Tag Archives: texted

Accused wife-killer Judge Jeffrey Ferguson texted ‘I just shot my wife. I won’t be in tomorrow’ to staff: prosecutors – New York Post

  1. Accused wife-killer Judge Jeffrey Ferguson texted ‘I just shot my wife. I won’t be in tomorrow’ to staff: prosecutors New York Post
  2. OC County judge charged with murder after fatally shooting his wife KCAL News
  3. California judge who’s charged with murder texted court staff that he shot his wife, prosecutors say Yahoo News
  4. California judge who’s charged with murder texted court staff that he shot his wife, prosecutors say San Francisco Chronicle
  5. California judge texted bailiff ‘I won’t be in tomorrow’ after allegedly killing his wife: Police Fox News
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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California judge who’s charged with murder texted court staff that he shot his wife, prosecutors say – The Associated Press

  1. California judge who’s charged with murder texted court staff that he shot his wife, prosecutors say The Associated Press
  2. California judge who’s charged with murder texted court staff that he shot his wife, prosecutors say Yahoo News
  3. OC judge charged with murdering wife FOX 11 Los Angeles
  4. Orange County Judge Jeffrey Ferguson charged with murdering wife at Anaheim Hills home; prosecutors say he confessed in text KABC-TV
  5. California judge texted bailiff ‘I won’t be in tomorrow’ after allegedly killing his wife: Police Fox News
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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Tori Spelling’s Realtor Accidentally Texted Her Talking Smack About Her — And She Posted The Screenshot – Yahoo Entertainment

  1. Tori Spelling’s Realtor Accidentally Texted Her Talking Smack About Her — And She Posted The Screenshot Yahoo Entertainment
  2. Tori Spelling Realtor Wrong Text Mocking Her BuzzFeed
  3. Tori Spelling leaks texts from realtor ‘mocking’ her family’s housing ‘crisis’ Page Six
  4. Tori Spelling’s Friends Are Concerned About Her Well-Being After She Goes ‘Radio Silent’ Amid Dean McDermott Split Yahoo Entertainment
  5. Tori Spelling leaks texts from realtor ‘mocking’ her housing ‘crisis’ after staying at a $100-a-night motel du Daily Mail
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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Here’s how Antioch police officers texted in racist, homophobic slurs – San Francisco Chronicle

  1. Here’s how Antioch police officers texted in racist, homophobic slurs San Francisco Chronicle
  2. ‘I’ll Bury That N—-r In My Fields’: Police Probe Exposes ‘Very Disturbing’ Texts Sent In Personal Chat Among Dozens of Officers In Bay Area; City’s Black Mayor Not Exempt from Threats Yahoo News
  3. Antioch officers called Black people ‘gorillas’ in texts, documents show KRON4
  4. Antioch police scandal: 2nd DA’s report reveals more racist texts SFGATE
  5. Editorial: Antioch police text scandal tests mayor’s leadership The Mercury News
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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Tucker Carlson texted ‘I hate (Trump) passionately’ as outrage grows over Jan. 6 whitewash – New York Daily News

  1. Tucker Carlson texted ‘I hate (Trump) passionately’ as outrage grows over Jan. 6 whitewash New York Daily News
  2. ‘I hate him passionately’: Tucker Carlson was fed up with Trump after the 2020 election Yahoo News
  3. Tucker Carlson’s Private Contempt for Trump: ‘I Hate Him Passionately’ The New York Times
  4. Tucker Carlson ‘passionately’ hates Donald Trump. But that’s not all The Independent
  5. Analysis | Carlson hates Trump but needs his base — like the rest of the right The Washington Post
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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Andrew Tate Texted Rape Accuser ‘I Love Raping You:’ Vice

  • Andrew Tate sent a sexual assault accuser a series of texts endorsing rape, according to Vice News.
  • They were part of evidence UK police collected while investigating Tate between 2015 and 2019.
  • Ultimately, the Crown Protection Service did not pursue rape charges against Tate in 2019.

A series of messages were released by Vice World News on Wednesday that appear to show the misogynistic influencer and ex-kickboxer Andrew Tate endorsing a sexual assault to a woman who accused him.

The texts and voice messages released by the outlet come a day after Tate failed to secure his release from a Romanian jail in the middle of a sex trafficking investigation into him and his brother.

According to Vice’s reporting, Tate sent a woman who accused him of rape in 2013 threatening messages after the incident, including ones where he said he “enjoyed it.”

“I love raping you,” Tate said in one of the texts shared with Vice. “Monsters are monsters. When ur under my control, I do whatever I please.” 

Tate was arrested by UK police in 2015 after two women came forward with allegations against Tate — one accused him of sexual assault, and the other of violent assault, saying he strangled her. A third woman also told police that Tate sexual assaulted her in 2014, six months after she said the 2013 incident took place, Vice reported.

A spokesperson for Hertfordshire police confirmed to Insider:

  • Tate was initially arrested on July 18, 2015 in relation to an allegation of assault against one woman.
  • He was arrested again the same day in relation to an allegation of rape and assault of another woman.
  • He was subsequently further arrested on December 17, 2015 on suspicion of rape.

