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Report: Giuliani Must Pay Ex-Defense Team $1.4M

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    Photo via Gage Skidmore Flickr

    Former New York City Mayor Rudy Giuliani has been ordered by New York Judge Arthur Engoron to pay the law firm Davidoff Hutcher & Citron (DHC) more than $1.36 million in unpaid legal fees, plus interest. The firm said the total bills for partner Robert Costelloโ€™s legal work amounted to $1.57 million. Giuliani previously paid $214,000, but stopped paying in 2023, according to the firmโ€™s lawsuit.

    Judge Engoronโ€”best known for presiding over the controversial civil fraud case against Donald Trumpโ€™s business empireโ€”rejected Giulianiโ€™s arguments that he never agreed to pay the fees or didnโ€™t receive the bills. Engoron noted that Giuliani had even written checks referencing the firmโ€™s file and invoice numbers, undermining his claims.

    This ruling adds to Giulianiโ€™s mounting legal burdens from his efforts to defend former President Trump and expose alleged election irregularities following the 2020 election.


    A Pattern of Politically Charged Investigations

    Giuliani, once celebrated as โ€œAmericaโ€™s Mayorโ€ for his leadership after 9/11, has been the target of numerous investigations since working as Trumpโ€™s personal attorney. He represented Trump from November 2019 through July 2023 while fending off probes from:

    • Congressional Democrats investigating Trumpโ€™s Ukraine dealings and post-election challenges.
    • Special Counsel Jack Smith, who named Giuliani as an unindicted co-conspirator in the January 6th case against Trump. (That case was later dismissed after Trumpโ€™s 2024 election victory.)
    • Fulton County District Attorney Fani Willis (D), who charged Giuliani in her sprawling Georgia election case. Willis has since been disqualified from prosecuting the case and just lost her final appeal to stay on it.
    • Arizona prosecutors, who brought charges related to the stateโ€™s 2020 alternate electors effortโ€”this case remains ongoing.

    Giuliani has consistently argued these prosecutions are politically motivated attempts to punish Trump allies and dissuade legal challenges to election practices.


    Engoronโ€™s History Raises Eyebrows on the Right

    Judge Engoronโ€™s role has drawn skepticism from conservatives, who see him as part of a pattern of partisan lawfare against Trump-world figures. Engoron previously levied a massive $500 million civil penalty against Trumpโ€™s real estate empireโ€”an unprecedented punishment that was later wiped out on appeal just last month.

    Now, Engoronโ€™s decision against Giuliani forces him to pay DHC for years of legal defense work, plus accumulating interest since October 2023. Giulianiโ€™s legal team has not yet said whether they will appeal.


    Broader Legal and Financial Pressures

    This ruling is just one of several financial pressures on Giuliani. He is also facing:

    • A bankruptcy filing after losing a defamation suit brought by two Georgia election workers.
    • Disbarment proceedings in New York and Washington, D.C. over his legal challenges to the 2020 election.
    • Ongoing legal fees from multiple federal and state investigations.

    Despite this, Giuliani has maintained that he acted within the law in his efforts to challenge election results and believes he will ultimately be vindicated.

    Biden Canceled Trumpโ€™s Program Identifying Chinese Threats Lastย Year

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      Donald Trump via Gage Skidmore Flickr

      President Biden’s incompetency as President is unavoidable.

      After the President permitted a Chinese spy balloon to traverse the country for the better part of a week it is important to remind Americans that last year Biden chose to cancel a program launched by the Trump administration to identify Chinese threats to national security.

      According to The Daily Wire, Matt Olsen, the Biden administrationโ€™s assistant attorney general in charge of the national security division, claimed that Asians had said the program was biased against them, saying, โ€œWe helped give rise to a harmful perception that the department applies a lower standard to investigate and prosecute criminal conduct related to that country or that we in some way view people with racial, ethnic, or family ties to China differently.โ€

      โ€œMake no mistake. We will be relentless in defending our country from China,โ€ he added.

      A few weeks before Biden ended Trump’s China Initiative, former FBI director Christopher Wray acknowledgedย that when he took his job in 2017 and examined the scope of Chinese theft of American technology, it โ€œblew me away. And Iโ€™m not the kind of guy that uses words like โ€˜blown awayโ€™ easily.โ€

      โ€œThere is no country that presents a broader, more severe threat to our innovation, our ideas and our economic security than China does,โ€ he added.

      โ€œThe scale of their hacking program, and the amount of personal and corporate data that their hackers have stolen, is greater than every other country combined,โ€ย Wray concluded.

      The China Initiative was implemented by former Attorney General Jeff Sessions in 2018.

