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DBP66

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The crazy thing is 66 does all this shit for free. Twitter was at least paying people to push this 24/7. This guy is like a programmed robot that can’t articulate any idea other than melting down about Trump. 
 

This 70 page thread is him going through all the World Wide Web and finding anything about Trump and posting it hysterically, and about 5-10 posters at any given time laughing and calling him a fat dumb fuck. Lol.

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1 hour ago, Nolebull813 said:

The crazy thing is 66 does all this shit for free. Twitter was at least paying people to push this 24/7. This guy is like a programmed robot that can’t articulate any idea other than melting down about Trump. 
 

This 70 page thread is him going through all the World Wide Web and finding anything about Trump and posting it hysterically, and about 5-10 posters at any given time laughing and calling him a fat dumb fuck. Lol.

LOL...sure pal...I go to my Yahoo page and day after day Trump is in the headlines for something related to his multiple law suits...I just cut and paste for the clowns here who are in denial like you...and it seems to get your attention...mission accomplished...😉

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Looks like they "got him" this time.....😉

 
USA TODAY

NY judge orders monitor to oversee all Trump Organization financial operations

Kevin McCoy, USA TODAY
Thu, November 3, 2022 at 5:19 PM·5 min read
 
 
 

New York - The judge hearing a massive civil fraud lawsuit against former President Donald Trump, his businesses and three of his adult children on Thursday ordered the appointment of a monitor with sweeping authority to oversee all Trump-related business operations.

Acting Manhattan Supreme Court Justice Arthur Engoron issued the ruling after hearing arguments from the New York Attorney General's Office, which filed the lawsuit and sought the appointment, and a lawyer for Trump, who said such a decision would be improper and would set a dangerous precedent for other New York businesses.

"Defendants are wrong," wrote Engoron, whom Trump's legal team has sought unsuccessfully to have removed from hearing the case.

His ruling bars the Trump businesses from selling, transferring or disposing of non-cash assets. It also orders appointment of a monitor to ensure compliance with the order.

Trump businesses must give the monitor access to financial statements, statements of financial condition and "full and accurate descriptions of the structure and liquid and illiquid holdings and assets for the Trump Organization" and its subsidiaries and affiliates, the state trial court judge ordered.

The businesses must give the monitor at least a 30-day advance notification of any planned reorganization or restructuring of the Trump Organization. Engoron set a Nov. 10 deadline for the submission of up to three monitor candidates each from state officials and Trump lawyers.

"Here, the balancing of the equities tips, strongly, if not completely, in favor of granting a  preliminary injunction, particularly to ensure that defendants do not dissipate their assets or transfer them out of this jurisdiction," wrote Engoron.

The decision is certain to be appealed by Trump. It marks a major development in the September lawsuit filed by New York Attorney General Letitia James, a Democrat who has frequently clashed with Trump.

The lawsuit argues that Trump was part of a 10-year scheme "that grossly inflated" his personal net worth by billions of dollars, and then used the higher values "to induce banks to lend money to the Trump Organization on more favorable terms than would otherwise have been available."

Former President Donald Trump gestures as he departs Trump Tower, Wednesday, Aug. 10, 2022, in New York, on his way to the New York attorney general's office for a deposition in a civil investigation.
 
Former President Donald Trump gestures as he departs Trump Tower, Wednesday, Aug. 10, 2022, in New York, on his way to the New York attorney general's office for a deposition in a civil investigation.

The alleged actions violated New York laws and likely saved Trump, his business and his family more than $150 million from 2011-2021, the complaint argues.

James' office is seeking $250 million in penalties and an order barring Trump and his children from holding executive posts on any New York businesses.

Lawyers for the Trumps say there was no wrongdoing.

Attorneys for both sides stated their positions for nearly three hours Thursday during an at-times heated hearing before Engoron.

Kevin Wallace, a top lawyer in James' office, argued that appointment of a monitor and other steps were necessary to halt alleged "ongoing fraudulent activities" by the Trump Organization.

He argued that the recent creation of the Trump Organization II required a legal block preventing the new organization or other entities from receiving financial transfers from Trump's long-existing businesses. Any such transactions could foil efforts to enforce the $250 million in penalties demanded by the lawsuit, said Wallace.