The Crown Prosecution Service did not bring charges in any of the cases. The third accuser shared texts with Vice that she told the publication Tate sent her after he raped her, which she also said she shared with police. The messages have not been independently authenticated by Insider.

The woman, who used the alias Amelia, told Vice that she and Tate had known each other since 2009 and began dating in 2013. The first night that she went over to Tate’s apartment, she told the publication that a flip had switched after she told him she did not want to have sex that night.

“I got up and looked at him and went, ‘What’s wrong?'” the woman told Vice. “This guy literally laid there and went: ‘I’m just debating whether I should rape you or not.'”

She told that outlet that Tate strangled and raped her after that moment, calling her his property and asking “who do you belong to?”

In some of his videos, Tate has made similar comments, calling women the property of men, and has advocated for violence against women in the context of infidelity. 

Six months later, the woman had filed a police report and by 2015 she was contacted by the Hertfordshire Police as they sought evidence on Tate. At that point, she turned over her phone which included texts with Tate after the incident, per Vice.

 The voice notes provided by the woman from Tate struck a macabre tenor as well.

“Am I a bad person… because the more you didn’t like it the more I enjoyed it,” Tate can be heard saying in one of the voice notes, per Vice, adding that he wanted to “pin you down and make you do things you didn’t like.”

The messages painted a grim picture of the evening Amelia described to Vice.

“You didn’t like that I was thinking I can do whatever I want to you,” Tate said in one voice note provided to the outlet. “That’s what it is. I’m the smartest person on this fucking planet.”

She told Vice that after Tate sent her a video of him breaking a baseball bat on his shin, she never saw him in person again. He also sent a voice note with the video, according to Vice.

“I am one of the most dangerous men on this planet,” Tate said in the video, per Vice. “Sometimes you forget exactly how lucky you were to get fucked by me.”

Ultimately, the Crown Prosecution Service decided not to pursue charges against Tate in 2019 and previously told Insider that it did not prosecute Tate because it saw “no realistic prospect of a conviction.”

The spokesperson told Insider on Thursday that its statement has not changed in light of the latest reports.

Tate’s lawyer did not immediately return Insider’s request for comment.

Andrew Tate has monetized his views through his paid video subscription program “Hustler University,” where he has amassed tens of millions of dollars and a legion of largely male followers, according to Buzzfeed News. 

Tate, his brother Tristan, and two Romanian women were arrested in December on charges related to a Romanian human trafficking and rape investigation into the four. They are accused of exploiting women in the country to produce pornography and are also facing a separate rape accusation.

After losing an appeal on Tuesday, all four defendants will remain in detention at least through the end of January.

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Elon Musk Texted Twitter CEO About Lawyers Before Deal Pull-Out: Report

Twitter sued Musk after he decided to back out of the $44 billion takeover deal. (File)

Washington:

The dispute between Tesla CEO Elon Musk and Twitter is taking many twists and turns.

As per new reports, Elon Musk recently, but before pulling out of the deal, sent a text to Twitter CEO Parag Agrawal on June 28, informing him that the company’s lawyers were trying to “cause trouble” after they sought information on the financial details that Musk was planning to complete the acquisition of Twitter.

“Your lawyers are using these conversations to cause trouble. That needs to stop,” Musk’s text reportedly read. Musk sent the particular message after Twitter asked Musk how he would finance the Twitter deal.

A few days ago, Twitter sued Musk after he decided to back out of the $44 billion takeover deal.

As per The Verge, the lawsuit was filed in Delaware’s Court of Chancery on Tuesday, accusing Musk of hypocrisy.”Twitter brings this action to enjoin Musk from further breaches to compel Musk to fulfil his legal obligations and to compel consummation of the merger upon satisfaction of the few outstanding conditions,” Twitter wrote in the lawsuit. The lawsuit marks the beginning of what could be a protracted legal battle as Twitter seeks to hold Musk to his deal to pay USD 54.20 per share for the company. Twitter, which is being repped by M&A powerhouse law firm Wachtell, Lipton, Rosen & Katz, alleged that Musk looked for an escape from the deal, which required a “material adverse effect” or breach of contract.”

Musk had to try to conjure one of those,” the lawsuit stated. Musk announced the termination of the Twitter purchase deal in a letter sent by Musk’s team to Twitter earlier this month.

Musk decided to suspend the deal due to multiple breaches of the purchase agreement. In April, Musk reached an acquisition agreement with Twitter at USD 54.20 per share in a transaction valued at approximately USD 44 billion. However, Musk put the deal on hold in May to allow his team to review the veracity of Twitter’s claim that less than 5 per cent of accounts on the platform are bots or spam.

Back in June, Musk had openly accused the microblogging website of breaching the merger agreement and threatened to walk away and call off the acquisition of the social media company for not providing the data he has requested on spam and fake accounts. Musk alleged that Twitter is “actively resisting and thwarting his information rights” as outlined by the deal, CNN reported, citing the letter he sent to Twitter’s head of legal, policy and trust, Vijaya Gadde.

