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Trump's world....


DBP66

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1 hour ago, OldTerrapin said:

 

Wonder if these electric car fucks ever stop to wonder what happens when the gas stations can't make money selling gas anymore and then they start cranking up the price for the electric charging stations.. what cost 30 bucks now for 150 miles worth of juice will be over $200 for sure.. Where da fuck all this go go juice gonna come from anyway? we already have rolling brownouts all over the place as it is.

 

The grid can't support it.  

People can't afford it.

And the magic electricity fairy doesn't exist.

 

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2 hours ago, DBP66 said:

your not going to see any sensitive secrets...that's why they call them "secrets" Inspector Gadget!...any clue why he said he returned all the files in June and LIED about that....hummm

image.jpeg.ee05fd693252f78e90f5415fad8aca01.jpeg

what files...

the secret ones ?

....or the  tippy top

secret ones LOLOL...

xD

 

PS: you never did say what info is supposed to be restricted

from a president...

 

BTW: you hoping for a prosecution...

...with invisible evidence.

Ghost Funny GIFs | Tenor

 

 

 

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If these govt fucks really want to do something useful then do something about about all these credit card scammers, phone call scams and email scammers.. Shit is out of control ... no wonder no one wants to work they all making bank scammin

Watch this shit one day.. it will wake you up

 

https://video.vice.com/en_us/video/credit-card-scammers-fraud-street-gang-dark-web/5966792a512e1bed3185be4a

Credit Card Scammers: Street Gangs on the Dark Web

Credit card fraud has been on the rise for about a decade. In 2016 alone, losses topped $24 billion worldwide, half of which affected cardholders in the US. With a virtually unlimited amount of money to be made scamming, some tech-savvy criminals have turned ripping off credit card numbers into a full-time gig.

 

 

 

 

VICE met up with a scammer for an inside look at the shady underground profession. He walked us through the process, showing us how he buys stolen accounts on the dark web, prints pilfered numbers on blank cards, and buys thousands of dollars worth of goods with stolen money. He also explained why he got into the game in the first place—and what it would take for him to get out.

 

 

 

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1 hour ago, Troll said:

what files...

the secret ones ?

....or the  tippy top

secret ones LOLOL...

xD

 

PS: you never did say what info is supposed to be restricted

from a president...

 

BTW: you hoping for a prosecution...

...with invisible evidence.

Ghost Funny GIFs | Tenor

 

 

 

he's NOT the Pres....🤡

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The New York Times

Sean Hannity and Other Fox Stars Face Depositions in Defamation Suit

 
 
Jeremy W. Peters
Thu, August 25, 2022 at 2:17 PM
 
 
Sean Hannity is the latest Fox star to be called for a deposition by Dominion's legal team. (Emil Lippe/The New York Times)
 
Sean Hannity is the latest Fox star to be called for a deposition by Dominion's legal team. (Emil Lippe/The New York Times)

Some of the biggest names at Fox News have been questioned, or are scheduled to be questioned in the coming days, by lawyers representing Dominion Voting Systems in its $1.6 billion defamation suit against the network, as the election technology company presses ahead with a case that First Amendment scholars say is extraordinary in its scope and significance.

Sean Hannity became the latest Fox star to be called for a deposition by Dominion’s legal team, according to a new filing in Delaware Superior Court. He is scheduled to appear Wednesday.

Tucker Carlson is set to face questioning Friday. Lou Dobbs, whose Fox Business show was canceled last year, is scheduled to appear Tuesday. Others who have been deposed recently include Jeanine Pirro, Steve Doocy and a number of high-level Fox producers, court records show.

 

People with knowledge of the case, who would speak only anonymously, said they expected that Fox News Media CEO Suzanne Scott could be one of the next to be deposed, along with the president of Fox News, Jay Wallace. Rupert and Lachlan Murdoch, whose family owns Fox, could follow in the coming weeks.

The depositions are among the clearest indications yet of how aggressively Dominion is moving forward with its suit, which is set to go to trial early next year, and of the legal pressure building on the nation’s most powerful conservative media company. There have been no moves from either side to discuss a possible settlement, people with knowledge of the case have said.

It is common for large media companies such as Fox to settle such cases well before they reach the point where journalists or senior executives are forced to sit for questioning by lawyers from the opposing side. But both Dominion and Fox appear to be preparing for the likelihood that the case will end up in front of a jury.

