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I am expecting to be arrested on Tuesday, says Donald Trump

Capitol riot probe Donald Trump

Donald Trump is expected to be arrested on Tuesday. In connection with hush money payments to Stormy Daniels. The first time a former US president has ever faced criminal charges. Donald Trump, a former US president, said he expects to be detained on Tuesday in connection with a case involving suspected hush money payments to … Read more

Wyoming becomes first US state to outlaw abortion pills

Wyoming
  • Wyoming has become the first state in the United States to outlaw abortion pills.
  • Violations can result in up to six months in prison and a $9,000 fine.
  • Abortion pills are the most often used technique of terminating a pregnancy.

Wyoming has become the first state in the United States to outlaw abortion pills after its governor signed legislation making prescription or selling them unlawful.

Violations can result in up to six months in prison and a $9,000 fine.

Women “upon whom a chemical abortion is performed or attempted” will not be prosecuted.

On the same day that Mark Gordon signed the measure, a Texas court was deliberating on a lawsuit that may essentially prohibit a popular abortion medication statewide.

In the United States, abortion pills are the most often used technique of terminating a pregnancy.

The Wyoming bill, which was passed by the state’s Republican-controlled legislature earlier this month, makes it illegal to “prescribe, dispense, distribute, sell or use any drug for the purpose of procuring or performing an abortion”.

The bill is set to go into force on July 1.

It does not cover morning-after medications or therapy to save a woman’s health or life.

It also exempts treatment of a “natural miscarriage according to currently accepted medical guidelines”.

Wyoming American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) advocacy director Antonio Serrano criticised the bill, saying “a person’s health, not politics, should guide important medical decisions – including the decision to have an abortion”.

Wyoming has only one abortion clinic: the Women’s Health & Family Care Clinic in Jackson.

The state is one of many where legal battles over abortion laws have raged since the Supreme Court overturned the landmark 1973 Roe v Wade decision legalising abortion.

More than a dozen states have passed near-total abortion prohibitions, many of which have been overturned by the courts.

Mr Gordon, a Republican, also stated that he would allow a separate, broader bill that prohibits abortion except in restricted cases to become law without his signature on Sunday. Both this restriction and the ban on abortion medicines may face legal challenges. It is unclear when a broader prohibition might go into effect.

More states have imposed limits on abortion medicine, such as requiring a doctor’s visit before purchasing a pill.

Meanwhile, in Texas, Judge Matthew Kacsmaryk, an appointment of former President Donald Trump, is scheduled to decide soon on whether mifepristone, a routinely used abortion pill, should be sold in the United States, in a decision that may limit access to the medicine statewide.

Mifepristone may be administered at home and is used in more than half of all pregnancy terminations in the United States.

The court is due to rule on a complaint brought in Texas by an anti-abortion organisation claiming that the drug’s safety was never adequately researched by the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA), which authorises medications.

The administration of President Joe Biden has maintained that the approval of mifepristone was fully backed by science.

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China’s new defence minister is a general sanctioned by the US

China
  • China appointed a US-approved general as its new defence minister on Sunday.
  • The country’s rubber-stamp legislature unanimously confirmed the appointment of General Li Shangfu.
  • His appointment was one of several confirmed by China’s National People’s Congress.

China appointed a US-approved general as its new defence minister on Sunday.

During a session on Sunday, the country’s rubber-stamp legislature unanimously confirmed the appointment of General Li Shangfu, a veteran of the People’s Liberation Army’s modernization drive.

Given Li’s background, experts say the appointment will be closely watched in Washington, even though the position is largely diplomatic and ceremonial.

Former US President Donald Trump’s administration sanctioned Li and China’s Equipment Development Department, which he was in charge of at the time, for purchasing Russian weapons, including a Su-35 combat aircraft and an S-400 surface-to-air missile system, in 2018.

His appointment was one of several confirmed by China’s National People’s Congress on Sunday. Four new vice premiers were also appointed: Ding Xuexiang, He Lifeng, Zhang Guoqing, and Liu Guozhong.

Following Li Qiang’s nomination, all four will serve as vice premiers on the State Council, the body in charge of reviving China’s economy after three years of strict zero-Covid restrictions.