Musk demanded that Twitter turn over information about its testing methodologies to support its claims that bots and fake accounts constitute less than 5 per cent of the platform’s active user base, a figure the company has consistently stated for years in boilerplate public disclosures.

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CNN Exclusive: Republicans who texted Meadows with urgent pleas on January 6 say Trump could have stopped the violence

“POTUS needs to calm this shit down,” GOP Rep. Jeff Duncan of South Carolina wrote at 3:04 p.m.

“TELL THEM TO GO HOME !!!” former White House chief of staff Reince Priebus messaged at 3:09 p.m.

“POTUS should go on air and defuse this. Extremely important,” Tom Price, former Trump health and human services secretary and a former GOP representative from Georgia, texted at 3:13 p.m.

“Fix this now,” wrote GOP Rep. Chip Roy of Texas at 3:15 p.m.
One of the key questions the January 6 House committee is expected to raise in its June hearings is why Trump failed to publicly condemn the attack for hours, and whether that failure is proof of “dereliction of duty” and evidence that Trump tried to obstruct Congress’ certification of the election.

The Meadows texts show that even those closest to the former President believed he had the power to stop the violence in real time.

CNN obtained the 2,319 text messages that Meadows selectively handed over to the January 6 committee in December before he stopped cooperating with the investigation. According to a source familiar with the committee’s investigation, the texts provide a valuable “road map” and show how Meadows was an enabler of Trump, despite being told there was no widespread election fraud.

Seventeen months later, CNN spoke to more than a dozen people who had texted Meadows that day, including former White House officials, Republican members of Congress and political veterans. Without exception, each said they stood by their texts and that they believed Trump had the power and responsibility to try to stop the attack immediately.

“I thought the President could stop it and was the only person who could stop it,” said Alyssa Farah Griffin, who was Trump’s director of strategic communications until she left the White House in December 2020. Farah Griffin is now a CNN political commentator.

“When he finally tweeted something hours and hours later, there are reports of people inside the building saying, ‘He’s saying to go home.’ They would have listened to him,” she added.

Farah Griffin texted Meadows at 3:13 p.m. that day: “Potus has to come out firmly and tell protesters to dissipate. Someone is going to get killed.”

Trump’s former acting White House chief of staff, Mick Mulvaney, also texted Meadows on January 6: “Mark: he needs to stop this, now. Can I do anything to help?”

Mulvaney told CNN he stands by his text. “I wish someone had responded to my outreach,” he said.

Most of the people who spoke to CNN about their texts on January 6 would be quoted only anonymously. Some said it was because of their jobs. Some said they were afraid Trump would be reelected. One said they just didn’t want to go through “the misery of being targeted by Trump supporters.”

Their words were blunt, emotional and damning, even those who remain staunch Trump allies.

“I thought there was only one person who could stop it and that was the President,” said a senior Republican. “I don’t know that I can think of another situation that was as grave for the nation, or as affecting for the nation, where the President didn’t say something.”

A Meadows associate said Trump had waited too long to act: “Two hours is just inexcusable … when the safety of the federal government is in question you have the duty immediately to speak out. And Trump was derelict in that duty.”

Another political veteran said Trump’s silence made him complicit: “I think he knew he could stop it, which is why he remained silent.”

And a former Trump administration official summed it up with this stark assessment: “He failed at being the president.”

An attorney for Meadows did not respond to a request for comment. A spokesman for the January 6 committee also did not respond to a request for comment.

‘I’m very worried about the next 48 hours’

The Meadows text logs present a dramatic timeline of how friends, colleagues and Republican allies were pleading for help on January 6.

Rioters stormed police barriers around the Capitol just after 1 p.m. that day. The House and Senate fled their chambers around 2:20 p.m. Yet it took Trump until 4:17 p.m. to release a video on Twitter telling the rioters to go home.

The upcoming January 6 hearings are expected to focus on the gap of 187 minutes it took Trump to release the video — as well as highlight some of the most notable texts that Meadows received and sent that day.

The logs are not a complete record of Meadows’ texts — he withheld more than 1,000 messages, claiming executive privilege, according to the committee. But the messages Meadows did hand over show his responses were often terse and emotionless, if he replied at all.

Two sources familiar with the committee’s investigation said it was remarkable that Meadows never seemed alarmed in the messages he sent on January 6, and that even in the midst of the violence, he appeared unwilling to stand up to Trump. “Even Don Jr. knew the right thing to do,” one source told CNN.

On January 5, the Meadows text logs show that the chief of staff was still actively involved with plans to object to the congressional certification of Joe Biden’s election victory, encouraging Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene to pass on evidence of voter fraud.

“Last night Sen Graham told me that if I found 100 names of dead voters in GA that he would object. I have 100 dead voters names!! Tell President Trump!” Greene, a Georgia Republican, texted Meadows at 2:30 p.m.

“Send them to him,” Meadows responded, making sure she had Graham’s cell phone number.

At 10:29 p.m., Fox’s Sean Hannity chimed in with an apprehensive message over what was to come.