He also cited reports about a major asset-shedding move since James filed the civil lawsuit. The Trump Organization reportedly is moving to sell its rights to the Trump International Hotel in Washington, D.C., said Wallace.

He also cited a lawsuit Trump lawyers filed against James in a Florida state court on Wednesday. The filing, replete with criticism of James, argued that her office lacks  jurisdiction to seek internal details of a Florida-based trust that holds all of Trump's businesses on behalf of the former president. Trump previously lost a federal court action to end James' investigation.

That new lawsuit filed by Trump aims to "preclude any visibility" into the trust's decisions and transactions, making it difficult for James' office to detect potential ongoing or future frauds, said Wallace.

A court-authorized monitor would resolve potential financial questions about Trump's companies, said Wallace, who added that the monitor would not "inhibit the day-to-day operations of the Trump Organization."

However, Christopher Kise, a Florida-based attorney for the Trumps and their businesses, contended that appointment of a monitor represented an extraordinary step unsupported by any evidence.

He argued that James lacked legal standing to win such an appointment, particularly before any court proceedings have been held on the accuracy and merits of the civil fraud allegations.

There have been no efforts to avoid penalties that would be levied if James wins the case, said Kise. Two of Trump's Manhattan real estate properties, including Trump Tower, collectively are worth more than $250 million and "aren't going anywhere," he argued.

He noted that major banks and insurance companies involved in Trump-related real estate development projects never complained or lost money on loan agreements they reached with the Trump Organization.

Kise also argued that James' office misunderstood the nuances and complexities of the loan agreements that he said were "negotiated by experts on both sides."

"This is a private dispute, and the private parties have not seen fit to complain," said Kise. "We view this as a manufactured bill of grievances."

Granting a preliminary injunction that authorizes a monitor would amount to improper "pre-judgment attachment" before any of James' allegations have been tried in court, said Kise.

If a monitor were appointed,"then every business in the state of New York needs to be very concerned" about similar "nationalization of a private corporation," said Kise.

Engoron, who questioned the attorneys during Thursday's arguments, is the judge who issued a contempt order against Trump and fined him more than $100,000 for failing to cooperate with subpoenas for James' investigation.

Late Wednesday, Engoron declined to sign a legal motion by Trump's lawyers to move the civil lawsuit to the court's Commercial Division, which typically handles complex corporate cases. Engoron said a previous denial of such a transfer by a New York supervisory judge was final and could not be appealed.

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4 minutes ago, I AM IRONMAN said:

I bet you don’t even read what you cut and paste 🤔

of course I do.....knowledge = power....try it some time! Looks like they "got" your boy this time...why not read the article??...scared??....USA Today won't hurt you...I promise!....LOL...🙄

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8 minutes ago, I AM IRONMAN said:

0-196….about to be 197.  But keep the faith!

...nope!....LOL..they "got him" this time....if you're not scared read the article...😉

His ruling bars the Trump businesses from selling, transferring or disposing of non-cash assets. It also orders appointment of a monitor to ensure compliance with the order.

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USA TODAY

Fact check: Post falsely links Pennsylvania drop boxes ballots to election fraud

65c6a7edd65477e18d839e008877efe2
 
Sudiksha Kochi, USA TODAY
Thu, November 3, 2022 at 1:58 PM
 
 

The claim: Ballots found in Pennsylvania drop boxes show cheating in the election

Ahead of Election Day, some social media users claim there's evidence of election fraud in Pennsylvania, a battleground state in the midterm elections.

An Oct. 27 Facebook post includes a link to a Gateway Pundit article with the headline, "BREAKING: Ballots Discovered 'Pre-Loaded' Inside Drop Box in Pennsylvania… Two Others Reportedly Also Had 'Pre-Loaded' Ballots Inside the Boxes.

The article includes a video clip of officials in Centre County, Pennsylvania, opening a drop box to place an official bag of early ballots in it for Election Day and finding 10 ballots already inside.

 

"Has the cheating in PA already started? Looks like it," reads the caption of the post. "This is shameful. VOTE REPUBLICAN to stop the steal!"

 

The Gateway Pundit story was shared nearly 2,000 times on Facebook within a week. Other posts with a link to the article have spread widely on Facebook and Instagram.

But the discovery of the ballots is not indicative of election fraud.

