt to explain his role and understanding of the events leading to its collapse, but he has expressed reluctance to speak to Congress.

Now he has bowed to pressure after Waters made it clear a subpoena was on the table if he refused, and implored him to speak to “help the company’s customers, investors and others”.

In a series of Twitter posts on Friday, Bankman-Fried said he would be willing to testify. “I still do not have access to much of my data — professional or personal. So there is a limit to what I will be able to say, and I won’t be as helpful as I’d like,” he added.

John J Ray, who took over as chief executive of the now defunct exchange and is running its bankruptcy proceedings, is also scheduled as a witness in a separate panel.

The rapid collapse of Bankman-Fried’s crypto empire has sent shockwaves through the digital assets industry, triggering multiple investigations worldwide, with dozens of authorities seeking to understand how FTX and its related trading shop Alameda Research operated and failed. A string of other crypto companies including broker Genesis and lender BlockFi have also encountered stress because of links with FTX.

Bankman-Fried, who has remained in the Bahamas since FTX collapsed, said he would “try to be helpful during the hearing” and shed light on issues including “what I think led to the crash”, “my own failings” and “pathways that could return value to users internationally”.

He has repeatedly denied knowingly misusing customer funds and committing fraud, but has admitted to a lack of basic risk management and losing track of the cosy relationship between FTX and Alameda.

“I had thought of myself as a model CEO, who wouldn’t become lazy or disconnected,” he said on Friday. “Hopefully people can learn from the difference between who I was and who I could have been.”

US lawmakers are increasing their scrutiny of the crypto industry. On Thursday, the US Securities and Exchange Commission told US-listed companies to disclose any impact from the “widespread disruption” in crypto markets. The regulator added public companies should aim to provide investors with “specific, tailored disclosure” around how market events including bankruptcies had affected their businesses.

Meanwhile, Changpeng “CZ” Zhao, chief executive of crypto exchange Binance, continued his online criticism of his former rival. When FTX first encountered difficulties last month, Zhao initially offered to buy some or all of the platform. That deal would probably have represented a rescue deal, but it quickly unravelled.

Binance was also an early investor in FTX and exited the investment last year. Zhao on Friday said that decision was met with an “unhinged” response from Bankman-Fried.

“He launched a series of offensive tirades at multiple Binance team members, including threatening to go to ‘extraordinary lengths to make us pay’,” Zhao wrote on Twitter.

“You won,” Bankman-Fried responded. “None of this is necessary. You won. Why are you lying about this now?”

Additional reporting by Stefania Palma in Washington

Video: Cryptocurrencies: how regulators lost control



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Rupert Murdoch to testify in Dominion voting machine defamation case | Rupert Murdoch

A defamation lawsuit claiming Fox News purposely promoted false claims that a voting tech company rigged the 2020 election is set to reach the apex of the media empire next week when the channel’s owner, Rupert Murdoch, is scheduled to sit for a deposition.

Lawyers for Dominion Voting Systems, which is suing Fox for $1.6bn, are seeking to learn what knowledge the 91-year-old billionaire might have of his company’s repeated broadcasts of the untruthful allegations.

Segments of shows hosted by the prominent rightwing Fox personalities Sean Hannity, Tucker Carlson and Laura Ingraham, among others, all featured a post-election narrative that Dominion’s voting machines were somehow crooked, including switching ballots from Donald Trump to Joe Biden in the former’s defeat to the latter in the race for the Oval Office, Dominion says.

The lawsuit alleges the unsubstantiated claims were amplified by conspiracy theorist guests such as Rudy Giuliani and Sidney Powell, both lawyers for Trump who have either been sanctioned, or are facing disciplinary measures, for pushing in court the former president’s big lie of a stolen election.

Murdoch, who will sit for depositions via video link on 13 and 14 December, is the most significant name yet to have received a subpoena. On Monday, his son Lachlan Murdoch – the chief executive of the channel’s parent company Fox Corp – gave testimony while others called in last month include the Fox News CEO, Suzanne Scott, and president, Jay Wallace.

Hannity gave a seven-hour deposition in August, the Washington Post reported. According to the newspaper, he was asked specifically about a November 2020 episode of his show in which Powell claimed Dominion “ran an algorithm that shaved off votes from Trump and awarded them to Biden” and added additional huge quantities of “fake” Biden votes.

The lawsuit, which was filed in June 2021 against Fox News, was expanded to include Fox Corp in June. It claims Fox “sold a false story of election fraud in order to serve its own commercial purposes, severely injuring Dominion in the process”.