The appointment of Li Shangfu as defence minister comes at a time when relations between Beijing and Washington are becoming increasingly strained.

According to defence experts, his appointment was most likely a reward for his work in modernising China’s military.

Li was named deputy commander of the PLA’s then-new Strategic Support Force in 2016, an elite body tasked with accelerating China’s space and cyber warfare capabilities development. According to Reuters, he was then appointed head of the Central Military Commission’s (CMC), China’s governing defence body, which is led by the country’s leader, Xi Jinping.

Defense experts believe Li’s background as a technocrat and aerospace engineer who worked on China’s satellite programme will be important in his new role.

“The operational and technological background of the next Chinese defense minister is especially pertinent given that the PLA aims to become a world-class military by 2049,” James Char from Singapore’s S. Rajaratnam School of International Studies

“I think he has been elevated to this position because he’s delivered for Xi Jinping in key areas of modernisation,” Singapore-based security analyst Alexander Neill from Hawaii’s Pacific Forum think-tank told Reuters.

“This is someone who will have to hold their own in front of an international audience.”

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‘History will hold Donald Trump accountable’ for January 6, Pence says

Donald Trump
  • Pence was in the Capitol when thousands of Trump fans stormed the building.
  • Pence was presiding over what had always been the ceremonial process of approving the votes.
  • He harshly attacked Trump’s behavior in a recent interview.

Former U.S. Vice President Mike Pence delivered his strongest denunciation to his former employer Donald Trump yet on Saturday, saying history will hold him accountable for his role in the Jan. 6, 2021, attack on the United States Capitol.

Pence was in the Capitol when thousands of Trump fans stormed the building, attempting to prevent Congress from recognizing the results of Trump’s 2020 presidential election loss to Joe Biden.

Pence was presiding over what had always been the ceremonial process of approving the votes of the Electoral College to determine the president and vice president, as the vice president holds the constitutional role of Senate president.

Throughout the siege, Trump issued multiple tweets, one of which urged Republicans to “fight” and another of which made bogus accusations about voter fraud. He also chastised Pence for approving the results.

“President Trump was wrong,” Pence told assembled journalists and their guests at the Gridiron dinner, an annual white-tie event in Washington, D.C.

“I had no right to overturn the election, and his reckless words endangered my family and everyone at the Capitol that day, and I know that history will hold Donald Trump accountable.”

During the incident, Pence, who is exploring a candidature for the Republican presidential nomination in 2024, was taken to safety by law officers.

Most pointed

In the months following the incident, he rarely mentioned Jan. 6, but he has subsequently increased his condemnation of the rioters and his former boss’s behavior on that day.

In recent media interviews, he has harshly attacked Trump’s behavior, and in a memoir published in November, he accused Trump of threatening his family.

Yet, Pence’s remarks on Saturday were his most pointed to date.

“What happened that day was a disgrace,” he said. “And it mocks decency to portray it any other way. For as long as I live, I will never, ever diminish the injuries sustained, the lives lost, or the heroism of law enforcement on that tragic day.”

Outside of work hours, a Trump representative did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

Since the two left offices, Pence’s relationship with Trump has been complicated. He denounced the former president’s behavior but avoided the most venomous rebukes of Trump. He also refused to participate with the House of Representatives committee probing the Capitol attack, labeling their work as biased.

The former vice president’s comments on Saturday suggest he is willing to distance himself from Trump more aggressively as the 2024 race heats up, even if it means losing millions of GOP voters who still support the former president.

His remarks came just days after conservative television host Tucker Carlson aired security footage of the Capitol attack, claiming that many of the rioters were “orderly.”

Carlson’s depiction of Jan. 6 was sharply criticized by Democrats and several high-profile Republicans in the Senate, though many other Republicans – particularly in the House – shrugged off the episode.

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Donald Trump invited to testify before grand jury

Donald Trump i
  • The Manhattan district attorney has been investigating Mr. Trump.
  • Ms. Daniels claims she received $130,000 in exchange for silence.
  • A grand jury is set up by a prosecutor.

Prosecutors in New York have called former US President Donald Trump to testify before a grand jury in the Stormy Daniels case, according to his lawyer.

For the past five years, the Manhattan district attorney has been investigating Mr. Trump for alleged hush money payments made on his behalf to the ex-porn star.