Centre County election officials told USA TODAY voters slipped their ballots into the locked drop boxes prior to the opening date. The drop boxes had a slight defect that allowed voters access. None of the ballots were fraudulent, and they could not be accessed once inside the box except by county officials.

USA TODAY reached out to the social media users who shared the claim for comment.

Ballots in drop boxes is not proof of election fraud

Officials found 18 ballots in three Centre County drop boxes on Oct. 25. But this discovery is not proof of cheating in the midterm election, according to Michael Pipe, a Centre County Commissioner.

About 14,000 absentee ballots and mail-in-ballots were sent to Centre County voters on Oct .9, according to a county press release. While instructions sent with the ballots indicated that drop boxes would open on Oct. 25, some voters chose to slip their ballots into the closed and locked deposit slot of the drop boxes prior to that date.

The locked drop boxes had a defect that allowed voters to insert their ballots, according to Pipe. That defect is being corrected. The ballots could not be retrieved once inside the box except by county officials who had the keys to the drop boxes, Pipe said.

"Typically the drop boxes are installed and opened up and then the mail ballots are sent out," Pipe said. "We did it the other way this year where the ballots were out prior to the drop boxes being opened up and so that's what caused this issue."

All the voters whose ballots were in the box were registered to vote in Centre County, and county officials have checked that their completed applications requesting a mail-in or absentee ballot were valid, according to Pipe.

"We actually had seven out of the 18 voters come in to our office and show us a form of ID, and they basically took the ballot from us and then they gave it right back to us establishing the fact that they did indeed return it to us in an appropriate way," Pipe said.

Processing of these ballots will also be addressed by the county's Board of Elections on Nov. 14, when it reviews ballots with questions or missing information, according to Beth Lechman, Centre County elections director.

There has been no evidence that the use of drop boxes to collect paper votes has led to any type of widespread or systematic fraud in an election, Wesley Leckrone, an election expert at Widener University, told USA TODAY in an email.

PolitiFact also debunked the claim.

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ABC News

Judge grants independent monitor to oversee Trump Organization, in major victory for NY AG

AARON KATERSKY
Thu, November 3, 2022 at 7:44 PM
 
 

A New York judge has approved a preliminary injunction and an independent monitor to oversee the Trump Organization in an order that follows several hours of oral arguments Thursday.

The judge chided the Trump defense team for failing to submit "an iota of evidence" that would rebut the New York attorney general's allegations of "comprehensive demonstration of persistent fraud" within the Trump Organization.

In deciding to appoint a monitor to supervise parts of former President Donald Trump's business and grant a preliminary injunction to stop, what the attorney general's office described as "ongoing fraudulent activities," Judge Arthur Engoron said Trump has "demonstrated propensity" to engage in fraud, specifically calling out the overvaluation of Trump's New York City apartment.

Until he moved to Florida, Trump lived in an 11,000-square-foot triplex in Trump Tower. Between 2012 and 2016, Trump represented the size of the apartment to be 30,000 square feet and valued it as high as $327 million.

Former Trump Organization CFO Allen Weisselberg testified the valuation "overstated the apartment's value by give or take $200 million," according to the attorney general's office.

PHOTO: In this Sept. 21, 2022, file photo, New York Attorney General Letitia James speaks during a press conference regarding former US President Donald Trump and his family's financial fraud case in New York. (Yuki Iwamura/AFP via Getty Images, FILE)
 
PHOTO: In this Sept. 21, 2022, file photo, New York Attorney General Letitia James speaks during a press conference regarding former US President Donald Trump and his family's financial fraud case in New York. (Yuki Iwamura/AFP via Getty Images, FILE)

"To the extent that defendants assert that the over-valuation of approximately $200 million was not intentional but an inadvertent mistake, such argument is irrelevant under Executive Law 63 (12)," Engoron wrote.

Trump's attorney decried the judge's ruling.

"This unprecedented Order effectively seizes control of the financial affairs of a highly successful private corporate empire based on nothing more than gross exaggeration of standard valuation differences common in complex commercial real estate financing transactions," Trump's attorney Christopher Kise said in a statement to ABC News.

"The New York Attorney General has stretched the bounds of her authority to set a very dangerous precedent," he said.

The preliminary injunction prevents Trump from moving assets, so they're available in New York should the state prevail in its $250 million civil lawsuit against the former president and his family.