Fox Corp attempted to have the suit dismissed, but a Delaware judge said Dominion, which provided voting machines to 28 states in the 2020 election, had shown adequate evidence for it to proceed.

Dominion was already suing other rightwing networks OAN and Newsmax for airing similar claims about the integrity of its machines.

Fox has rejected the claims, painting the case as a battle for a free press and its right to broadcast newsworthy allegations of an election fraud pressed by a prominent public official, namely Trump.

In a statement in August, Fox News said: “We are confident we will prevail as freedom of the press is foundational to our democracy and must be protected, in addition to the damages claims being outrageous, unsupported and not rooted in sound financial analysis.”

Fox News objects to what it sees as an attempt by Dominion to expose its internal processes, and it has sought to protect Hannity and fellow host Jeanine Pirro from having to reveal “confidential sources and information”.

Although Hannity has stated publicly that he is not a journalist, Fox appears intent on describing him as one, insisting it is “a journalist’s right to maintain his confidences”.

A five-week trial is set to begin in Delaware’s superior court in April unless a settlement is reached before then. The Post reports that the two sides are so far apart that such a deal is not seen as imminent.

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Trump news today – live: Donald Trump sues NY’s Letitia James as Kash Patel ‘to testify’ in Mar-a-Lago case

Donald Trump says Twitter has become ‘very boring’ since he got banned

Donald Trump has filed a lawsuit against New York attorney general Letitia James alleging “extraordinary wrongdoing” and embarking on a “war of intimidation and harassment” against him.

In a 41-page filing at Florida State Circuit Court in Palm Beach, he sought to block Ms James from obtaining documents from a Florida revocable trust that holds ownership of the Trump Organization.

It comes as Mr Trump’s key aide, Kash Patel, is set to testify before a grand jury investigating the handling of secret documents at Mar-a-Lago after being granted immunity from prosecution, The Wall Street Journal reported.

Mr Patel is a close adviser to the former president and maintains a personal relationship with him. He was appointed as one of his official representatives to the National Archives and Records Administration.

Mr Patel’s testimony was sought after he was summoned in October to testify before a grand jury but he invoked his Fifth Amendment right against self-incrimination.

Mr Patel has claimed that Mr Trump declassified White House documents while still president.

Meanwhile, Mr Trump has settled a lawsuit filed by a group of protesters who say they were assaulted up by the Republican’s private security guards during his 2015 presidential campaign.

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Stewart Rhodes to Trump: ‘Save the republic’ or ‘die in prison’

Growing frustrated with what he believed was Donald Trump’s inadequate response to the 2020 presidential election, the leader of a far-right anti-government group that allegedly conspired to storm the US Capitol wrote a message to the president four days after the attempted insurrection.

Oath Keepers leader Stewart Rhodes allegedly called on the president to invoke the Insurrection Act, activate the group to defend the nation from his political enemies, and jail members of Congress and state legislators, according to a message that was shared in court on 2 November in the ongoing seditious conspiracy trial involving Mr Rhodes and members of his militia.

Alex Woodward reports on what else Rhodes told Trump.

Oliver O’Connell3 November 2022 10:45

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Elon Musk: Trump and other banned users won’t be back on Twitter before midterms

Banned users won’t be back on Twitter “for weeks,” Elon Musk has said, meaning that former President Donald Trump and other users blocked from the platform won’t be back before the midterm elections on 8 November.

The Tesla CEO finished his $44bn purchase of the social media platform last week after failing to back out of the deal.

“Twitter will not allow anyone who was de-platformed for violating Twitter rules back on [the] platform until we have a clear process for doing so, which will take at least a few more weeks,” Mr Musk tweeted on Wednesday.

Oliver O’Connell3 November 2022 09:15

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Can anything stop Trump running in 2024?

But while losing to Joe Biden in November 2020 may have dented the one-term president’s pride and fuelled 18 months of lies about rigged ballot boxes, it now seems almost certain that Mr Trump will run again for the White House in 2024.

So what, if anything, could stop him?

Graeme Massie and Gustaf Kilander report.

Oliver O’Connell3 November 2022 07:45

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Trump 2024 campaign preparing for post-midterms launch

As he played to a crowd of supporters in Robstown, Texas, former President Donald Trump drew cheers as he talked up his first two runs for the White House — and teased a third.

“In order to make our country successful, safe and glorious again, I will probably have to do it again,” he said last month.