      โ€œToday, we see Chinese espionage not just taking place against traditional targets like our defense and intelligence agencies, but against targets like research labs and universities, and we see Chinese propaganda disseminated on our campuses.ย โ€ฆ This Department of Justiceโ€”and the Trump administrationโ€”have already made our decision: we will not allow our sovereignty to be disrespected, our intellectual property to be stolen, or our people to be robbed of their hard-earned prosperity.ย  We want fair trade and good relationships based on honest dealing.ย  We will enforce our lawsโ€”and we will protect Americaโ€™s national interests.โ€

      Diddy Boasts Of Potential Trump Pardon As Conviction Fallout Mounts

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        Disgraced hip-hop mogul Sean โ€œDiddyโ€ Combs, now serving time at FCI Fort Dix, is reportedly bragging to fellow inmates that a presidential pardon from Donald Trump is on the horizon.

        According to TMZ, Combs has been telling other convicts he expects to walk free early next year โ€” and has even promised to โ€œtake care of themโ€ once heโ€™s back on the outside.

        When asked earlier this year about the possibility of a pardon, President Trump told Fox Newsโ€™ Peter Doocy heโ€™d be open to reviewing the case.

        โ€œHe used to really like me a lot, but I think when I ran for politics, that relationship busted up,โ€ Trump said. โ€œIf I think somebody was mistreated, whether they like me or donโ€™t like me, it wouldnโ€™t have any impact on me.โ€

        Combsโ€™s troubles stem from a sensational trial last month that pulled back the curtain on his decadent and abusive lifestyle. Jurors heard shocking testimony about drug-fueled โ€œfreak-offsโ€ โ€” private sex parties where women were allegedly coerced and mistreated.

        While Combs managed to avoid conviction on the more serious racketeering and sex-trafficking charges, he was found guilty of two counts of transporting women for prostitution under the federal Mann Act. The 55-year-old was sentenced to four years and two months in prison, fined $500,000, and ordered to complete five years of supervised release.

        The embattled music mogul isnโ€™t done facing justice yet. Heโ€™s still staring down multiple civil suits accusing him of rape, assault, and human trafficking, painting an even darker picture of an entertainment empire built on exploitation and excess.

        While Democrats and their media allies once celebrated Combs as a cultural icon and political activist, his downfall now stands as a reminder that Hollywood and celebrity politics often mask deep corruption.

        MAHA Year One: How Trump & RFK Jr. Are Rebuilding American Health

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        By Gage Skidmore from Surprise, AZ, United States of America - Robert F. Kennedy, Jr., CC BY-SA 2.0,

        For decades, Americans were told a story about their health that no longer matched reality. We were assured that food was safe, that regulators were vigilant, that medical advice was insulated from politics and profit, and that rising chronic disease was an unfortunate but unavoidable byproduct of modern life. Meanwhile, the health of the nation deteriorated in plain sight. Obesity climbed year after year. Childhood chronic disease became common rather than exceptional. Autism rates surged. Cancer diagnoses among children rose. By the time President Trump returned to office, 76.4% of Americans were living with at least one chronic disease. Eight out of 10 children could not qualify for military service. What should have been treated as a civilizational emergency was instead normalized, until that long-running failure of honesty and accountability culminated during the COVID-19 pandemic, when public health leaders abandoned transparency, misled the public, and, under Dr. Fauciโ€™s direction, shattered trust in medical professionals and the institutions meant to serve them.

        The collapse of trust that followed COVID did not occur in a vacuum. It was the culmination of years of regulatory capture, scientific arrogance, and a public health establishment that confused authority with truth. Americans were ordered, not persuaded. Dissent was pathologized. Data was selectively presented. Vaccine policy was enforced through mandate rather than transparency. Dr. Fauci became the symbol of an anti-science regime that claimed infallibility while revising its claims in real time. When institutions insist on obedience while refusing accountability, trust does not merely erode; it implodes.

        It is against this backdrop that the Make America Healthy Again initiative must be understood. MAHA is not a branding exercise or a partisan slogan. It is a course correction. President Trumpโ€™s decision to place Robert F. Kennedy Jr. at the helm of HHS was not an appeal to nostalgia or name recognition. It was an explicit rejection of the managerial consensus that presided over the chronic disease explosion. The mandate was simple and radical: identify root causes, dismantle regulatory capture, and tell the truth even when it disrupts powerful interests.

        Skeptics ask whether one year can matter. The answer depends on what one expects a first year to do. MAHA was never going to reverse decades of metabolic, environmental, and institutional decay overnight. Its purpose was to reorient the system, establish credibility, and force long-delayed questions back into the open. By that standard, the first year has been historic.