Experts believe that summoning him to a grand jury means that he may face prosecution.

Ms. Daniels claims she received $130,000 in exchange for silence about an alleged romance prior to the 2016 election.

A grand jury is set up by a prosecutor to determine whether there is enough evidence to pursue charges in a case. It is held in secret, and several former aides of Mr. Trump have reportedly testified in this case.

If prosecutors pursue the case, it could be the first time a former US president has faced criminal charges.

Mr. Trump was called to testify before the grand jury, according to the New York Times.

If the Manhattan district attorney’s office has summoned Mr. Trump, it means the office is considering indicting him, according to Catherine Christian, a former financial prosecutor in District Attorney Alvin Bragg’s office.

She believes Mr. Trump will decline the opportunity to testify.

“Most people decline for a host of reasons. You waive immunity, you open yourself up, if you lie, to perjury charges,” she said. “You’re also letting the district attorney know what your defense is.”

Mr. Trump is being investigated in multiple cases, including the Stormy Daniels case, though he has not been charged in any of them and denies wrongdoing in each.

They come as the 76-year-old Republican prepares to run for President again.

Prosecutors have not commented on the invitation, which was widely reported in the American media and confirmed by Mr. Trump’s legal team.

The action arises from allegations that Mr. Trump authorized his former lawyer to pay adult film actress Stormy Daniels to prevent her from coming out about an alleged affair.

Michael Cohen, the lawyer, was later imprisoned on various offenses. Cohen stated under oath that Mr. Trump authorized him to make the $130,000 (£110,000) payment only days before the 2016 presidential election.

Mr. Trump admitted to reimbursing the cash but denied the affair and any wrongdoing in violation of campaign statutes.

According to Ms. Christian, the former president could face two charges for his acts.

The first, she said, may be a simple misdemeanor charge of manipulating business documents, as prosecutors believe he categorized Cohen’s payments as legal fees.

The district attorney’s office may possibly seek to charge Mr. Trump with a low-level felony, but she says that would be a considerably more challenging legal case.

Mr. Trump would face a felony charge for altering business records with the purpose to conduct or conceal a second crime.

Prosecutors might argue Mr. Trump’s efforts to hide his payments to Ms. Daniels were election campaign-related, as he allegedly did so to shield voters from knowing he had participated in an “illicit relationship” with Ms. Daniels, Ms. Christian said – something she termed “a novel theory”.

“That doesn’t mean they can’t prove it and get a conviction, but it’s going to be tough.”

If convicted, Ms. Christian said Mr. Trump could face probation or a fine.

“But it would still be a felony, and who wants to be charged with a felony, and who wants to be convicted of a felony? Certainly not a former president,” she said.

Mr. Trump labeled the inquiry a political witch-hunt by a “corrupt, perverted, and weaponized legal system” on his social media network Truth Social.

Before a meeting with the Manhattan DA on Friday, Cohen told media he “applauded” Mr. Bragg for “providing Donald the opportunity to come in to give his narrative”.

“Well, knowing Trump as well as I do, I understand that he doesn’t speak the truth,” Cohen said. “It’s one thing to turn around and lie on your deception social. It’s one thing to turn around and lie in front of a grand jury.”

Throughout Trump’s administration, there was a legal battle over Ms. Daniels’ allegations.

A federal investigation into the Stormy Daniels issue was abandoned after he left office in 2021, but the Manhattan District Attorney’s Office has been conducting its own investigation since 2018.

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Suppressing China won’t make America great, says Qin Gang

Qin Gang

Qin Gang claims that US-China relations have “seriously diverged”. China’s new foreign minister warns of conflict with the US. Saying an ‘invisible hand’ is driving the Ukraine crisis. The foreign minister of China Qin Gang claims that US-China relations have “seriously diverged” and expresses concern over possible conflict. “Containment and suppression will not make America … Read more

Why has the American far right embraced Brazilian Jair Bolsonaro?