That carefully placed “probably” may soon be gone from Trump’s stump speech. Aides to the former president are making quiet preparations for a 2024 presidential campaign that could be launched soon after next week’s midterm elections as Trump tries to capitalize on expected Republican wins to propel himself toward becoming the front-runner for his party’s nomination.

Oliver O’Connell3 November 2022 05:45

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Trump settles lawsuit filed by protesters over 2015 scuffle

Donald Trump has settled a lawsuit filed by a group of Mexican protesters who say they were roughed up by the Republican’s private security guards during his 2015 presidential campaign.

The two sides settled as a jury was being selected in a New York courtroom for a civil trial, one of a spate of legal entanglements involving the former president.

Details of the settlement in the protesters’ lawsuit were not divulged.

“Although we were eager to proceed to trial to demonstrate the frivolousness of this case, the parties were ultimately able to come to an amicable resolution,” said Mr Trump‘s lawyer, Alina Habba. “We are very pleased with this outcome and are happy to finally put this matter to rest once and for all.”

Shweta Sharma3 November 2022 04:22

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Trump sues NY’s Letitia James for ‘war of intimidation and harassment’

Donald Trump has filed a lawsuit against New York attorney general Letitia James alleging “extraordinary wrongdoing” and embarking on a “war of intimidation and harassment” against him.

In a 41-page filing at Florida State Circuit Court in Palm Beach, he sought to block Ms James from obtaining documents from a Florida revocable trust that holds ownership of the Trump Organization.

“Extraordinary wrongdoing requires extraordinary relief,” the lawsuit said. “As set forth below, James has repeatedly abused her position as Attorney General for the State of New York to pursue a relentless, pernicious, public, and unapologetic crusade against President Trump, a resident of Palm Beach County, Florida, with the stated goal of destroying him personally, financially, and politically.”

Mr Trump claims that the New York attorney general is violating his privacy by seeking details of his trust.

It comes after Ms James filed a civil lawsuit against Mr Trump and his family members last month alleging financial fraud.

Shweta Sharma3 November 2022 04:16

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Trump’s biracial ex-girlfriend says he told her she got her intelligence from white father

Donald Trump’s biracial former girlfriend Kara Young has broken her silence about an incident where he told her she got her intelligence from her white father.

Speaking to Inside Edition on Tuesday in her first interview about Mr Trump since 2017, Ms Young, 47, confirmed the veracity of a previous report about the alleged encounter.

Johanna Chisholm has the story.

Oliver O’Connell3 November 2022 03:45

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Key Trump aide Kash Patel granted immunity to testify in Mar-a-Lago secret documents case, report says

Donald Trump aide Kash Patel is set to testify before a grand jury investigating the handling of secret documents at Mar-a-Lago after being granted immunity from prosecution, a report says.

Mr Patel, who worked in the Trump administration, will “soon testify” before the federal grand jury, The Wall Street Journal reported on Wednesday evening.

In June, Mr Trump named Mr Patel as one of his official representatives to the National Archives and Records Administration.

Shweta Sharma3 November 2022 03:22

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Trump says Kanye West ‘will be fine’, downplaying his antisemitism

Speaking with conservative talk radio personality and podcaster Chris Stigall, the former president was asked about a number of current events and news topics, including the midterms and Elon Musk’s takeover of Twitter.

Mr Trump’s remarks on the disgraced rapper, whose slew of antisemitic comments saw him dropped by a string of companies with whom he collaborated, stuck out in particular.

Oliver O’Connell3 November 2022 02:45

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Clinton wants Trump to pay legal fees from dismissed lawsuit

Hillary Clinton has asked a federal judge to order former President Donald Trump and his attorneys to pay more than $1m in legal fees and costs to cover expenses she and several other defendants accrued defending themselves against a dismissed lawsuit claiming that they conspired to sink Mr Trump’s 2016 presidential campaign by accusing it of colluding with Russia.

Abe Asher has the details.

Oliver O’Connell3 November 2022 01:45



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Trump news today – live: Donald Trump sues NY’s Letitia James as Kash Patel ‘to testify’ in Mar-a-Lago case

Donald Trump says Twitter has become ‘very boring’ since he got banned

Donald Trump has filed a lawsuit against New York attorney general Letitia James alleging “extraordinary wrongdoing” and embarking on a “war of intimidation and harassment” against him.

In a 41-page filing at Florida State Circuit Court in Palm Beach, he sought to block Ms James from obtaining documents from a Florida revocable trust that holds ownership of the Trump Organization.