The suit accuses Fox of pushing false and far-fetched claims of voter fraud to lure back viewers who had defected to other right-wing news sources. In its initial complaint, Dominion’s lawyers framed their lawsuit as a matter of profound civic importance. “The truth matters,” they said, adding, “Lies have consequences.”

The judge overseeing the case allowed Dominion in late June to expand the suit to include the cable news network’s parent company, Fox Corp., potentially broadening the legal exposure of both Murdochs. Shortly after, Fox replaced its outside counsel on the case and hired one of the nation’s most prominent trial lawyers, Dan Webb.

A spokesperson for Fox Corp. has said that the First Amendment protected the company from the suit, and that any attempt by Dominion lawyers to put the Murdochs at the center of their case would be a “fruitless fishing expedition.”

The network is “confident we will prevail as freedom of the press is foundational to our democracy and must be protected,” a Fox News spokesperson said in a statement. She added that the $1.6 billion in damages that Dominion is seeking is “outrageous, unsupported and not rooted in sound financial analysis.” According to court filings, Dominion estimates business losses at hundreds of millions of dollars and values the company at around $1 billion.

Dominion’s legal complaint lays out how Fox repeatedly aired conspiracy theories about the company’s purported role in a plot to steal votes from former President Donald Trump and argues that its business has suffered considerably as a result. Those falsehoods — including that Dominion was a pawn of Venezuelan strongman Hugo Chavez and that its machines were designed with a feature that allowed votes to be flipped from one candidate to another — aired night after night as Fox hosts such as Hannity and Dobbs allowed guests to make them on their shows, and in some cases vouched for them.

Legal experts say the case is one of the most potentially consequential libel suits brought against an American media company in more than a generation, with the potential to deliver a judgment on a falsehood that has damaged the integrity of the country’s democratic system and remains an article of faith among many Trump supporters.

Defamation is extremely difficult to prove in a case like this because of the broad constitutional protections that cover the news media. A company such as Dominion has to prove either that a media outlet knew what it was publishing or broadcasting was false, or that it acted so hastily it overlooked facts proving that falsity, a legal standard known as demonstrating a “reckless disregard for the truth.”

Dominion’s legal strategy, which it has detailed in court filings, hinges on getting testimony and unearthing private communications among Fox employees that prove either such recklessness or knowledge that the statements were false.

The case has stirred considerable unease inside Fox all summer, as employees have had to turn over months of emails and text messages to Dominion lawyers and prepare for depositions. Other current and former Fox personalities who have been deposed include Dana Perino, Shepard Smith and Chris Stirewalt, who was part of the team that made the election-night projection that Trump would lose Arizona, and the presidency as a result.

This is not the first time that Hannity has been in the middle of a high-profile defamation suit. In 2018, Fox was sued by the parents of Seth Rich, a former Democratic National Committee staff member whom Hannity and others at Fox falsely linked to a hacking that resulted in committee emails being published by WikiLeaks. Rich was murdered in an apparent botched robbery in 2017, although conspiracy theorists tried to blame his death on Democratic operatives. Fox News later retracted some of its reporting on the story, saying it did not meet the network’s editorial standards.

Fox settled the Rich case in the fall of 2020, before Hannity could be deposed.

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Trump calls for McConnell to be ousted as GOP leader ‘immediately’

3447ed149a45cab88bde49fd5e39b4b1
 
Brad Dress
Wed, August 24, 2022 at 7:34 PM
 
 

Former President Trump on Wednesday called on Republicans to boot Sen. Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) from his post as Senate minority leader, accusing the senator of being a “ pawn for the Democrats.”

In a statement, Trump cited a Wednesday story from The Federalist about McConnell and his wife Elaine Chao’s alleged ties to China in calling for the senator’s ouster from his longtime leadership post.

“Mitch McConnell is not an Opposition Leader, he is a pawn for the Democrats to get whatever they want,” Trump said in his statement. “He is afraid of them, and will not do what has to be done. A new Republican Leader in the Senate should be picked immediately!”

Trump has feuded with McConnell, who he has dubbed “Old Crow,” since the Senate leader denounced the former president in Congress for his role in the Jan. 6, 2021, attack on the U.S. Capitol.