        Start with the scope of institutional change. President Trump signed an executive order establishing the MAHA Commission, chaired by Secretary Kennedy, with a singular focus on chronic disease. For the first time in generations, chronic illness was treated not as an actuarial inevitability but as a policy failure demanding investigation. This alone marked a break with orthodoxy. Under previous administrations, chronic disease spending rose to $1.3T annually while prevention remained an afterthought. When Kennedy notes that the federal government once spent essentially nothing on chronic disease, he is not making a rhetorical point. He is diagnosing a structural blind spot.

        The results are already visible. Thirty-seven states have enacted legislation advancing MAHA-aligned reforms. Nearly 100 MAHA-related bills have passed nationwide. Eighteen states secured SNAP waivers to restrict taxpayer-funded junk food purchases that directly fuel obesity and diabetes. These are not symbolic victories. They are structural incentives aligned with public health rather than industry convenience.

        Food policy has been the most visible arena of reform, and for good reason. The American diet did not become toxic by accident. It was engineered through regulatory loopholes that allowed synthetic additives to enter the food supply under the GRAS standard with minimal oversight. MAHA moved quickly to overhaul this system. Agreements now cover roughly 40% of the food industry, committing to remove petroleum-based synthetic dyes. The dairy industry has pledged to eliminate artificial dyes from ice cream by 2028. These changes matter because they reset norms. Once voluntary reform becomes expected, resistance collapses.

        The same logic applies to infant health. Operation Stork Speed was launched to expand access to safe and nutritious infant formula while removing heavy metals that had no business entering baby food in the first place. For parents who watched institutions minimize legitimate safety concerns during COVID, this shift toward precaution and transparency has been decisive in rebuilding trust.

        Critics often ask whether MAHA is anti-science. The premise is backward. MAHA is anti-dogma. It insists that science earns authority through openness, replication, and humility. This is why vaccine policy has been reframed around informed consent and gold standard trials rather than mandates. Honesty about uncertainty is not weakness. It is the precondition of credibility. Public trust returns when institutions stop pretending to be omniscient.

        This emphasis on trust extends beyond food and vaccines. HHS issued guidance restoring biological truth, recognizing that there are two sexes, male and female. This was not culture war theater. Medicine depends on biological reality. When institutions deny observable facts for ideological reasons, patients notice. Restoring clarity restores confidence.

        MAHAโ€™s critics also underestimate the importance of state-level experimentation. Utahโ€™s decision to ban added fluoride in public drinking water did not impose a national mandate. It reopened a conversation that had been closed by bureaucratic inertia. Communities are once again allowed to weigh risks and benefits rather than defer to outdated consensus.

        Health care delivery itself has not been ignored. Prior authorization has long functioned as a hidden tax on patients and physicians, delaying care while enriching intermediaries. Secretary Kennedy and CMS Administrator Oz secured industry commitments to streamline this process across health plans. Less paperwork means faster treatment and lower burnout. These are the reforms patients feel immediately.

        Drug pricing has followed the same philosophy. President Trumpโ€™s most favored nation order is being rapidly implemented to align U.S. prescription drug prices with those paid abroad. This is not price control masquerading as populism. It is a refusal to subsidize global markets at the expense of American patients. Lower prices are a public health intervention.

        Physical health has returned to the cultural mainstream as well. The Pete and Bobby Challenge, launched by Secretary Kennedy alongside Defense Secretary Hegseth, did something that countless white papers failed to do. It made fitness visible again. A nation where most children cannot meet basic physical standards is not merely unhealthy. It is vulnerable.

        The MAHA Commissionโ€™s release of the Make Our Children Healthy Again strategy, outlining more than 120 initiatives, signaled that childhood chronic disease is no longer being treated as a mystery or a taboo. New data linking rising thyroid and kidney cancers among children demands answers. Autism rates demand answers. MAHA has made clear that asking these questions is not forbidden. It is required.

        Perhaps the most underestimated achievement of the first year is cultural rather than regulatory. Trust is returning because institutions are speaking plainly. The public understands that special interests once thrived behind closed doors. They know they were sold better cigarettes and sugar smacks with a health halo. What they demanded in 2024 was not perfection. It was honesty.

        President Trump and Secretary Kennedy have delivered the first credible attempt in decades to dismantle the alliance between bureaucratic power and corporate profit that hollowed out public health. The appointments at NIH, FDA, and CMS reflect this shift. These are not partisan enforcers. They are reformers tasked with ending capture and restoring the mission.