It comes as Mr Trump’s key aide, Kash Patel, is set to testify before a grand jury investigating the handling of secret documents at Mar-a-Lago after being granted immunity from prosecution, The Wall Street Journal reported.

Mr Patel is a close adviser to the former president and maintains a personal relationship with him. He was appointed as one of his official representatives to the National Archives and Records Administration.

Mr Patel’s testimony was sought after he was summoned in October to testify before a grand jury but he invoked his Fifth Amendment right against self-incrimination.

Mr Patel has claimed that Mr Trump declassified White House documents while still president.

Meanwhile, Mr Trump has settled a lawsuit filed by a group of protesters who say they were assaulted up by the Republican’s private security guards during his 2015 presidential campaign.

1667461500

Can anything stop Trump running in 2024?

But while losing to Joe Biden in November 2020 may have dented the one-term president’s pride and fuelled 18 months of lies about rigged ballot boxes, it now seems almost certain that Mr Trump will run again for the White House in 2024.

So what, if anything, could stop him?

Graeme Massie and Gustaf Kilander report.

Oliver O’Connell3 November 2022 07:45

1667454300

Trump 2024 campaign preparing for post-midterms launch

As he played to a crowd of supporters in Robstown, Texas, former President Donald Trump drew cheers as he talked up his first two runs for the White House — and teased a third.

“In order to make our country successful, safe and glorious again, I will probably have to do it again,” he said last month.

That carefully placed “probably” may soon be gone from Trump’s stump speech. Aides to the former president are making quiet preparations for a 2024 presidential campaign that could be launched soon after next week’s midterm elections as Trump tries to capitalize on expected Republican wins to propel himself toward becoming the front-runner for his party’s nomination.

Oliver O’Connell3 November 2022 05:45

1667449378

Trump settles lawsuit filed by protesters over 2015 scuffle

Donald Trump has settled a lawsuit filed by a group of Mexican protesters who say they were roughed up by the Republican’s private security guards during his 2015 presidential campaign.

The two sides settled as a jury was being selected in a New York courtroom for a civil trial, one of a spate of legal entanglements involving the former president.

Details of the settlement in the protesters’ lawsuit were not divulged.

“Although we were eager to proceed to trial to demonstrate the frivolousness of this case, the parties were ultimately able to come to an amicable resolution,” said Mr Trump‘s lawyer, Alina Habba. “We are very pleased with this outcome and are happy to finally put this matter to rest once and for all.”

Shweta Sharma3 November 2022 04:22

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Trump sues NY’s Letitia James for ‘war of intimidation and harassment’

Donald Trump has filed a lawsuit against New York attorney general Letitia James alleging “extraordinary wrongdoing” and embarking on a “war of intimidation and harassment” against him.

In a 41-page filing at Florida State Circuit Court in Palm Beach, he sought to block Ms James from obtaining documents from a Florida revocable trust that holds ownership of the Trump Organization.

“Extraordinary wrongdoing requires extraordinary relief,” the lawsuit said. “As set forth below, James has repeatedly abused her position as Attorney General for the State of New York to pursue a relentless, pernicious, public, and unapologetic crusade against President Trump, a resident of Palm Beach County, Florida, with the stated goal of destroying him personally, financially, and politically.”

Mr Trump claims that the New York attorney general is violating his privacy by seeking details of his trust.

It comes after Ms James filed a civil lawsuit against Mr Trump and his family members last month alleging financial fraud.

Shweta Sharma3 November 2022 04:16

1667447112

Trump’s biracial ex-girlfriend says he told her she got her intelligence from white father

Donald Trump’s biracial former girlfriend Kara Young has broken her silence about an incident where he told her she got her intelligence from her white father.

Speaking to Inside Edition on Tuesday in her first interview about Mr Trump since 2017, Ms Young, 47, confirmed the veracity of a previous report about the alleged encounter.

Johanna Chisholm has the story.

Oliver O’Connell3 November 2022 03:45

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Key Trump aide Kash Patel granted immunity to testify in Mar-a-Lago secret documents case, report says

Donald Trump aide Kash Patel is set to testify before a grand jury investigating the handling of secret documents at Mar-a-Lago after being granted immunity from prosecution, a report says.

Mr Patel, who worked in the Trump administration, will “soon testify” before the federal grand jury, The Wall Street Journal reported on Wednesday evening.

In June, Mr Trump named Mr Patel as one of his official representatives to the National Archives and Records Administration.

