Donald Trump will once again negatively make history. Today (April 15), Trump will be the first former president to stand tiral on criminal charges. The first step in the trial will be jury selection. Trump is required to attend each trial hearing, which, according to NBC News, could last up to eight weeks. Trump has […] The post The People of New York v. Donald Trump: First Criminal Trial of U.S. President Begins first appeared on The Source.
Editor’s Note: A version of this article first appeared in the “Reliable Sources” newsletter. Sign up for the daily digest chronicling the evolving media landscape here. O.J. Simpson gripped the nation’s attention for a final time Thursday. As breaking news banners and push alerts crashed onto screens from coast to coast, stunning millions with news of the former National Football League star’s death, the moment produced one last Simpson-centric collective event for the national consciousness....
Justice Ellen Gesmer did not say when she would rule.
Justice Ellen Gesmer did not say when she would rule.
(From the Ohio State Highway Patrol) The Ohio State Highway Patrol’s new Fremont Post opened on the same grounds where its original location stood for over six decades. On May 16, 2023, Fremont Post operations were relocated to a temporary site on Pinnacle Drive so the original post, located on the Route 20 Bypass, could
Former Trump White House attorney Jim Schultz says that Trump's post about
Jury selection began Monday in the first of former President Donald Trump’s criminal cases to go to trial, a case legal experts say is the Read More
With the Sole Exception of Dartmouth, All Ivy League Schools Earn D's or a
Warning: This livestream has not been independently fact-checked and may contain misinformation.
U.S. government officials will work with the countries to develop better testing, surveillance, communication and preparedness for such outbreaks in those countries.
Warning: This livestream has not been independently fact-checked and may contain misinformation.
The Former commander-in-chief faces cases in Washington, Florida, New York and Georgia – all while campaigning to become president once again. Josh Marcus explains each one and the lengthy prison sentences that could be attached