“I’m very worried about the next 48 hours,” Hannity texted Meadows. “Pence pressure. WH counsel will leave.”

Meadows did not reply directly, but he appeared to have called Hannity, who texted that he couldn’t pick up the phone.

“On with boss,” Hannity texted, an apparent reference to Trump.

The last message Meadows received on January 5 is from his close friend and Trump ally Rep. Jim Jordan of Ohio. Shortly before midnight, Jordan forwarded a message making the case that Vice President Mike Pence “should call out all electoral votes that he believes are unconstitutional as no electoral votes at all.”

‘I have pushed for this’

The morning of January 6, Meadows woke up to three problems: logistics for that day’s rally on the Ellipse, Pence’s refusal to join Trump’s attempts to subvert the election and the US Senate runoffs the day before in Georgia, where both Republicans were trailing.

At 7:30 a.m., Meadows responded to Jordan’s message from the night before, acknowledging his support for Pence to reject the electoral votes. “I have pushed for this,” Meadows wrote back. “Not sure it is going to happen.”

Meadows then turned his attention to the January 6 rally, where Trump was slated to speak later that morning. Meadows had been involved with the fraught internal drama over the speaker’s list in the days leading up to the event.

Meadows checked in to make sure one of the speakers, Rep. Mo Brooks of Alabama, knew he was supposed to appear.

“You are speaking this am. Are you aware,” Meadows asked at 8:08 a.m.

Brooks, who gave one of the more incendiary speeches of the day, responded at 9:33 a.m., after leaving the stage: “Did it in 10m. Thanks! Crowd roaring.”

Jordan and Brooks are two of five House Republicans who have been subpoenaed by the January 6 committee.
At 11 a.m., Trump campaign spokesman Jason Miller shared a tweet with Meadows and other top Trump aides capturing the darkening mood inside Senate Republican leader Mitch McConnell’s camp with Democrats poised to take control of the Senate.

“Emotions running high among McConnell-aligned Republicans early Wednesday am — after reality of what transpired in Georgia settled in,” National Journal reporter Josh Kraushaar wrote in the tweet. “May be the heat of the moment, but mood is for declaring war on Team Trump.”

‘Someone is going to get killed’

At 1:05 p.m., while Trump was still addressing the crowd at the Ellipse, House Speaker Nancy Pelosi gaveled in the joint session inside the Capitol to begin certifying Biden’s Electoral College win. Outside the Capitol, pro-Trump supporters were already breaking through police barriers.

Roughly an hour later, rioters clashed with police and breached the Capitol doors, forcing the House and Senate to abruptly gavel out of session and evacuate the chambers.

According to court filings, at 2:02 p.m. Meadows’ deputy Ben Williamson sent his boss a text message about the violence unfolding at the Capitol. The text is not included in the logs Meadows turned over, but Williamson provided it to the committee.

“Would recommend POTUS put out a tweet about respecting the police over at the Capitol — getting a little hairy over there,” Williamson wrote.

Williamson said he had then spoken to Meadows in person and that Meadows had immediately gone toward the Oval Office to inform Trump, according to court documents.

Shortly afterward, Meadows began receiving messages about the mob at the door.

“Will potus say something to tamp things down?” wrote CNN’s Jim Acosta at 2:12 p.m.

Despite Williamson’s advice urging the President to send a message about respecting the police, Trump tweeted again at 2:24 p.m., attacking his vice president.

“Mike Pence didn’t have the courage to do what should have been done to protect our Country and our Constitution, giving States a chance to certify a corrected set of facts, not the fraudulent or inaccurate ones which they were asked to previously certify. USA demands the truth!” Trump tweeted.

Four minutes later, Trump’s allies began imploring Meadows to convince the President to do something. The first message came from Greene.

“Mark I was just told there is an active shooter on the first floor of the Capitol Please tell the President to calm people This isn’t the way to solve anything,” Greene wrote at 2:28 p.m.

Fox’s Laura Ingraham texted Meadows at 2:32 p.m., “Hey Mark, The president needs to tell people in the Capitol to go home. This is hurting all of us.”

Meadows heard from local contacts, too, including one who castigated the White House chief of staff for his role leading up to the insurrection.

At 2:34 p.m., North Carolina-based Republican strategist Carlton Huffman wrote, “You’ve earned a special place in infamy for the events of today. And if you’re the Christian you claim to be in your heart you know that.”

“It’s really bad up here on the hill,” texted Rep. Barry Loudermilk of Georgia at 2:44 p.m.

At 2:46 p.m., GOP Rep. Will Timmons of South Carolina wrote to Meadows: “The president needs to stop this ASAP.”

Several who texted Meadows told CNN they hoped their messages would convince the chief of staff to stand up to Trump and get him to stop the violence.

‘We love you, you’re very special’

At 2:48 p.m., Meadows responded to Loudermilk that “POTUS is engaging.” But Trump would not tell the rioters to leave the Capitol for another hour and a half as messages continued to pour in from Trump allies, Meadows associates and reporters seeking a White House response.