Shweta Sharma3 November 2022 03:22

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Trump says Kanye West ‘will be fine’, downplaying his antisemitism

Speaking with conservative talk radio personality and podcaster Chris Stigall, the former president was asked about a number of current events and news topics, including the midterms and Elon Musk’s takeover of Twitter.

Mr Trump’s remarks on the disgraced rapper, whose slew of antisemitic comments saw him dropped by a string of companies with whom he collaborated, stuck out in particular.

Oliver O’Connell3 November 2022 02:45

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Clinton wants Trump to pay legal fees from dismissed lawsuit

Hillary Clinton has asked a federal judge to order former President Donald Trump and his attorneys to pay more than $1m in legal fees and costs to cover expenses she and several other defendants accrued defending themselves against a dismissed lawsuit claiming that they conspired to sink Mr Trump’s 2016 presidential campaign by accusing it of colluding with Russia.

Abe Asher has the details.

Oliver O’Connell3 November 2022 01:45

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‘The whole thing is crazy’: Trump joins in on Paul Pelosi conspiracy theories

The former president began airing the controversial remarks while calling in to the Chris Stigall radio show on Tuesday morning.

Johanna Chisholm reports.

Oliver O’Connell2 November 2022 23:45

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Supreme Court temporarily shields Trump tax returns from House committee

The US Supreme Court has temporarily blocked the House Ways and Means Committee from obtaining six years of tax returns from former president Donald Trump and his eponymous real estate businesses after the ex-president requested an emergency stay of a lower court order allowing them access to the documents.

The temporary stay was granted by Chief Justice John Roberts, who is responsible for appeals of decisions from the US Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit.

Chief Justice Roberts also ordered the House of Representatives to respond to the ex-president’s appeal by 10 November.

Andrew Feinberg reports from Washington, DC.

Oliver O’Connell2 November 2022 22:45

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Supreme Court clears way for Lindsey Graham to testify in Georgia election probe

Comment

The Supreme Court on Tuesday rejected a request from Sen. Lindsey O. Graham (R-S.C.) to spare him from testifying before a Georgia grand jury investigating efforts to overturn the election defeat of former president Donald Trump.

There were no noted dissents to the court’s short order.

Graham had claimed that his actions were legitimate legislative activity protected by the Constitution’s “speech or debate clause” and that he was protected from disclosing them to a grand jury.

But Tuesday’s unsigned order said lower courts already had protected him from questioning that related to his official duties.

Read the Supreme Court order: Graham, Senator v. Fulton County Spec. Purpose Grand Jury

“The lower courts assumed that the informal investigative fact-finding that Senator Graham assertedly engaged in constitutes legislative activity protected by the Speech or Debate Clause … and they held that Senator Graham may not be questioned about such activities,” the order said.

“The lower courts also made clear that Senator Graham may return to the District Court should disputes arise regarding the application of the Speech or Debate Clause immunity to specific questions. Accordingly, a stay or injunction is not necessary to safeguard the Senator’s Speech or Debate Clause immunity.”

The action dissolved a temporary stay that had been granted by Justice Clarence Thomas while the full court considered the issue.

The Fulton County special grand jury investigating alleged 2020 presidential election interference by Trump and his allies has called for the senator to testify by Nov. 17. Jurors already have heard testimony from several Trump lawyers, including Rudy Giuliani, John Eastman and Boris Epshteyn. A judge has also ruled that former White House chief of staff Mark Meadows must testify.

Georgia 2020 election inquiry may lead to prison sentences, prosecutor says

Fulton County District Attorney Fani Willis (D) wants to question Graham about calls he made to Georgia election officials soon after Trump lost the election to Joe Biden. Prosecutors say Graham has “unique knowledge” about the Trump campaign and the “multistate, coordinated efforts to influence the results” of the election in Georgia and elsewhere.

The senator’s lawyers have said that they have been informed that Graham is a witness in — and not a target of — the probe. Graham’s lawyer Donald F. McGahn told the Supreme Court that Graham is immunized by the Constitution and that without a stay, “Sen. Graham will suffer the precise injury he is appealing to prevent: being questioned in state court about his legislative activity and official acts.”

Last month, a district court judge said prosecutors could not question Graham about portions of his calls that were legislative fact-finding. But the judge said Willis’s team could explore coordination with the Trump campaign in its post-election efforts in Georgia, public statements regarding the 2020 election and any efforts to “cajole” or “exhort” Georgia election officials.

A three-judge panel of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 11th Circuit agreed that those actions “could not qualify as legislative activities under any understanding of Supreme Court precedent.” Two of the judges were nominated by Trump.