        No serious observer should claim that the work is finished. Chronic disease did not emerge in one year, and it will not be eliminated in one term. But trajectories matter. Incentives matter. Trust matters most of all. After years in which Americans were told to comply and not question, MAHA has reopened the social contract between the public and medicine.

        Public health cannot function without consent. Consent requires trust. Trust requires truth. That is the chain MAHA is rebuilding. It is why the first year matters. Not because every problem has been solved, but because the system has finally been pointed in the right direction.

        If you enjoy my work, please subscribe: https://x.com/amuse.

        Sponsored by the John Milton Freedom Foundation, a nonprofit dedicated to helping independent journalists overcome formidable challenges in todayโ€™s media landscape and bring crucial stories to you.

        Trump Juror Dismissed After Prior Criminal Record Comes To Light

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          Arrest image via Pixabay

          The path to finding an impartial jury in former President Donald Trump’s hush money trial in New York has faced a number of setbacks throughout the week.

          On Thursday, two jurors were dismissed after being sworn in on Tuesday, including one who had previously been arrested for tearing down Right-leaning political posters.

          Judge Juan Merchan excused juror #4 after a prosecutor from Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Braggโ€™s office said the man had been arrested for ripping down โ€œpolitical posters that were on the Right,โ€ Fox News reported. Juror #4โ€™s dismissal came just after another juror โ€” juror #2 โ€” was excused by Merchan following her admission that she could no longer be impartial.

          โ€œI definitely have concerns. I donโ€™t think I can be fair,โ€ she said, adding that โ€œoutside influenceโ€ would โ€œinterfereโ€ with her judgment.

          The dismissals of jurors #4 and #2 brought the total of those seated down to five, but shortly after they were let go, more jurors were sworn in, bringing the total to 12, according toย the New York Post.

          Five more jurors must be selected as alternates before the trial can move forward. Thursday marks the third day of the hush-money trial, which is the first criminal trial against a former U.S. president. Jury selection will continue on Friday and with hopes that opening statements will kick off at the beginning of next week.

          Dozens of prospective jurors wereย dismissedย on Monday after they said it would be difficult for them to remain impartial throughout the trial.

          Trump is being charged with 34 counts of falsifying business records to make alleged hush money payments to porn actress Stormy Daniels.

          Report: CNN Considering Shifting Jim Acosta Time Slot

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            CNN is doing anything it can to survive its ratings slump…

            CNN chief executiveย Mark Thompsonย reportedly suggested moving anchorย Jim Acostaโ€™sย morning show to midnight as part of a planned shakeup within the network

            Former CNN senior media reporterย Oliver Darcyย reported in hisย Statusย newsletterย on Thursday that Acosta โ€œreceived a peculiar telephone call from CNN chief Mark Thompsonโ€ the night before.

            โ€œThompson, Iโ€™m told, delivered the veteran journalist a sudden and strange proposal: Move your show to midnight and anchor it until 2am ET,โ€ reported Darcy, who claimed Acosta was caught โ€œoff guardโ€ by the proposal as โ€œhe had no reason to believe that his current show would be on the chopping block.โ€

            Acosta was reportedly told that the lineup change โ€œhad nothing to do with his ratings or the editorial style of his show,โ€ but would be necessary logistically to accommodate a new morning schedule.

            According to Darcy, Thompson โ€œeven pitched the graveyard shift as if it were something of a promotion for Acosta.โ€

            Darcy questioned the purpose of the change, noting that Acosta had some of the stronger ratings at CNN, and that a 12 a.m. time slot โ€œoccupied by virtually zero other hosts in the cable news businessโ€ would โ€œeffectively exile Acosta to the Siberia of television news.โ€

            One unnamed source told Darcy that the move may be part of an effort to appeal to President-electย Donald Trump.

            โ€œThey want to get rid of Acosta to throw a bone to Trump,โ€ the source claimed. โ€œMidnight is not a serious offer when his ratings are among the best on the network.โ€

            Throughout Trump’s first term in the White House, Acosta was consistently combative with Trump officials quickly earning the Commander-In-Cheif’s ire.

            CNN has been experiencing a significant decline in viewership, particularly in the key 25-to-54-year-old demographic prized by advertisers. In 2024, the network averaged 92,000 total day viewers in this age group, marking a 1% drop from the previous year’s low. Primetime viewership in the same demographic saw a more substantial decline, with a 52% decrease to an average of 77,000 viewers. Overall primetime viewership also shrank by 45%, averaging 405,000 viewers.