Jair Bolsonaro

Bolsonaro has received a warm welcome in America. He spoke in the auditorium of a Trump hotel just outside Miami in early February. Kirk and Bolsonaro enthusiastically described common ground between the Brazilian and American right. This Saturday, as American conservatives gather in Maryland for the Conservative Political Action Conference, they’ll get a sense of … Read more

Rupert Murdoch states Fox News hosts backed false election fraud claims

Rupert Murdoch
  • Rupert Murdoch denied that Fox supported any of Donald Trump’s bogus claims of widespread fraud.
  • Fox News claims the hosts’ statements were taken out of context and disputes slander.
  • A jury trial is scheduled to begin in April.

Rupert Murdoch, the wealthy owner of Fox News, has admitted that several of the network’s hosts supported bogus allegations that the 2020 presidential election was stolen.

But, he denied that Fox supported any of Donald Trump‘s bogus claims of widespread fraud following his election defeat.

Mr. Murdoch’s statements were exposed in a legal filing as part of a defamation case filed by Dominion Voting Systems, a ballot technology business. Fox News claims the hosts’ statements were taken out of context and disputes slander.

“Some of our commentators were endorsing it,” Murdoch testified in a formal deposition on Monday.

Asked about certain on-air claims that echoed Mr. Trump’s, he said: “I would have liked us to be stronger in denouncing it, in hindsight.”

Mr. Murdoch expressed skepticism about the Republican former president’s claims of rampant voter fraud.

Dominion is suing Fox News for $1.6 billion (£1.3 billion), claiming that the conservative network spread false and malicious rumors about voter fraud that hurt its company.

Fox News has maintained that the comments are protected by the First Amendment right to free expression and that it was just reporting on Mr. Trump’s charges, not endorsing them.

Dominion’s complaint, according to Fox, “mischaracterizes the facts by cherry-picking soundbites, missing important context, and mischaracterizing the record.”

To prove defamation, Dominion’s lawyers would have to convincingly argue that Fox presented incorrect information while knowing it was false.

In Delaware, a jury trial is scheduled to begin in April.

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Prince Harry and Meghan Markle may invoke fifth amendment

Prince Harry

Prince Harry and Meghan Markle may choose to plead the Fifth Amendment. The fifth amendment grants an individual the liberty to refuse to answer. A US court denied a stay of discovery in the defamation action. According to express.co.uk, Prince Harry and Meghan Markle may choose to plead the Fifth Amendment, following in the footsteps … Read more

Meghan Markle and Prince Harry appears to have skipped the ‘wedding of the year’

Meghan Markle

Meghan Markle and Prince Harry appear to have skipped the ‘wedding of the year.’ Meghan Markle and Prince Harry are not believed to have known the couple. Donald Trump who plans to run for US President in 2024, was removed from the guest list. Meghan Markle and Prince Harry appear to have skipped the ‘wedding … Read more

ChatGPT lists Musk, Trump, Putin as ‘controversial’ noted personalities

ChatGPT

ChatGPT lists Trump and Elon Musk as controversial and worthy of special treatment, Biden and Bezos as not. Musk issued a warning, stating that one of the greatest threats to humanity’s future is artificial intelligence (AI), as ChatGPT shows. “ Musk was a co-founder of OpenAI, the American company that created the popular generative AI … Read more

A special grand jury in Georgia “unanimously” concluded 2020 election report

2020 election report

The grand jury in Georgia concluded that there was no widespread voter fraud in the 2020 presidential election. This could influence state prosecutors’ decisions on whether to charge Trump. Donald Trump’s attempts to overturn the 2020 election “unanimously.”   After hearing “extensive testimony” from election officials, poll workers, and other experts, the special grand jury … Read more

The FBI searches Biden’s papers at the University of Delaware

FBI
  • FBI performed two searches last month.
  • On two separate days, investigators retrieved multiple boxes from the campus.
  • Mr. Biden and his team consented to the search, thus no warrant was required.

The FBI performed two searches at the University of Delaware in the last month to see if US President Joe Biden contributed any potentially secret materials.

On two separate days, investigators retrieved multiple boxes from the campus.

Mr. Biden’s alma mater houses thousands of cartons of documents from his service in the Senate.

Donald Trump is under criminal investigation for his handling of secret data.

Documents marked classified have been discovered in recent months at Mr. Biden’s Delaware home and offices in Washington, DC. During a search of his private property in Wilmington last month, the FBI discovered some of the data.