Willis had warned the Supreme Court that if Graham is allowed to avoid testimony entirely, the grand jury “will be foreclosed indefinitely from pursuing unique information, analyzing any resulting evidence, or using the Senator’s testimony to explore additional routes of valid inquiry.” It is scheduled to conclude its work by April.

Tom Hamburger contributed to this report.

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Zuckerberg to testify in U.S. case against Facebook’s virtual reality deal

Oct 28 (Reuters) – Meta Platforms Inc (META.O) Chief Executive Officer Mark Zuckerberg will testify in a case by the Federal Trade Commission (FTC) that argues the company’s proposed deal to buy virtual reality (VR) content maker Within Unlimited should be blocked.

In a court document filed with U.S. District Court Northern District Of California on Friday, the FTC listed 18 witnesses it plans to question, including Zuckerberg, Within CEO Chris Milk and Meta Chief Technology Officer Andrew Bosworth.

They were also on a list of witnesses submitted on Friday by defendants Meta and Within.

In addition to defending the Within acquisition, Zuckerberg is expected to be questioned about the Facebook-parent’s strategy for its VR business, as well as the company’s plans to support third-party developers, according to the court document.

The FTC had filed a lawsuit in July saying that Meta’s acquisition of Within would “tend to create a monopoly” in the market for VR-dedicated fitness apps.

The regulator argues that the proposed deal would “substantially lessen competition or tend to create a monopoly” in that market. read more

Meta, in court documents, has argued that “the FTC’s conclusory, speculative, and contradictory allegations do not plausibly plead any facts to establish that any supposed market for VR Deliberate Fitness apps is ‘oligopolistic’ as to either behavior or structure.” read more

Facebook agreed to buy Within in October 2021 for an undisclosed sum.

Reporting by Ismail Shakil in Ottawa; Editing by Aurora Ellis

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

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Mark Meadows ordered by court to testify in Georgia 2020 election meddling probe



CNN
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A South Carolina judge on Wednesday ruled that former Trump White House chief of staff Mark Meadows must appear for testimony in the Atlanta-area grand jury 2020 election meddling investigation.

“I am going to find that the witness is material and necessary to the investigation and that the state of Georgia is assuring not to cause undue hardship to him,” Judge Edward Miller – who sits on the Court of Common Pleas in Pickens County, South Carolina – said at the end of a hearing Wednesday morning.

The matter was before the South Carolina judge because Meadows now lives in South Carolina and Atlanta-area prosecutors sought an order there compelling his compliance with the subpoena.

Meadows plans to appeal the ruling, his attorney James Bannister told CNN.

The Fulton County district attorney’s office, which is leading the special grand jury probe in Georgia, said in court filings there are multiple dates in November when they could accommodate Meadows’ testimony.

Meadows’ arguments for why he should not have to comply with a subpoena were met with skepticism from the South Carolina judge, who questioned the relevancy of some of the evidence Meadows’ attorney tried to put forward in the hearing, which lasted less than an hour. Miller also jumped in when a question by Bannister posed to a prosecutor involved in the Atlanta probe suggested a partisan motivation of the investigation.

“This is not a political hearing,” Miller told Bannister, calling the line of inquiry “far afield” from the dispute before the South Carolina court.

The judge said that some of the legal arguments Meadows was raising were claims that could be considered by other courts, but were not relevant to the decision before him.

CNN reporter details Meadows’ texts from pro-Trump operative

Fulton County District Attorney Fani Willis is spearheading the special purpose grand jury investigation into attempts to manipulate Georgia’s 2020 election results. The probe was prompted by the infamous call between Trump and Georgia’s secretary of state, in which Trump requested that Secretary Brad Raffensperger “find” the votes that would secure his victory. But the investigation has grown to include the fake electors plot, the presentations made by Trump allies to Georgia lawmakers that promoted bogus voter fraud claims and other Trump-world machinations from that period.

The Atlanta-area investigators, in demanding Meadows’ testimony, are pointing to his involvement in the Trump-Raffensperger call and to a December 2020 White House meeting about election fraud claims that was touted by Meadows. Their filings also reference his visit to a site where an audit of Georgia’s election was underway and emails Meadows sent to Justice Department officials about unsubstantiated fraud allegations.

Meadows, in court filings, argued that the South Carolina law that Fulton County district attorney is using to force his appearance does not apply to the subpoena in question. Meadow’s attorney also stressed at the hearing executive privilege concerns, noting his ongoing federal court lawsuit challenging a House January 6 select committee subpoena.

