Trump’s Mar-a-Lago judge just made sure Jack Smith’s final report won’t see the light of day - Judge Aileen Cannon is blocking top lawmakers from privately viewing a report on the classified documents
Judge Aileen Cannon suggested Friday she was not inclined to allow the Justice Department to share special counsel Jack Smith’s report on the classified documents case with Congress – at least for now.
Judge Aileen Cannon on Monday cleared the way for the release of former special counsel Jack Smith's report on Trump's alleged election interference. The post ‘Confined to this proceeding’: Judge Cannon admits she has no authority to stop release of Jack Smith’s final report on Trump’s alleged election interference first appeared on Law & Crime.
According to legal analyst Glenn Kirschner on Friday, U.S. District Judge Aileen Cannon is "about to do Donald Trump another solid" by potentially helping the president-elect stop the release of details about his mishandled classified documents case to Congress.
Judge Aileen Cannon granted the Department of Justice (DOJ) permission on Monday to release the first volume of Special Counsel Jack Smith’s report on his investigations into former President Donald Trump.
Judge Aileen Cannon fulfilled the final terms of her employment—and threw a drive-by elbow at Jack Smith into the bargain.
Former federal prosecutor Joyce Vance has questioned U.S. District Judge Aileen Cannon for issuing orders in Donald ... the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of Florida, and Trump's transition team via email for comment. Following Trump's ...
During an appearance on MSNBC "The Weekend," legal analyst and former SDNY prosecutor Kristy Greenberg reported that District Court for the Southern District of Florida Judge Aileen Cannon once again tried to throw Donald Trump a lifeline late Saturday ...
Taylor Swift's lawyers presented a new defense in a motion to dismiss the lawsuit against the singer's production company.
One person died and two others were injured in a knife attack Wednesday night outside a train station in Nagano in central Japan, and police were looking for a suspect who fled, authorities said. Nagano police and fire department officials said a 49-year-old man was pronounced dead at a hospital.
There were more than two dozen people from Kentucky charged in the insurrection before President Trump issued pardons.