Trump Jurors Hear How Seamy Hush-Money Deals Were Made
Keith Davidson, a lawyer for Stormy Daniels and Karen McDougal, will resume testimony on Thursday.
By Ben Protess, Jonah E. Bromwich, Alan Feuer and
Keith Davidson, a lawyer for Stormy Daniels and Karen McDougal, will resume testimony on Thursday.
By Ben Protess, Jonah E. Bromwich, Alan Feuer and
Donald J. Trump was fined for contempt and warned of jail time before a lawyer testified about how he struck deals to silence two women who said they had trysts with the former president.
By Jesse McKinley and
In arguing to the Supreme Court that he cannot be charged for acts while in office, Donald Trump has asked the justices to enforce a norm that he has long threatened to shatter.
By Alan Feuer and
Donald J. Trump had complained about the judge in his Manhattan criminal trial not immediately giving him permission to be away from court on the day of the graduation, May 17.
By
Trump, Venting About Lawyer in His Criminal Trial, Seeks More Aggression
Todd Blanche upended his career to represent Donald J. Trump and has been the former president’s favorite. But Mr. Trump has made him a focus of his episodic wrath.
By Maggie Haberman and
Trump’s Trial Could Bring a Rarity: Consequences for His Words
The former president has spent decades spewing thousands and thousands of words, sometimes contradicting himself. That tendency is now working against him in his Manhattan criminal case.
By Maggie Haberman and
Trump and DeSantis Meet for First Time Since Bruising Primary
The former president and his vanquished rival met in Florida, months after Ron DeSantis dropped out after a contentious Republican contest.
By Maggie Haberman and
Echoing Their Client, Trump’s Lawyers Pursue an Absolutist Defense
Donald J. Trump demands praise and concedes no faults, denying his lawyers time-honored defense tactics.
By Ben Protess, Jonah E. Bromwich, Maggie Haberman and
Donald Trump Has Never Sounded Like This
No major American presidential candidate has talked like he now does at his rallies — not Richard Nixon, not George Wallace, not even Donald Trump himself.
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El expresidente quiere que su abogado ataque a los testigos, al jurado que considera hostil y al juez, Juan Merchan.
By Maggie Haberman and Jonathan Swan
Economists are wondering whether political developments could play into both the Fed’s near-term decisions and its long-term independence.
By Jeanna Smialek
I tried operating a boat on Conservatory Water, the pond famous for model boating. It’s harder than it looks.
By James Barron
The firm, LaRocca Hornik, has represented Donald Trump’s political operation in numerous suits dating to his first presidential run, including a pregnancy discrimination case in New York.
By Ken Bensinger
Donald Trump was fined and warned of jail time after he violated a gag order in his criminal trial. Prosecutors have argued that his statements threaten the trial. Jonah Bromwich, a criminal justice reporter at The New York Times, gives his takeaways.
By Jonah E. Bromwich, Rebecca Suner, Gabriel Blanco and Claire Hogan
The judge made it clear that further gag-order violations could land the former president in jail.
By Jesse McKinley
Republicans pressed the Treasury secretary on President Biden’s tax proposals and the fate of the Trump tax cuts that will expire in 2025.
By Alan Rappeport
They played clips of Donald J. Trump attacking women who had accused him of assault, a way to contend with a judge’s order barring direct testimony about the cases.
By Matthew Haag and Alan Feuer
The president and other top Democrats moved quickly to capitalize politically on Donald J. Trump’s interview with Time magazine, particularly his comments on abortion.
By Nicholas Nehamas and Reid J. Epstein
Keith Davidson, the lawyer who represented two women from Donald Trump’s past, testified in his criminal trial about the hush-money deals both received.
By Michael Rothfeld
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