Will Wooten – a deputy district attorney in Willis’ office who testified as a witness at the hearing – noted that Meadows traveled to the Georgia audit site apparently by himself. “There’s multiple places where there is no executive privilege issue,” Wooten said.

Other former Trump allies, including his then-attorney Jenna Ellis, have brought similar challenges to the Fulton County probe’s subpoenas – but most have been unsuccessful so far. However, one Texas attorney who participated in the presentations to Georgia lawmakers was able to defeat Willis’ office in such a subpoena dispute.

A bid by Sen. Lindsey Graham to halt a subpoena in the investigation for his testimony is currently before the US Supreme Court.

This story has been updated with additional details.

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Former Trump aide Mark Meadows ordered to testify before Georgia grand jury

Former Trump White House chief of staff Mark Meadows must testify before a Georgia grand jury investigating Republican efforts to reverse the 2020 presidential election results in the state, a South Carolina judge ruled Wednesday.

Fulton County District Attorney Fani Willis (D) has said that her inquiry is examining “the multistate, coordinated efforts to influence the results of the November 2020 election in Georgia and elsewhere.” Because Meadows does not live in Georgia, she could not subpoena him to testify but filed a petition in August for him to do so.

South Carolina Circuit Court Judge Edward Miller ruled Wednesday that Meadows must comply with a subpoena as his testimony is “material and necessary to the investigation and that the state of Georgia is assuring not to cause undue hardship to him.”

The ruling was confirmed Wednesday by Jeff DiSantis, a spokesman for Willis. DiSantis said Meadows would not be called until after the midterm elections.

An attorney for Meadows said Wednesday there is a possibility of an appeal or additional legal action.

“There may be additional proceedings before the trial judge before any decision is made about an appeal,” said Meadows’s lawyer, George J. Terwilliger.

Meadows, who served four terms as a congressman from North Carolina before becoming Trump’s White House chief of staff, has helped promote Trump’s baseless claims that widespread voter fraud delivered the presidency to Joe Biden. Meadows has said he now lives in South Carolina, though he registered to vote in 2020 using the address of a North Carolina mobile home.

In her petition seeking Meadows’s testimony, Willis noted Meadows’s participation in a telephone call Trump made on Jan. 2, 2021 to Georgia Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger (R) asking him to “find” 11,780 votes that would enable him to defeat Joe Biden in the state.

‘I just want to find 11,780 votes’: In extraordinary hour-long call, Trump pressures Georgia secretary of state to recalculate the vote in his favor

Willis wrote that she was also interested in testimony regarding a Dec. 21, 2020, meeting Meadows attended at the White House with Trump and others “to discuss allegations of voter fraud and the certification of electoral college votes from Georgia and other state.”

Willis also noted in the petition that on Dec. 22, 2020, Meadows “made a surprise visit” to the Cobb County Civic Center in Marietta, Ga., where the Georgia Secretary of State’s office and the Georgia Bureau of Investigation were conducting an absentee ballot signature match audit.

There, Meadows “requested to personally observe the audit process but was prevented from doing so because the audit was not open to the public,” Willis wrote.

Meadows had sought to kill the Georgia subpoena citing executive privilege and making the argument that the special Georgia grand jury is conducting a civil inquiry and is not a criminal proceeding that would require his testimony. Willis has said that the investigation — being conducted by a special grand jury — is criminal in nature.

Meadows’s South Carolina lawyer, James W. Bannister, argued in court filings that the subpoena was moot because the September date on which his testimony was originally sought has passed.

The Meadows ruling came Wednesday as another prominent Republican, Sen. Lindsey O. Graham (S.C.), has appealed to the Supreme Court to block a request for his testimony.

Graham has argued that he is protected from having to testify by constitutional protections provided to lawmakers conducting official business.

Justice Clarence Thomas on Monday put a temporary hold on an order that Graham appear. The brief order appears to be an attempt to maintain the status quo as Graham’s petition to the Supreme Court advances. Prosecutors face a Thursday deadline for responding to Graham’s request, which usually means the full court will consider the issue.

Last week, a unanimous three-judge panel of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 11th Circuit turned down an attempt by Graham to block a subpoena from Willis in which the lawmaker claimed a sitting senator is shielded from testifying in such investigations.

Despite resistance from Graham, Meadows and others, the Georgia grand jury has heard testimony from prominent Trump advisers, including lawyers Rudy Giuliani and John Eastman. Requests for testimony are pending from former House speaker Newt Gingrich (R-Ga.) and Michael Flynn, Trump’s former national security adviser.