Jonathan Karl of ABC News texted at 2:53 p.m., “What are you going to do to stop this? What is the president going to do?”

Karl said of his text to Meadows, “I was asking a question as a reporter who wanted to know what was happening inside the White House as the Capitol was being attacked. But I was also asking as an American horrified by what I was witnessing.”

Meadows received more messages from contacts in his home state urging Trump to intervene.

At 3:42 p.m., North Carolina-based lobbyist Tom Cors wrote, “Pls have POTUS call this off at the Capitol. Urge rioters to disperse. I pray to you.”

At 3:52 p.m., North Carolina lawyer Jay Leutze texted, “Mark, this assault in the Capitol is tragic for the country. Please call it off so the Congress can resume its peaceful debate.”

Finally, at 4:17 p.m., Trump released a video message telling the rioters to leave the Capitol. The video he tweeted was just over a minute long.

“I know your pain. I know you’re hurt,” Trump said. “We have to have peace. We have to have law and order. We have to respect our great people in law and order. We don’t want anybody hurt.”

Trump concluded, “So go home. We love you, you’re very special. You’ve seen what happens, you see the way others are treated that are so bad and so evil. I know how you feel, but go home and go home in peace.”

‘Good that you made that video’

Trump’s video helped ease some of the pressure being directed toward Meadows. Priebus, a former White House chief of staff, told Meadows at 4:20 p.m., “Good that you made that video.”

The video also wasn’t Trump’s final word. At 6:01 p.m., he sent another tweet once again falsely claiming fraud. Trump’s Twitter account was suspended a little over an hour later before he was ultimately banned from the platform.

“These are the things and events that happen when a sacred landslide election victory is so unceremoniously & viciously stripped away from great patriots who have been badly & unfairly treated for so long,” Trump tweeted. “Go home with love & in peace. Remember this day forever!”

That evening, Meadows received numerous queries from reporters asking about the fallout of the insurrection, such as questions about whether Cabinet secretaries were resigning or considering invoking the 25th Amendment to remove Trump from office. He was asked about Pence’s situation, too, including by Hannity, who texted at 7:57 p.m., “Wth is happening with VPOTUS.” Meadows does not appear to have responded.

Several reporters also texted Meadows asking whether he personally was considering resigning.

“Off the record. No,” he responded at 10:21 p.m. to reporter Al Weaver of The Hill.

‘Mrs. Trump has also signed off’

While rioters were still being cleared from the Capitol, there were questions about whether the House and Senate would reconvene to finish counting the electoral votes. Republican and Democratic leaders in both chambers vowed to do so.

At 8:06 p.m., Pence gaveled the Senate back into session.

“Today was a dark day in the history of the United States Capitol,” he began from the Senate dais.

The vice president condemned the violence and said the reassembled lawmakers were there to defend and support the Constitution. “Let’s get back to work,” he concluded to loud cheers.

After two months of trying to overturn the 2020 election, the Meadows text logs show, Trump’s team had prepared a draft statement once the certification was complete, which said there “will be an orderly transition on January 20th.”

In a group text at 10:01 p.m., Trump campaign spokesman Miller reached out to Meadows, Trump’s son-in-law, Jared Kushner, and Trump aide Dan Scavino. “Chief, Jared, Dan – below please find an approved statement from the President to go out right as they’re finalizing the votes, which we’re expecting to be 3am, though with some Members caving it could happen earlier,” Miller texted. “Mrs. Trump has also signed off.”

Kushner weighed in with a suggestion about how to release the statement. “Why don’t we post on his Facebook page since he isn’t locked out there,” Kushner wrote, after Trump had been suspended from Twitter a few hours earlier.

“I’ll be up,” responded Scavino, “let me know when ok to drop, and it’s official…just got off w/them.”

In the end, Scavino tweeted the statement from his personal account at 3:49 a.m. on January 7, five minutes after Biden’s win was finally certified and Pence gaveled out the joint session of Congress.



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Georgia official frantically texted Mark Meadows as Trump badgered secretary of state to ‘find’ votes

“Need to end this call,” Jordan Fuchs, then the deputy secretary of state, said in a text message to then-White House chief of staff Mark Meadows. “I don’t think this will be productive much longer.”

The little-noticed text messages, included in a recent court filing, provide a deeper look at the chaos that ensued as the former President pressed Raffensperger to help prove Trump won in Georgia — a state Trump lost. That call now stands at the center of an investigation into Trump, which is set to advance this week when Atlanta-area prosecutors convene a special grand jury to determine whether any of Trump’s actions related to Georgia’s election — or those of his allies — were criminal.

Meadows eventually did wrap up that tense call back in January 2021, suggesting lawyers from both sides should connect again soon.

“Thank you,” Fuchs said. “Wow.”

Fuchs declined to comment.

Fulton County District Attorney Fani Willis has been digging into Trump’s calls with Raffensperger and another official in the Secretary of State’s office; presentations former Trump lawyer Rudy Giuliani made before state lawmakers that were riddled with election falsehoods; a phone call between South Carolina Sen. Lindsey Graham and Raffensperger; and the sudden departure of Byung “BJay” Pak, the US attorney for the Northern District of Georgia.