 

Over the weekend, the former president slammed McConnell for making remarks last week about “candidate quality,” in a reference to Republicans running for Senate, a number of whom were hand-picked by Trump. McConnell has said the race for Senate control in November will be close.

Trump also took a dig at Chao, his former Transportation secretary who resigned from office one day after the Jan. 6 attack, calling her McConnell’s “crazy wife.” In Wednesday’s message, he called her “Coco.”

Last year, Trump also called for Republicans to select a new Senate leader to boost the party’s chances of retaking Congress in 2022.

“I think we’re going to do very well,” Trump said at the time. “We need good leadership. Mitch McConnell has not done a great job — I think they should change Mitch McConnell.”

In Wednesday’s statement, Trump accused McConnell of giving the “Radical Left the Trillions and Trillions of Dollars that they constantly DEMAND” and faulted him for failing to stop passage of the landmark tax, climate and healthcare law known as the Inflation Reduction Act.

In fact, Democrats have had to find routes around staunch GOP opposition for their major spending programs, such as passing the Inflation Reduction Act through the budget reconciliation process to avoid a filibuster, and President Biden using executive authority to forgive student debt this week.

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I guess class just runs in the family.....

Don Jr. Posts 'Dick Pic' Of Dad After Affidavit Release: 'Redact This!'

Mary Papenfuss
Fri, August 26, 2022 at 11:13 PM
 
 

Always the intellectual, Donald Trump Jr. on Friday came up with an innovative way to respond to the public release of the affidavit supporting the FBI’s search of Mar-a-Lago.

He posted a photo of his dad, Donald Trump, in his golf duds with a long black bar over his crotch, and said: “Redact this!” The former president’s thumb is hooked in his belt in the shot.

Trump fans swooned over the length of the black bar, with one drooling: “Hang in there, Mr. President!”

The crotch shot wasn’t all Donald Jr. came up with, but it was the most “graphic.” Mostly he mocked all the redactions in the affidavit, which the Justice Department had explained were necessary to protect witnesses, the names of FBI agents and other details of the investigation of his father.

Threats against the FBI have skyrocketed in the wake of vicious attacks against the bureau by Donald Trump, federal authorities reported earlier this month in a joint intelligence bulletin released by the FBI and the Department of Homeland Security.

Ricky Shiffer was killed by police earlier this month after attempting to breach an FBI office in Cincinnati, Ohio. Shiffer frequently posted violent messages on Trump’s Truth Social platform and appeared to be incited by Trump’s angry tirades against the FBI.

The affidavit, although heavily blacked out, detailed repeated requests by federal officials for boxes of documents that the former president had stashed at his Mar-a-Lago estate when he left the White House. It showed that highly classified information was haphazardly stored at the private country club that includes his residence. The information contradicted Trump’s claim that officials only had to ask and they would have been given the material.

The National Archives first reached out about retrieving records from Mar-a-Lago in May 2021, according to the affidavit. Trump’s aides responded later that year that they had 12 boxes ready to be picked up, and the National Archives eventually left with 15 boxes in January.

FBI agents searched Trump’s Florida estate on Aug. 8 and took away dozens of additional boxes, including 11 packets of classified documents. Among that set was a batch labeled with the highest classification markings, meant for review only in secure government facilities.

Justice Department prosecutors filed the redacted affidavit at the federal courthouse in West Palm Beach, Florida, late Friday morning after Magistrate Judge Bruce Reinhart ruled on Thursday that he had accepted the redactions prosecutors had proposed. He described the redactions as “narrowly tailored to serve the government’s legitimate interest in the integrity of the ongoing investigation and are the least onerous alternative to sealing the entire affidavit.”

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Karl Rove: ‘Beyond me’ why Trump held on to docs ‘when he had no legal authority’

3760c6ddf257137c36889a0ff2148d22
 
Zach Schonfeld
Fri, August 26, 2022 at 4:23 PM
 
 

Karl Rove, who served as a senior adviser to former President George W. Bush, said on Friday that former President Trump did not have the authority to take presidential documents with him to his Mar-a-Lago residence when he ended his term.

“Why he was holding on to these materials when he had no legal authority to do so under the Presidential Records Act is beyond me,” Rove, a Fox News contributor, said during an appearance on the network.

Rove’s appearance came shortly after a federal magistrate judge approved the release of a redacted affidavit used to convince him to approve a search warrant for Trump’s Florida residence.