"In the absence of an injunction, and given defendants' demonstrated propensity to engage in persistent fraud, failure to grant such an injunction could result in extreme prejudice to the people of New York," Engoron's order said. "The relief sought is appropriately tailored to curbing unlawful conduct and ensuring that funds are available for potential disgorgement at the conclusion of this case."

As for the independent monitor, the judge said the monitor's function will be "narrowly tailored" to assure there is no fraud or illegality at the Trump Organization.

The monitor will be chosen later this month after the two sides submit candidates. The monitor will oversee the company's preparation of Trump's statements of financial condition and ensure accurate information is conveyed to lenders and third parties.

During oral arguments, Kise said this kind of relief should make every commercial real estate developer concerned about what he argued was the improper injection of the court into private business affairs.

On Wednesday, Trump asked a Florida court to shield his revocable trust from New York Attorney General Letitia James.

When he became president, Trump put his ownership of the Trump Organization into the revocable trust that he is now trying to shield from the attorney general's lawsuit.

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Scary times in America.....another Trump nut.

Miami Trump supporter convicted of shooting at men after argument over Biden flag on Jet Ski

0c5c6d4a8f1136863b886bd9d33a642b
 
Jose A. Iglesias/jiglesias@elnuevoherald.com
 
David Ovalle
Thu, November 3, 2022 at 7:05 PM
 
 

A Miami jury on Thursday convicted a Donald Trump supporter who was accused of shooting at two men in a dust-up that started over one of them flying a “Ridin’ with Biden” flag on his Jet Ski on Election Day 2020.

The six-person jury deliberated less than two hours in convicting Eduardo Acosta, 39, on charges of attempted murder, aggravated assault with a firearm and armed robbery. He faces up to life in prison, with a mandatory minimum of at least 20 years, when he is sentenced on Dec. 16.

The case was decided against the backdrop of increased political rancor ahead of Tuesday’s midterm elections. The case made for a challenging jury selection process, with many potential jurors unable to serve because of their own political biases.

Prosecutors alleged that Acosta was on his Jet Ski with a group of men on Nov. 3, 2020, when they allegedly approached two other men on a small Biscayne Bay island near Miami Marine Stadium. Those two men, Wilson Peralta and Alfredo Garcia, were on one Jet Ski, that had a Biden flag.

 

Triggered by the flag, prosecutors said, Acosta began to argue with the men, claiming that anyone who supported Biden was a “child molester.” The insult originates from an unfounded QAnon conspiracy theory that a “deep state” group of child sex traffickers were secretly working to defeat Trump.

According to a cellphone video recorded by one of the two men, Acosta at some point lunged at them but was held back by one of the people in his group. According to testimony, Acosta came back later armed with a handgun, shooting at the men as they jumped on their Jet Ski and zoomed off. The two victims fell into the water as a bullet whizzed overhead.

He caught up with them on the water, holding them at gunpoint, police said. “Don’t come back to this island. I’m going to kill you,” he allegedly said in Spanish, according to police.

The victims were unharmed.

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"A Rigged & Corrupt System!"...LOL..I think he already used this excuse...a few hundred times...

Trump rages at New York judge who imposed a watchdog on the Trump Org

Tom Porter
Fri, November 4, 2022 at 9:47 AM
 
 
Trump
 
Former President Donald Trump leaves Trump Tower to meet with New York Attorney General Letitia James for a civil investigation on August 10, 2022 in New York City.James Devaney/GC Images
  • Former President Donald Trump criticized a Manhattan judge.

  • He described him as a "Radical Left Lunatic Judge in New York City."

  • The judge has ordered a watchdog to review the Trump Organization's finances.

Former President Donald Trump criticized a New York judge after he imposed an independent monitor to oversee the finances of the Trump Organization.

In the ruling Thursday, Judge Arthur Engoron appointed the official to the role in a move that restricts the company's freedom to do business independently.

It means the company is unable to change its corporate structure, sell or transfer non-cash assets, or make deals without giving notice to the court.

Trump in a Truth Social post described Engoron as a "Radical Left Lunatic Judge in New York City" who is "refusing to let go of the case. He is a partisan disaster. A Rigged & Corrupt System!"

