The 64-story Trump International Hotel doesn’t have a casino and it’s unclear whether it could be sold to pay off Donald Trump’s court judgments.
Donald Trump
The former president’s lawyers argue some of the evidence and alleged acts in the hush money case overlap with his time in the White House and constitute official acts.
Donald Trump became a bigger betting favorite over Joe Biden to win the 2024 election after Super Tuesday. Biden has closed the gap over the past month, however
It prohibits the former president from attacking key figures in the case, like his former lawyer-turned-nemesis Michael Cohen or porn star Stormy Daniels.
In an exclusive interview with Israel Hayom, the former president said Israel is ‘losing a lot of the world’ amid its war against terrorist group Hamas.
Trump Media & Technology Group, whose flagship product is social networking site Truth Social, will begin trading on the Nasdaq stock market on Tuesday.
A New York judge has scheduled an April 15 trial date in former President Donald Trump’s hush money case.
The development came just before New York Attorney General Letitia James was expected to initiate efforts to collect the judgment.
A state appeals court judge ruled last month that the former president must post a bond covering the full amount to pause enforcement of the judgment.
The U.S. national debt currently sits at $34.5 trillion — that’s more than $100,000 per person. Both parties are to blame.
Fulton County Superior Court Judge Scott McAfee left in place other counts — including 10 facing the former president — and said prosecutors could seek a new indictment.
“When he says he wants to be a dictator, I believe him,” Biden said of Trump. “Our freedoms are literally on the ballot this November.”
Michael Whatley, who has echoed the former president’s theories of voter fraud, was elected the party’s new national chairman in a vote Friday.
Attorney Alina Habba simultaneously filed a notice of appeal to show the former president is appealing the verdict to the 2nd U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals.
A London judge threw out the case against Orbis Business Intelligence last month saying it was “bound to fail.”