Willis is poised to seat the grand jury in the middle of a hotly contested Republican primary season in Georgia. She has said she will delay calling witnesses — several of whom are on the ballot — to avoid interfering with the primary. Meantime, as former Republican Sen. David Perdue challenges Gov. Brian Kemp in the GOP gubernatorial primary, new evidence is emerging about Perdue’s efforts to backchannel with Georgia officials about the 2020 election results.

For Willis, her probe has been playing out against a backdrop of racist threats that began the moment she announced an investigation into Trump. For Monday’s jury selection, officials are planning to close roads surrounding the courthouse, station snipers on the roof and have K-9 police dogs at the ready, according to people involved in the planning. Prosecutors on Willis’ team have also been issued bulletproof vests, said a person familiar with the situation.

The sweeping investigation has sought to determine not only whether Trump committed crimes but also whether there was a broader criminal conspiracy playing out in the efforts to overturn Georgia’s election results. In document preservation requests to Georgia officials in February 2021, Willis said she was investigating potential crimes including solicitation of election fraud, making false statements to government bodies, conspiracy, racketeering, violation of oath of office and violence or threats related to election administration.

Over the past 15 months, investigators in Georgia have interviewed more than 50 witnesses, with plans to subpoena at least 30 others, Willis told the Atlanta Journal Constitution and a source familiar with the probe confirmed to CNN. Once the special grand jury is empaneled, prosecutors will be able to subpoena witnesses that may include some of Trump’s closest associates.

“I imagine that we’re going to be issuing subpoenas to a lot of people, and that all of them are not going to welcome our invitation to come speak with us,” Willis told CNN in February.

A special grand jury does not issue indictments, but it possesses broader investigative powers than a typical grand jury in the state as well as the power to issue subpoenas for witness testimony, phone, email and other records. If the special grand jury recommends an indictment, Willis could then seek one from the other grand juries regularly empaneled in Fulton County.

The Georgia investigation is playing out as the House select committee has already collected a mountain of information, including some relating to the Trump team’s efforts in Georgia. The House select committee and Willis’ team have already been in contact about ways to share information, according to sources familiar with the situation, although it’s still unclear if she has access to material like Meadows’ texts. Some of that information could bolster Willis’ efforts or even open new avenues of investigation.

“Any relevant information no matter where it comes from will be reviewed and part of the investigation,” said Jeff DiSantis, a spokesman for the Fulton County district attorney’s office.

Text messages from Meadows show Perdue’s efforts to help Trump

Perdue jumped into the governor’s race last year after Trump — still livid over Kemp’s role in certifying the 2020 election — went hunting for a Republican to challenge the incumbent governor. Earlier that year, Perdue had lost his US Senate seat in a runoff election against Democrat Jon Ossoff. It was a loss many Republicans blamed on Trump, complaining Trump’s constant election fraud claims had depressed the GOP vote.

Now that he’s running as the Trump-backed candidate, Perdue has fully embraced baseless election fraud claims, opening an April debate against Kemp by saying, “folks, let me be very clear tonight, the election in 2020 was rigged and stolen.”

Previously unreported text messages which were obtained by CNN and are among those Meadows selectively provided to the House select committee investigating Jan. 6, reveal Perdue also played a role in working to sway Georgia officials last year while he was preparing for his runoff fight.

Georgia Attorney General Chris “Carr won’t be any help with SOS,” Perdue wrote to Meadows on December 13, 2020. “I have a call into the Governor’s general counsel now to see if they might help.”

The text came days after Trump spoke to Carr and reportedly encouraged him not to rally Republicans against a lawsuit Trump allies filed with the Supreme Court to toss millions of votes from Georgia and other battleground states. In a response to the Supreme Court on December 10, Carr urged the justices to reject the Trump-backed lawsuit. (The court rejected the lawsuit the next day.)

Spokespeople for Carr and Kemp did not respond to requests for comment about the text messages.

In a separate exchange, Perdue texted Meadows on December 29, saying he was helping to arrange a call between Giuliani and top Republicans in the Georgia state legislature. “I’m trying to set up this call with state legislature leaders and Rudy,” Perdue texted. “I just want to make sure I’m doing what you and the president want.”

After Perdue sent a follow-up text confirming the roster of call of participants, Meadows responded, “Great.”

The following day, Giuliani appeared before a Georgia state Senate subcommittee spreading more lies and conspiracies about the 2020 election.

A spokeswoman for Perdue’s campaign declined to comment.

An attorney for Meadows did not respond to a request for comment.

Bob Costello, an attorney for Giuliani, declined to comment on the text messages and said his client has yet to hear from investigators in Georgia.

“No news is good news,” Costello said.

Long road ahead in Trump case

Willis told CNN in February that she expects some subpoenas to go out in May, followed by more in June. But she told the Atlanta Journal Constitution she doesn’t intend to call witnesses to testify until June 1, after Georgia’s May 24 primary.