Engoron is adjudicating in the civil lawsuit filed by New York Attorney General Letitia James against Trump, his company, and three of his adult children.

In that case she accuses him of manipulating the value of assets as part of a fraud scheme.

James is seeking a $250 million penalty and to ban Trump from doing business in New York over the alleged fraud, and successfully applied for the official to be appointed because she believes the company is still breaking the law.

Both James and Engoron are Democrats. Trump is stirring rumors of another bid for the presidency on the Republican ticket in 2024.

Trump has launched a lawsuit against James in Florida this week, whom he also accuses of waging a politically motivated campaign against him, seeking to prevent her from gaining control over his businesses.

He accused her of waging "a relentless, pernicious, public and unapologetic crusade" against him and his business interests.

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Trump was told he has until next week to start turning over records to the January 6 committee after new deadline was set

 
 
Kelsey Vlamis
Fri, November 4, 2022 at 9:26 PM
 
 
Donald Trump
 
Former President Donald Trump speaks at CPAC in Dallas, Tex., on August 6, 2022.Brandon Bell/Getty Images
  • The January 6 panel last month subpoenaed former President Donald Trump for documents and testimony.

  • The deadline to start turning over documents was extended on Friday, according to the committee.

  • Trump has repeatedly dismissed the work of the committee.

Former President Donald Trump has until next week to start turning over records to the January 6 committee after the initial deadline came and went, according to the panel.

Reps. Bennie Thompson and Liz Cheney, the committee and chair and vice chair, respectively, said in a statement on Friday they had been in touch with Trump's lawyers regarding their subpoena for documents and testimony and included the new deadline.- ADVERTISEMENT -

"We have received correspondence from the former President and his counsel in connection with the Select Committee's subpoena. We have informed the former President's counsel that he must begin producing records no later than next week and he remains under subpoena for deposition testimony starting on November 14th," they said.

The initial deadline for Trump to start turning over documents was Friday morning.

Representatives for Trump did not immediately respond to Insider's request for comment.

The January 6 committee voted unanimously last month to subpoena the former president, saying they had "overwhelming evidence" that Trump personally "orchestrated and oversaw a multi-part effort to overturn the 2020 presidential election and to obstruct the peaceful transition of power."

Among the records the committee is requesting are communications between Trump and his allies, including texts and phone calls.

Trump has repeatedly dismissed the work of the committee. Cheney has previously said they were in talks with Trump's lawyers about him sitting for a deposition, but it's still unclear if he will end up testifying

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4 hours ago, DBP66 said:

Trump was told he has until next week to start turning over records to the January 6 committee after new deadline was set

 
 
Kelsey Vlamis
Fri, November 4, 2022 at 9:26 PM
 
 
Donald Trump
 
Former President Donald Trump speaks at CPAC in Dallas, Tex., on August 6, 2022.Brandon Bell/Getty Images
  • The January 6 panel last month subpoenaed former President Donald Trump for documents and testimony.

  • The deadline to start turning over documents was extended on Friday, according to the committee.

  • Trump has repeatedly dismissed the work of the committee.

Former President Donald Trump has until next week to start turning over records to the January 6 committee after the initial deadline came and went, according to the panel.

Reps. Bennie Thompson and Liz Cheney, the committee and chair and vice chair, respectively, said in a statement on Friday they had been in touch with Trump's lawyers regarding their subpoena for documents and testimony and included the new deadline.- ADVERTISEMENT -

"We have received correspondence from the former President and his counsel in connection with the Select Committee's subpoena. We have informed the former President's counsel that he must begin producing records no later than next week and he remains under subpoena for deposition testimony starting on November 14th," they said.

The initial deadline for Trump to start turning over documents was Friday morning.

Representatives for Trump did not immediately respond to Insider's request for comment.

The January 6 committee voted unanimously last month to subpoena the former president, saying they had "overwhelming evidence" that Trump personally "orchestrated and oversaw a multi-part effort to overturn the 2020 presidential election and to obstruct the peaceful transition of power."

Among the records the committee is requesting are communications between Trump and his allies, including texts and phone calls.

Trump has repeatedly dismissed the work of the committee. Cheney has previously said they were in talks with Trump's lawyers about him sitting for a deposition, but it's still unclear if he will end up testifying

Waking up and TDS running strong! Good life 🤔

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