According to sources familiar with the inquiry, the searches at the University of Delaware took place around the end of January and the beginning of February.

The discovered documents did not appear to have classified markings, but the FBI is now evaluating the files.

No warrant was required

US president and his team consented to the search, thus no warrant was required.

Mr. Biden gave the college 1,850 boxes of information in 2012, but those files have not been made public since then.

Mr. Biden’s personal attorney, the US Department of Justice, and the University of Delaware have yet to respond.

The Justice Department has chosen Robert Hur as special counsel to conduct the inquiry into how Mr. Biden handled sensitive data.

The residence of former US Vice-President Mike Pence was also inspected last week after his aides revealed that they had discovered secret materials during their own search.

Former President Trump is facing a separate inquiry after FBI officers executing a search warrant at his Florida Mar-a-Lago home last year discovered hundreds of files with secret markings.

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Joe Biden to undergo medical checkup ahead of 2024 presidential bid

Joe Biden 2024 presidential bid

Joe Biden will finish a routine medical exam ahead of the 2024 presidential bid. The White House has vowed to make the 80-year-old president’s doctor’s report public. Biden will have to deal with the pressures of an election campaign and his office. On Thursday, Joe Biden will finish a routine medical exam. This is an … Read more

Nikki Haley will run for president race in 2024  

Nikki Haley

Former South Carolina governor and UN envoy Nikki Haley has declared her candidature for president. The time is now for a powerful and proud America “She posted a campaign video link on Twitter. The third Indian American to run for president is Ms. Haley. Former South Carolina governor and UN envoy Nikki Haley has declared … Read more

NATO chief’s planned departure reintroduces the succession race

NATO
  • Nato’s long-serving leader will step down in October.
  • There is no agreement on who should succeed Norwegian Prime Minister Jens Stoltenberg.
  • The mandate of Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg has been extended three times.

BRUSSELS – The NATO alliance revealed Sunday that its long-serving leader would step down in October, sparking new speculation about his replacement.

According to diplomats in Brussels, there is no agreement on who should succeed former Norwegian Prime Minister Jens Stoltenberg as the Western alliance’s top civilian official.

Some NATO allies were discussing extending his already nine-year tenure to oversee NATO’s reaction to the crisis triggered by Russia’s conflict with Ukraine.

However, shortly after Stoltenberg returned from high-level discussions in Washington on Sunday, his spokesman announced that he would step down later this year.

“The mandate of Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg has been extended three times and he has served for a total of almost nine years,” spokeswoman Oana Lungescu said.

“The secretary general’s term comes to an end in October of this year and he has no intention to seek another extension of his mandate.”

The 63-year-decision old’s to step down will focus attention on the race among senior European officials to replace him, with nations already quietly floating candidates in news media leaks.

The secretary-general has always been a European, even if Washington has the last say on his — or, perhaps, this time, her — selection.

Is it time for a woman?

And, while the day-to-day duty is to coordinate and seek consensus among the 30 members, the choice itself will be considered indicative of NATO’s orientation. – Is it time for a woman? When Stoltenberg’s future was in doubt the last time — in February 2022, when he was appointed future president of the Norwegian central bank, only to withdraw later – speculation centered on women.

For seven decades, the alliance has been led by a succession of Western European men, and many observers believed it was time for a woman or an Easterner to assume the helm.

The last four NATO commanders appear to have been chosen for an anti-clockwise tour around the North Sea coast, with a Briton being followed by a Dutchman, a Dane, and now a Norwegian.

Meanwhile, the alliance’s strategic attention has switched to the coalition’s eastern flank, where younger NATO members on the Baltic and Black Sea beaches face an aggressive Russia.

Poland and the Baltic countries now consider their long-standing warnings about Moscow as valid, and they have led calls to arm and help Ukraine in the event of an invasion.

As a result, proposals have been made for NATO to choose a person such as Lithuanian Prime Minister Ingrida Simonyte or her Estonian counterpart Kaja Kallas.

Both have long adopted a firm diplomatic posture with Russia, which may appeal to more hawkish friends but may backfire in some capitals.

Who is it?

Some say that selecting a Balt would be too provocative to Russia, bringing the allies — who currently arm and pay Kyiv’s soldiers — closer to direct conflict with Moscow.