Many Georgia Republican officials have already testified. The list includes Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger (R) and his staff, Georgia Attorney General Christopher M. Carr (R), state lawmakers and local election workers. The state’s Republican governor, Brian Kemp, filed a 121-page motion in August seeking to kill a subpoena requiring his testimony. The judge overseeing the inquiry agreed to delay the governor’s appearance until after the 2022 election. Kemp is seeking reelection.

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Harvey Weinstein’s 2nd sexual assault trial begins with eight accusers set to testify, prosecutors say



CNN
 — 

Eight women who say they were sexually assaulted by movie producer Harvey Weinstein will testify at his criminal trial in Los Angeles over the coming weeks, prosecutors said in opening statements Monday.

“Each of these women came forward independent of each other, and none of them knew one another,” prosecutor Paul Thompson told the jury, according to a pool report.

Four of the women’s testimony will be directly connected to specific charges. These women include Jennifer Siebel Newsom, a filmmaker and the wife of California Gov. Gavin Newsom; Jane Doe 1, a model and actress who lived in Italy at the time; Jane Doe 2, a 23-year-old model and aspiring screenwriter; and Jane Doe 3, a licensed massage therapist, according to a pool report.

The most recent indictment in the case indicated there were five women directly connected to charges. CNN is working to clarify the difference between that indictment and the prosecutors’ opening statements.

In addition, four women will testify as “prior bad acts” witnesses, meaning their testimony isn’t related to a specific charge but can be used by the jury as prosecutors try to show Weinstein had a pattern in his actions. These women will testify about assaults outside of Los Angeles jurisdiction, Thompson said.

Weinstein, 70, has pleaded not guilty to charges including rape and forcible oral copulation related to incidents dating from 2004 to 2013, according to the indictment.

In court Monday, he appeared hunched over as he clambered from a wheelchair into a chair at the defense table. Wearing a suit and tie, he primarily looked at jurors throughout the proceedings.

The trial in California is his second such sexual assault case since reporting by The New York Times and The New Yorker in 2017 revealed Weinstein’s alleged history of sexual abuse, harassment and secret settlements as he used his influence as a Hollywood power broker to take advantage of young women.

At the time, Weinstein was one of the most powerful men in Hollywood and helped produce movies such as “Pulp Fiction,” “Clerks” and “Shakespeare in Love.”

The revelations led to a wave of women speaking publicly about the pervasiveness of sexual abuse and harassment in what became known as the #MeToo movement.

Weinstein was found guilty in 2020 in New York of first-degree criminal sexual act and third-degree rape and was sentenced to 23 years in prison. Yet he has maintained his innocence, and New York’s highest court agreed in August to hear his appeal in the case.

In opening statements, Thompson outlined the women’s accusations and noted the similarities in their stories. The women will testify that Weinstein lured them into private meetings, often in hotel rooms, and then sexually assaulted them, Thompson said.

“I’m shaking and I’m kind of being dragged to the bedroom,” he quoted one woman as saying, according to the pool report.

Thompson also highlighted the women’s understanding of Weinstein’s imposing physical size as well as his power in Hollywood to make or break careers, the pool report said.

“I was scared that if I didn’t play nice something could happen in the room or out of the room because of his power in the industry,” one woman said, according to Thompson.

The women allegedly told friends and family members about their assaults, and those people may also be called to testify in the trial to confirm or deny such conversations.

Notably, the licensed massage therapist told Mel Gibson, the famed actor and director, about her assault, Thompson said.

The trial in Los Angeles comes two years after Weinstein was convicted in New York of similar charges featuring different women.

The New York charges were based on testimony from Miriam Haley, who testified that Weinstein forcibly performed oral sex on her in 2006 at his Manhattan apartment, and from Jessica Mann, who testified that he raped her in 2013 during what she described as an abusive relationship.

He did not testify in his own defense, but at his sentencing he offered an unexpected, rambling speech which oscillated between remorse, defense of his actions and confusion.

“I’m not going to say these aren’t great people, I had wonderful times with these people, you know,” Weinstein said of the women who accused him of assault. “It is just I’m totally confused, and I think men are confused about all of these issues.”

The former movie producer appeared in frail health during the trial and used a walker as he arrived to and left court each day. He used a wheelchair to arrive to the sentencing in March 2020 as well as in a court hearing in Los Angeles in July 2021. His attorneys have argued the lengthy prison sentence was a de facto life sentence due to his failing health.

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