The document revealed that authorities found 184 classified documents in boxes recovered by the National Archives in January, and prosecutors argued there was probable cause to believe they would find additional illegally possessed items, including classified national defense information, at Mar-a-Lago.

 

The previously unsealed search warrant noted that the search came as part of a federal investigation into potential violations of the Espionage Act and two other statutes, which do not rely on documents being classified.

“The Presidential Records Act is clear,” Rove said on Fox News.

“A president does not have the right to leave the White House and pick and choose what documents he wants to take with him,” he continued. “He can ask for copies, but those are the property of the American people, and since 1978 no president has left with sort of picking and choosing their own documents.”

The affidavit revealed that the National Archives first reached out about retrieving records from Mar-a-Lago in May 2021. Trump’s aides alerted the Archives that they had 12 boxes for pick up later that year, and the agency ultimately left with 15, according to the document.

Trump and many Republicans have denounced the search of Mar-a-Lago as being politically motivated, and the former president has described it as an unnecessary escalation.

“President Trump has said several times all they had to do was ask,” Rove said on Friday. “Well, my sense is they were asking for a year and a half.”

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On 8/25/2022 at 11:32 AM, concha said:

296158273_364226349224861_31020063884956

 

On 8/25/2022 at 1:12 PM, OldTerrapin said:

 

Wonder if these electric car fucks ever stop to wonder what happens when the gas stations can't make money selling gas anymore and then they start cranking up the price for the electric charging stations.. what cost 30 bucks now for 150 miles worth of juice will be over $200 for sure.. Where da fuck all this go go juice gonna come from anyway? we already have rolling brownouts all over the place as it is.

Well THAT didn't take long...

Energy price crisis hits electric car owners as public charging could become more expensive than petrol pumps

The cost charging an electric vehicle is rising fast as public charging points could cost an unprecedented £1 per kWh

File photo dated 8/3/2022 of electric vehicle parking signage in Hayes, west London. Grants for new electric cars have been scrapped, the Department for Transport (DfT) has announced. Drivers could previously claim up to ?1,500 towards the cost of a plug-in car costing below ?32,000. Issue date: Tuesday June 14, 2022. PA Photo. See PA story TRANSPORT Electric. Photo credit should read: John Walton/PA Wire The cost of EV charging is rising as energy prices soar (Photo: John Walton/PA Wire)
author avatar image
By Madeleine Cuff
Environment Correspondent
August 26, 2022 4:57 pm(Updated 6:44 pm)
 

Electric car drivers are feeling the pinch as soaring electricity costs push up the cost of recharging.

Almost every public charge point operator has already increased prices at least once this year, some by 15 per cent or more, and there are mounting fears this winter could see further large price hikes.

Earlier this month EV charge point operator Instavolt increased its prices for the fourth time in 10 months, from 57p to 66p per kWh – an increase of 16 per cent. It blamed “record-high” energy costs and said it had no choice but to pass on some of the increases to customers.

 
 

Meanwhile, at the start of August, Shell increased its prices across its charging network to 65p per kWh for its ultra-rapid chargers, up from 49p per kWh this year. It amounts to a price increase of 32 per cent.

The price hikes are putting pressure on EV drivers. The average cost to recharge an average electric car such as a Volkswagen ID.3 at a public plug point is around £21, according to EV website Electrifying.com, rising to almost £30 at the most expensive public plug points.

Electrifying.com founder Ginny Buckley warned public chargers have been subject to “alarming price hikes” in recent months, with more expected over the winter, denting the savings on offer for those without driveways.

“When it comes to public charging, we’ve already seen some alarming price hikes and there will no doubt be more to come, meaning that drivers without access to home charging pay up to £1,260 more to run their electric car than those using an off-peak home tariff,” she warned.

 
 
 

i understands many charge point operators expect to have to increase prices further this winter, with fears costs could exceed an unprecedented £1 per kWh. Under a worst-case scenario, recharging an EV could become more expensive than refuelling a petrol or diesel vehicle.

MORE ON ELECTRIC VEHICLES

Ms Buckley called for VAT charged on electricity delivered at public chargepoints to be cut from 20 per cent to five per cent, to bring it in line with domestic energy. The call is backed by chargepoint operators including Osprey and Instavolt, which have vowed to cut its prices for customers if VAT is reduced.