More cynical observers, including some NATO officials, believe Kallas has been an overly effective advocate for the eastern stance, causing animosity in western capitals.

So, if not a hawkish Balt, who is it?

Although no official candidatures have been revealed, diplomats in Brussels believe the Netherlands will promote its defense minister, Kajsa Ollongren.

Meanwhile, Britain has already produced three secretaries-general in the alliance’s history and has historically viewed itself as a bridge between Europe and the United States.

Britain’s defense secretary, Ben Wallace, is frequently mentioned as a prospective contender, but it may not sit well with the 21 NATO partners who are also members of the European Union. – There is no agreement -Britain made friends in Ukraine as an early and vociferous supporter of its defense, but Brexit strained London’s ties with many EU capitals.

This leaves NATO’s southern flank open, with former Italian Prime Minister Mario Draghi, 75, and Romanian President Klaus Iohannis allegedly in the running.

Finally, what if NATO chose a non-European secretary general for the first time, perhaps a Canadian like Deputy Prime Minister Chrystia Freeland?

“There is no consensus,” one senior NATO official admitted, amid reports that US President Joe Biden’s White House had yet to consider succession.

Stoltenberg assumed command of NATO’s headquarters in Brussels on October 1, 2014, and has led the Western alliance through various geopolitical crises.

The final NATO and US forces left Afghanistan in August 2021, just before the capital Kabul fell to victorious Taliban forces.

Stoltenberg also led NATO’s response to Russia’s invasion of Ukraine in February 2022 and the ongoing war, the bloodiest on European soil since the 1940s.

Under previous US President Donald Trump, a frequent NATO critic, he has been a respected secretary-general and, in particular, a bridge between European allies and Washington.

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Biden, Brazil’s Lula vow relationship reboot at meet

Biden

Joe Biden and Lula de Silva have pledged to restart bilateral ties. By promoting democracy and addressing climate change. Lula and Biden discussed their mutual objectives. Joe Biden and Luiz Inacio Lula de Silva, have pledged to restart bilateral ties by putting a strong emphasis on promoting democracy and addressing climate change. The commitment was … Read more

The FBI discovers another classified paper at ex-VP Pence’s residence

FBI
  • A five-hour search of the Carmel, Indiana house, was conducted with Pence’s consent.
  • FBI removed one document with classified markings and six additional without such markings.
  • Pence is considering a presidential bid in 2024.

The FBI found an additional classified document at the property of former vice president Mike Pence two weeks after the Republican acknowledged having a “small number” of government files at his home.

Pence’s spokesman Devin O´Malley said in a statement to US media that agents had turned up the material in a “thorough and unrestricted” five-hour search of the Carmel, Indiana house, conducted with Pence’s consent.

They removed “one document with classified markings and six additional without such markings that were not discovered in the initial review by the vice president’s counsel,” he added.

The search came after Pence, who is considering a presidential bid in 2024, revealed last month that an aide had discovered secret materials, which he most certainly took with him when he left the White House in January 2021.

This came after searches of President Joe Biden‘s and former President Donald Trump’s houses turned up secret documents.

Former top US officials are required to turn up to the National Archives any official records from their time in the White House.

Last August, FBI agents raided Trump’s Mar-a-Lago estate in Florida and discovered considerable numbers of secret materials, despite Trump’s claim that there were none.

That came after months of National Archives requests for all of the materials Donald Trump brought with him.

An independent Justice Department prosecutor is investigating the former president for illegally stealing and retaining sensitive documents, as well as an obstruction for obstructing the inquiry.

After Trump’s case became public, confidential documents were discovered at a Washington office that Biden used before becoming president.

This resulted in FBI searches of Biden’s house in Wilmington, Delaware, where more documents were discovered, and his vacation home in Rehoboth Beach, Delaware, where none were discovered.

“The vice president has directed his legal team to continue its cooperation with appropriate authorities and to be fully transparent through the conclusion of this matter,” added O´Malley in the statement quoted by multiple US media outlets.

The latest discovery comes after Pence was reportedly subpoenaed Thursday in a separate FBI investigation investigating Trump’s attempt to overturn the 2020 election and his role in the 2021 attack on the US Capitol.

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