Trump indictment live updates: Ex-president campaigns at 2024 fundraiser after arraignment

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Trump indictment live updates: Ex-president campaigns at 2024 fundraiser after arraignment
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Former President Donald Trump pleaded not guilty in court in Miami as he faces 37 federal counts for his retention of hundreds of classified documents.

Trump is inside the courtroom to face charges in the documents case, news outlets reported.

"Let's look at Donald Trump's words in 2016," Buck told CNN. "He said that Hillary Clinton was unfit for the White House for the way she handled classified information... So I think his words have set the standard that America will look at in determining whether he is fit for the presidency."Walt Nauta, valet to former U.S.

The federal criminal investigation into Trump is the second that the Justice Department had tapped Jack Smith to oversee as special counsel. "You think there's political bias inherent in this prosecution? Read the indictment and ask yourself, if this were a Democrat involved in this, would this not warrant prosecution?" Bolton said. "I think we've got to take the politics out of this when national security is at stake, and this is a good place to start."

Miami Police investigate a suspicious item near the media area outside the Wilkie D. Ferguson Jr. United States Federal Courthouse where former President Donald Trump is scheduled to be arraigned later in the day on June 13, 2023 in Miami, Florida.Miami Police reopened a street near the federal courthouse after completing an investigation into a suspicious object discovered there hours earlier.

With the caveat that these are Trump's justifications in public, and they are not arguments made by lawyers in court, below is what Trump is talking about.requires the National Archives and Records Administration, the custodian of official government documents, to "negotiate" with former presidents about what official records they get to keep.

The documents Trump refused to return to the National Archives, however, were inarguably official. They were classified documents generated by federal employees. Many of them were presidential daily intelligence briefings, and they were shared with the president in the course of his official duties. "Traffic has been temporarily shut down" due to the discovery of the object near North Miami Avenue between Third and Fourth streets, the spokesman said in a statement."We have temporarily closed N. Miami Avenue at NW 5 Street to NW 3 Street," the department added in a tweet.Walt Nauta, personal aide to former U.S.

Prosecutors allege Nauta was among those who packed items from the White House to be shipped to Florida. But Nauta denied knowledge of the boxes in false statements, they allege.GOP primary competitor Vivek Ramaswamy asks other campaigns to promise Trump pardon Ramaswamy, an entrepreneur whose media-friendly campaign has given him an outsize profile in the primary race, has previouslyto pardon Trump if elected. In his remarks in Miami on Tuesday, he announced that his campaign sent letters to competitors in both the Republican and Democratic primary fields, asking them to either pledge to pardon Trump or explain their refusal to do so.

In addition to the photo, Trump's handprint will be digitally scanned. He also will be required to provide his personal data to law enforcement, including his Social Security number, address and phone number. Kemp said Republicans should focus on policy matters, such as those tied to inflation and crime, rather than Trump's legal woes.

MIAMI, FLORIDA - JUNE 13: Members of law enforcement wearing riot gear ride past the Wilkie D. Ferguson, Jr. U.S. Courthouse on June 13, 2023 in Miami, Florida. Republican presidential candidate former U.S. President Donald Trump is scheduled to appear today for his arraignment on charges including possession of national security documents after leaving office, obstruction, and making false statements.

"We strongly encourage commuters to avoid the area and seek alternate routes, if possible," the department said in a traffic advisory, which warned that delays should be expected.

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