Energy providers should also start introducing ‘off peak’ tariffs to help drivers access a cheaper rate at quieter times of the day, Buckley argued, for example by charging during the night.

“Without taking these steps, we risk leaving people behind and creating a two-tiered nation when it comes to electric car ownership,” she warned.

Meanwhile, the RAC said the cost of a full charge at home for an EV with a 64-kilowatt hour battery – such as a Kia e-Niro – will be £33.80 under the new cap which comes into force on Saturday 1 October.

That is compared with £18.37 under the current cap, and £13.69 for last winter’s price limit.

RAC spokesman Rod Dennis said: “The impact of the energy price cap increase will certainly be felt by drivers who charge their electric cars at home, with a full charge of a typical family-sized electric SUV costing 84 per cent more from 1 October than it does under the current cap.”

 
 
 

Consumer experts at Which? warned the rising running costs could put people off switching to electric motoring. “A big part of the electric vehicle appeal has always been lower running costs, but these price rises could jeopardise more people making the switch to electric cars,” said Which? energy sustainability editor Emily Seymour. “Many non-hybrid petrol drivers will still save money by switching to electric, but for many diesel drivers that now won’t be the case. In a recent survey, we found that the upfront cost of buying an EV is the biggest barrier preventing drivers from considering an electric vehicle – and this latest energy price rise could further prevent people from making the switch.”

-------------

 

PS:Aussie ABC: Electric Vehicles Could Overload the Grid – Watts Up With That?

 

 

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The New York Times

Republicans, Once Outraged by Mar-a-Lago Search, Become Quieter as Details Emerge

 
 
Jonathan Weisman
Sat, August 27, 2022 at 11:05 AM
 
 
From left: Eric Trump, Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-Ga.), Tucker Carlson, Donald Trump Jr. and former President Donald Trump at Trump National Golf Club in Bedminster, N.J., July 31, 2022. (Doug Mills/The New York Times)
 
From left: Eric Trump, Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-Ga.), Tucker Carlson, Donald Trump Jr. and former President Donald Trump at Trump National Golf Club in Bedminster, N.J., July 31, 2022. (Doug Mills/The New York Times)

In the minutes and hours after the FBI’s search of former President Donald Trump’s residence in Florida this month, his supporters did not hesitate to denounce what they saw as a blatant abuse of power and outrageous politicization of the Justice Department.

But with the release of a redacted affidavit detailing the justification for the search, the former president’s allies were largely silent, a potentially telling reaction with ramifications for his political future.

“I would just caution folks not to draw too many conclusions,” Gov. Glenn Youngkin of Virginia, a Republican, said on Fox News. It was a starkly different admonition from his earlier condemnations of what he said were “politically motivated actions.”

 

Sign up for The Morning newsletter from the New York Times

Some Republicans will no doubt rally around Trump and his claim that he is once again being targeted by a rogue FBI that is still out to get him. His former acting White House chief of staff, Mick Mulvaney, said on Twitter that “this raid was, in fact, just about documents,” which he called “simply outrageous.” Rep. Andy Biggs, R-Ariz. and an ardent Trump ally, was on the right-wing broadcaster Newsmax denouncing the FBI as politically biased, though he notably did not defend the former president’s possession of highly classified documents.

But generally, even the most bombastic Republicans — Reps. Marjorie Taylor Greene of Georgia, Lauren Boebert of Colorado, Jim Jordan of Ohio — were at least initially focused elsewhere. Greene was posting on Friday about border “invasions.” Boebert noted on Twitter the anniversary of the suicide bombing of U.S. service members at the airport in Kabul, Afghanistan. Jordan was focused on an interview with Mark Zuckerberg, the Facebook founder. None tweeted about the affidavit.

The accusations against Trump have become increasingly serious.

Classified documents dealing with matters such as Trump’s correspondences with the North Korean leader Kim Jong Un were stored in unsecured rooms at Mar-a-Lago, The New York Times reported this month. The untempered attacks on the FBI after the initial search led to threats against federal law enforcement, opening up Republicans — long the self-proclaimed party of law and order — to charges from Democrats that they were trying to “defund” the agency.

And voters are again distracted by Trump in the political spotlight, even as Republicans try to direct their attention toward the economy and soaring inflation when the Federal Reserve chairman Jerome Powell said efforts to control rising prices would exact pain on Americans.