            Former GOP State Rep Acquitted In Second Corruption Trial

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              Gavel via Wikimedia Commons Image

              On Thursday, Former Michigan Rep. Larry Inman (R) was acquitted on all counts involving bribery and extortion after a second corruption trial.

              Inman, 69, was charged in 2019 for allegedly soliciting a bribe, attempted extortion, and lying to federal investigators,ย accordingย to the Detroit Free Press.

              According to The Daily Caller, in 2019 a jury originally found Inman not guilty of lying to investigators, however, they could not reach a verdict regarding the remaining counts forcing the trial to go into a second hearing, Detroit Free Press reported.

              โ€œI think heโ€™s very glad to have this behind him,โ€ Inman’s attorney James Fisher stated. โ€œHe feels vindicated because this has been a very long struggle for him. And heโ€™s never said anything other than that he is not guilty of these charges, and I think the jury believed that.โ€

              The jury had allegedly debated for 45 minutes before reaching their final verdict on Thursday. According to the outlet, the first jury deliberated for over 10 hours over two days during the first hearing.

              Inman served as aย Michiganย representative from 2015 to 2020. However, Fisher noted that Inman is unlikely to get back into politics.

              โ€œI think itโ€™ll be very hard for him to get back involved in politics after this just because heโ€™s struggled through this whole entire process,โ€ Fisher told the Detroit Press. โ€œI hope the people that he represented see this and look at him in a positive way. I think he is a good man who deserves to be credited for what he did for his constituents.โ€

              Georgia Supreme Court Tosses Fani Willis’s Last Bid To Prosecute Trump

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              The Georgia Supreme Court on Tuesday ended Fulton County District Attorney Fani Willisโ€™s bid to remain on the election interference prosecution against former President Donald Trump and his allies, issuing a 4โ€“3 decision that leaves the high-profile case in limbo.

              The justices declined to review a lower courtโ€™s ruling that disqualified Willis over what it called a โ€œsignificant appearance of improprietyโ€ tied to her romantic relationship with Nathan Wade, a top prosecutor she had appointed to the case.

              This decision effectively halts the sprawling racketeering prosecution brought by Willis against Trump and more than a dozen associates for allegedly attempting to overturn the 2020 election results in Georgia. Trump and most defendants have pleaded not guilty.

              Future of the Case Uncertain

              While Georgiaโ€™s Prosecuting Attorneysโ€™ Council could assign a new prosecutor to take over the case, that process could take months, leaving the matter stalled indefinitely.

              Willis, in a statement to The Hill, said that although she disagrees with the courtโ€™s decision, she accepts it.

              โ€œI hope that whoever is assigned to handle the case will have the courage to do what the evidence and the law demand,โ€ Willis said, adding that her office would turn over case materials to the council.

              Trump Team Applauds Decision

              Trumpโ€™s lead attorney in Georgia, Steve Sadow, called the decision correct and overdue.

              โ€œWillisโ€™ misconduct during the investigation and prosecution of President Trump was egregious and she deserved nothing less than disqualification. This proper decision should bring an end to the wrongful political, lawfare persecutions of the President,โ€ Sadow said.

              How the Case Unraveled

              The case began to unravel after revelations that Willis was romantically involved with Wade, whom she had hired to help lead the prosecution. A trial judge ruled that either Wade or Willis would have to leave the case; Wade resigned. But an appeals court later ruled that the โ€œappearance of improprietyโ€ meant neither could continue.

              Court Says Broader Issue May Be Revisited

              Justice Andrew Pinson, explaining the decision not to review Willisโ€™s appeal, noted the public scrutiny surrounding the case and acknowledged the broader legal question at stake.

              โ€œIf this question โ€” whether conduct creating an appearance of impropriety alone is grounds for disqualifying a prosecutor โ€” is presented by future cases, we may well need to take it up in one of them,โ€ Pinson said.

              However, Pinson added that this particular case did not meet the threshold for review because the appeals ruling was โ€œcase-specific.โ€

              โ€œBut, in my view, that possibly cert-worthy question is not presented by this case, at least not as it appears before this Court,โ€ he said.

              Common Sense Alert: Major Hollywood Director Warns Of AI Threat To World!

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                Image via Pixabay free images.

                Are you concerned about the long-term impacts of artificial intelligence?

                Watch Amanda explain the situation below:

                Opinions expressed by contributors do not necessarily reflect the views of Great America News Desk.

                Amanda Head: Celebrity Abandons Woke Pronouns!

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                Amanda Head screenshot

                It’s about time.

                Watch Amanda explain the situation below:

                Opinions expressed by contributors do not necessarily reflect the views of Great America News Desk.