A number of those potential witnesses — including Raffensperger, Carr and Kemp — are on the GOP primary ballot, facing off against a slate of election-deniers. All of them, in addition to Lt. Gov. Geoff Duncan who is not running for reelection, received document preservation requests last year. They are not expected to be targets of the probe, according to document preservation letters Willis sent last year.

“I would not request that anyone that was on the ballot come speak to me prior to May 24. I’ve run a campaign, I know how busy, crazy you are,” Willis told CNN in a February interview. “I think that you wouldn’t even be able to think clearly to really give us the type of interview I need. However, when we get past that point I can’t wait around until some election in November. I just can’t do that.”

Several staffers from the Secretary of State’s office participated in voluntary interviews with Willis’ team and Raffensperger previously told CNN he would share information if he received a subpoena. Carr and his staffers have not yet participated in interviews with investigators, according to his office. Spokespeople for Kemp and Duncan did not respond to questions.

Willis previously told CNN she hopes to decide whether or not to pursue charges by the end of 2022.

Michael J. Moore, the former US attorney for the Middle District of Georgia between 2010 and 2015 under President Barack Obama, said that Willis should expect a series of challenges from Trump’s legal team if she pushes ahead with subpoenas for his inner circle or, eventually, an indictment.

“There’s this big crescendo that has led up to this special grand jury, then everybody’s going to be waiting to see is there an indictment or is there a decision to charge,” Moore said. “If there’s an indictment, you’re going to have this ongoing legal battle about whether or not the state has the legal authority and jurisdiction to do it, whether or not the former President can be charged with this.”

Moore added: “At the end of the day I just think it’s unlikely that a former President ends up in the Georgia penitentiary system.”

For Trump’s part, people close to him said he hasn’t been particularly preoccupied by the Georgia investigation.

Willis has met with Trump’s attorneys on multiple occasions and has informed them she is moving ahead with her investigation. If Willis appears to be nearing an indictment, Trump’s attorneys have already asked Willis for an opportunity to present their case for why he should not face charges, according to a person familiar with the matter.

A Trump spokeswoman did not respond to a request for comment.

The threats that have ensued around this high-profile investigation have prompted officials to ramp up security as a pool of roughly 200 potential grand jurors arrive Monday. Eventually the group will be whittled down to roughly two dozen who will be chosen and are expected to meet weekly.

“We want to be in a space where we’re just overly prepared,” Fulton County Sheriff Patrick Labat, who has taken the lead on security protocols as the special grand jury gets underway, told CNN in an interview. “We’re rather have the resources and not need them, right? And given everything that took place on January 6th, we want to make sure that our community, our justice community, is as safe as possible.”

Willis also asked the FBI to provide security for buildings surrounding her office and the courthouse after Trump, appearing at a rally in Texas, called for his supporters to protest prosecutors in Atlanta, New York and Washington, DC.

“Our efforts are focused on gathering intelligence to identify any potential threats and sharing that information with our partners,” said Jenna Sellitto, public affairs specialist with the FBI in Atlanta. “If any potential threats develop, we will work with our partners as necessary.”

Willis previously told CNN the level of threats aimed at her team have ebbed and flowed, although they have been consistently racist in nature.

“I’ll tell your viewers and any other viewers: It does not offend me to call me Black. It just doesn’t. They’re wasting their time,” Willis said back in February. “However, they continue to send those very nasty messages. I’ve never been called the N-word so much in my life.”

Labat said Fulton County and its law enforcement partners are prepared to deal with high profile situations, comparing the preparations to getting ready for the Super Bowl or Atlanta’s Peachtree Road Race, which draws tens of thousands of runners and bills itself as the world’s largest 10-kilometer road race.

“This is a big show, but it’s not the biggest show the city and the country have ever seen,” Labat said of the Trump case in Georgia. “We’ll manage.”

CNN’s Jamie Gangel and Ryan Nobles contributed to this report.

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Johnny Depp-Amber Heard trial live: Depp texted a friend about Heard’s ‘rotting corpse’, court hears

Johnny Depp’s friend Isaac Baruch weeps in stand during Amber Heard defamation trial

Johnny Depp’s multi-million defamation lawsuit against his former wife, Amber Heard, continues in Virginia. The court has heard from the actor’s sister Christi Dembrowski, who also acted in part as his business manager, and his artist friend and neighbour Isaac Baruch, who gave especially colourful and emotional testimony.

Depp claims a 2018 article written by Heard in The Washington Post – in which she spoke about domestic violence towards women – implied Depp, her former husband, was an abuser.

Although the 35-year-old did not name the actor, lawyers for Depp say Heard’s allegations have made it difficult for the 58-year-old to land roles he previously did.

Depp is known for starring in films such as Pirates of the Caribbean, Sweeney Todd and Charlie and the Chocolate Factory. Heard has appeared in titles including Aquaman and Drive Angry.

He is asking for $50m (£38.2m) in damages during the trial in Fairfax County’s district courthouse. Heard has meanwhile filed a counterclaim of defamation against Depp, who she divorced from in 2017, for nuisance.