All of this could mean that enough Republican voters grow weary of the division and drama around Trump and are ready to move on.

Little wonder, then, that Karl Rove, President George W. Bush’s adviser and deputy chief of staff, took to Fox News on Friday afternoon to plead for Trump to stop commenting on the FBI investigation, for his own good and the good of his party.

“Let the election conversation get back to what it ought to be about,” Rove said, “which is about inflation and the economy and the direction of the country and people’s views of President Biden’s competence.”

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Here's some more "truth" for the clown squad....😉

Stiffed vendors, huge financial losses, and a trademark denial: Truth Social faces an uncertain future amid concerns over Trump's dwindling popularity and continued controversies

 
 
Katherine Tangalakis-Lippert
Sat, August 27, 2022 at 10:24 PM
 
 
A phone displaying Donald Trump's Truth Social app in the Apple App Store.
 
A phone displaying Donald Trump's Truth Social app in the Apple App Store.Christoph Dernbach/picture alliance via Getty Images
  • A company seeking to merge with Truth Social cited Trump's reputation as an "important factor" to its financial success in an SEC filing.

  • As Trump contends with ongoing legal battles, Digital World said its financial footing "could be adversely affected."

  • Truth Social is accused of stiffing a vendor out of more than $1 million in contractually obligated payments.

The future of the former president's 10-month-old social media platform, Truth Social, is on uncertain ground as the app faces huge financial losses and is accused of shorting its vendors amid Donald Trump's continued legal controversies.

A planned merger between the Trump Media & Technology Group (TMTG), the business that created the Truth Social platform, and the special purpose acquisition company (SPAC) Digital World Acquisition Corp, has been postponed indefinitely as the Securities and Exchange Commission investigates the platform's business dealings.

- ADVERTISEMENT -

SPACs like Digital World are companies formed either to raise funds through an initial public offering or for the purpose of merging with an existing company. SPACs have no other commercial operations. In an SEC filing earlier this month, Digital World said it had "neither engaged in any operations nor generated any revenues to date" as its sole purpose was to prepare to take Truth Social public.

In another filing, Digital World sought shareholder approval to delay the merger, set to take place Sept. 8, until next year, citing concerns over the former president's reputation potentially impacting business.

"If President Trump becomes less popular or there are further controversies that damage his credibility or the desire of people to use a platform associated with him, and from which he will derive financial benefit, TMTG's results of operations, as well as the outcome of the proposed Business combination, could be adversely affected," the filing read.

Digital World's stock has plunged more than 75 percent since its peak in March — from a high of $97.54 a share to $27.52 each — and in a recent SEC filing the company reported it lost $6.5 million in the first half of the year.

This week, Truth Social was dealt another blow as its trademark application was denied on Thursday for being too similar to another social app called "Vero — True Social."

Further illuminating the social platform's financial woes, Fox Business News reported on Thursday that Truth Social is locked in a bitter battle with its vendor, RightForge, and is accused of stiffing the hosting service out of $1.6 million in contractually obligated payments.

Three people with direct knowledge of the matter told Fox Business News that Truth Social made just three payments to RightForge for its web hosting services and stopped making payments in March.

Other Trump businesses have faced similar payment battles before, including contractors who claim they were left unpaid for more than $2.98 million after repairs at the Trump International Hotel and a small business owner who said Trump stiffed him $100,000 worth of pianos. Unpaid bills at the Taj Mahal Casino Resort amounted $90 million, while three liens were placed against Trump's DC hotel after $5 million in contractors fees were left unpaid.

Trump's companies have filed for bankruptcy at least six times — a fact Digital World noted in SEC filings, The Washington Post reported, saying: "a number of companies that were associated with [Trump] have filed for bankruptcy" and that "there can be no assurances that [Trump's media company] will not also become bankrupt."

Representatives for Trump, TMTG, Truth Social and RightForge did not immediately respond to Insider's requests for comment.

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14 minutes ago, DBP66 said:

LOL....clowns in denial ^^^!....yea.....Trump has nothing to worry about...he's innocent and the media is to blame!...you clowns feel better now??...LOL...🤡...🤡...🤡

Bro Biden literally showered with his daughter that it fucked her up so much she had to be institutionalized  

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