Depp has previously lost a defamation case in the UK against British newspaperThe Sun regarding the claims in Heard’s 2018 article.

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ICYMI: Heard accuses Depp of sexual assault with liquor bottle

Explosive new allegations have been made by Amber Heard about her ex-husband, Johnny Depp, during the opening arguments of his $50m defamation trial.

Ms Heard’s attorney, Elaine Bredehoft, claimed that Mr Depp sexually assaulted Heard using a liquor bottle during a black-out drunk episode.

Oliver O’Connell14 April 2022 10:00

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ICYMI: Opening statements – Lawyers claim Amber Heard is a ‘compulsive liar’

The legal team representing Johnny Depp in the defamation case against his ex-wife Amber Heard has made their opening statements, with Mr Depp’s attorneys painting Ms Heard as a compulsive and chronic liar who used the allegations she made against the actor as a means to advance her own career.

They claimed she wanted to portray herself as a heroic survivor of abuse.

The attorneys also noted Mr Depp’s drug and alcohol use, but argued that a substance abuse problem does not prove that he ever hurt Ms Heard.

Oliver O’Connell14 April 2022 09:00

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ICYMI: Fans, stars, and a flurry of questions

Johnny Depp and Amber Heard were both present for the first day of the defamation case opposing them in Virginia, Clémence Michallon reports from Fairfax.

Oliver O’Connell14 April 2022 08:00

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Johnny Depp called Amber Heard a ‘c**t’ and texted friend about her ‘rotting corpse’, court hears

Johnny Depp once called Amber Heard a “c**t” and referred to her “rotting corpse” in a text to a friend, a US court heard on Wednesday (13 April).

The message was read as part of the defamation case opposing Depp and Heard in Fairfax, Virginia.

The day’s witnesses included Depp’s longtime friend Isaac Baruch, who was asked by Heard’s attorney Elaine Bredehoft: “Do you recall Mr Depp ever telling you that he hoped that Amber Heard’s rotting corpse is decomposing in the f*****g trunk of a Honda Civic?”

Baruch pointed to a monitor on which the message was displayed and said: “Yeah. Well, I say yeah – I’m seeing it here, so obviously, yeah, it was said. It was written.”

Clémence Michallon has the full story

Peony Hirwani14 April 2022 06:40

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Depp’s friend insists actor and wife were ‘loving’ couple

A friend of Johnny Depp testified as a witness on day three of the defamation trial opposing Depp and his ex-wife Amber Heard.

Isaac Baruch was called to testify on Wednedsay (13 April) in Fairfax, Virginia. He took the stand after cross-examination wrapped up for Mr Depp’s sister Christi Dembrowski.

Mr Baruch said he first got to know Mr Depp when both were teenagers in Florida, playing in bands. He testified for a couple of hours, giving colorful testimony that at times drew smiles and laughs from others in the courthouse – including Mr Depp and Ms Heard themselves.

Oliver O’Connell14 April 2022 06:00

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Earlier: Depp’s sister says Heard called him ‘old and fat’ and family ‘devastated’ by marriage

Johnny Depp’s sister says Amber Heard called him “old and fat” and that the actor’s family was “devastated” at his marriage to her.

Christi Dembrowski made the claims as she took the stand as the first witness in the multi-million dollar defamation trial in Virginia, in which Depp claims that a 2018 article on domestic violence she wrote for The Washington Post implied he was an abuser.

She told the court that while she had seen Ms Heard “be nice” to her brother, she had also seen her “be not nice” and gave details of one such confrontation.

Oliver O’Connell14 April 2022 04:30

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Depp smirks as court hears he’s obsessed with Elon Musk

The actor appeared to stifle a laugh during opening statements in the case, when Ms Heard’s lawyer, Elaine Bredehoft, told the civil jury of 11 people that “Johny Depp is obsessed with Elon Musk”.

Oliver O’Connell14 April 2022 03:00

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Piers Morgan calls Heard and Depp ‘supreme narcissists’ amid ongoing legal battle

In an opinion column for the New York Post, Morgan wrote: “I can honestly say that the number of f***s I give about this shamelessly deluded and self-obsessed pair of whiny wastrels could be written on the back of Mycoplasma genitalium, the planet’s smallest living organism.”

Oliver O’Connell14 April 2022 00:00

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Depp’s tearful friend pleads for couple to ‘go heal’

In the defamation case against Amber Heard brought by her ex-husband Johnny Depp, a former neighbour of the couple became emotional during extensive testimony about his friendship with the pair.

Isaac Baruch, who first met Depp as a teenager in Florida and became his longtime friend, lived in one of the five penthouse lofts at the Eastern Columbia Building in Downtown Los Angeles owned by the actor.

At one point on Wednesday, he was asked by Heard’s lawyer Elaine Bredehoft if he was angry with her client given all that unfolded as the couple broke up and allegations were made against Depp.

Here’s how he responded:

Oliver O’Connell13 April 2022 23:00

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Judge Azcarate dismisses the jury for the evening.

Court resumes tomorrow at 10am.

Oliver O’Connell13 April 2022 22:24

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