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Manhattan D.A. asks for “narrowly tailored” Trump gag order ahead of “hush money” trial
Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg’s office asked a New York judge on Monday to impose a “narrowly tailored” gag order restricting what former President Donald Trump can say about those involved in the criminal case against him, which is set to go to trial next month.
The request came as one of a trio of filings in the case, which revolves around reimbursements for a “hush money” payment to an adult film star days before the 2016 presidential election. Trump has pleaded not guilty to 34 criminal counts of falsifying business records.
The district attorney’s office asked Judge Juan Merchan for an order barring Trump from commenting on any prospective jurors in the case, “known or reasonably foreseeable witnesses” and prosecutors besides Bragg himself. The filing also asked him to restrict Trump from publicly discussing court staffers, employees of the district attorney’s office and their families.
“The relief requested here is narrowly tailored to protect the integrity of the upcoming trial while still affording defendant ample opportunity to engage in speech, including speech about this case,” the district attorney’s office said. “And there are no less restrictive alternatives that will adequately protect the trial from the prejudice that is reasonably likely to arise from defendant’s unrestrained extrajudicial statements.”
The filing noted that the request mirrors similar restrictions imposed in Trump’s other legal cases. A federal appeals court largely upheld one of those orders in December.
The filing cites “a long history of making public and inflammatory remarks about the participants in various judicial proceedings against [Trump], including jurors, witnesses, lawyers, and court staff.”
The request includes references to statements Trump made during another New York case, a civil fraud trial that recently ended with a $464 million judgment against him and other defendants. During that trial, Trump publicly attacked a key witness in both cases and was subjected to a gag order for maligning the judge’s clerk.
An attorney for Trump, Susan Necheles, declined to comment on the district attorney’s filing and said the former president’s legal team “will be responding in our submissions.”
The request for a gag order, as well as a second filing on Monday, highlight a 2019 federal case against Trump confidant Roger Stone. The D.A.’s filing said attempts to “expose and harass prospective jurors began almost simultaneously” with the trial.
Bragg’s office wrote that Trump “targeted the jury foreperson” in Stone’s case, “including during a commencement address, in remarks delivered from the White House, and during a Fox News Town Hall.”
Bragg’s office is also seeking an order “prohibiting disclosure of juror addresses other than to counsel” and “prohibiting disclosure of juror names other than to the parties and counsel.”
The filing cites Trump’s “extensive history of publicly and repeatedly attacking trial jurors and grand jurors involved in legal proceedings against him and his associates, including recent proceedings in New York.”
Bragg’s other filing seeks a ruling blocking certain defense experts and arguments at trial, while permitting evidence related to uncharged crimes. Those arguments include that Trump was targeted due to “selective prosecution.” The trial is scheduled to begin March 25.
During a 2022 criminal trial over tax fraud that Merchan also oversaw, he barred defense attorneys for Trump’s company from making a “selective prosecution” argument. Merchan told lawyers that he would “have very little patience at trial for any questions that are not in a good faith basis.”
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Putin laments “serious blunders” in top general’s killing, says he’ll meet Trump “any time” on Ukraine war
Moscow — Russian President Vladimir Putin on Thursday made a rare admission of failings by his powerful security agencies over the Ukraine-orchestrated killing of a senior general in Moscow. Lt. General Igor Kirillov, the head of the Russian military’s chemical and biological weapons unit, was killed by a bomb planted in a scooter in Moscow on Tuesday, the boldest assassination claimed by Kyiv since the start of the conflict.
“Our special services are missing these hits. They missed these hits. It means we need to improve this work. We must not allow such very serious blunders to happen,” Putin said at his end-of-year press conference, addressing a string of attacks inside Russia on high-profile Kremlin backers amid Russia’s war in Ukraine.
Ukraine has been linked to previous attacks in Russia, including the August 2022 car bombing of nationalist Darya Dugina and an explosion in a Saint Petersburg cafe in April 2023 that killed high-profile military correspondent Maxim Fomin, known as Vladlen Tatarsky.
Putin was addressing the killing of Kirillov for the first time, more than 48 hours after the blast in a residential part of the Russian capital. Questions have been asked in Moscow about the security protocols for such a high-ranking and public figure involved in the military offensive on Ukraine.
Kyiv claimed responsibility for the attack, saying explosives were packed into an electric scooter left by the door of a residential building.
When Kirillov and his assistant left the building, it detonated, killing them both.
Russia has detained an Uzbek citizen born in 1995, suspected of carrying out the attack, the Investigative Committee said Wednesday.
It claimed he said he had been “recruited by Ukrainian special forces.”
Putin on Thursday called the attack “terrorism”.
A source in Ukraine’s SBU security services called Kirillov a “legitimate target” and has accused him of being behind the mass use of banned chemical weapons on the frontline in eastern Ukraine.
Putin says he’ll meet Trump “any time” about Ukraine
Putin said Thursday he was ready for talks “any time” with U.S. President-elect Donald Trump, who has touted his ability to strike a Ukraine peace deal within hours of coming to office.
Trump, who will return to the White House in January, has stoked fears in Kyiv that he could force Ukraine to accept peace on terms favourable to Moscow.
Holding his annual end-of-year press conference, the Kremlin leader said his troops held the upper hand across the battlefield, but was forced to admit he does not know when Russia will take back the western Kursk region where Ukrainian troops launched an incursion in August.
The traditional annual question and answer sessions, often lasting hours, are largely a televised show while also being a rare setting in which he is put on the spot and answers some uncomfortable questions.
Asked about Trump’s overtures regarding a possible peace deal, Putin said he would welcome a meeting with the incoming Republican.
“I don’t know when I’m going to see him. He isn’t saying anything about it. I haven’t talked to him in more than four years. I am ready for it, of course. Any time,” Putin said.
“If we ever have a meeting with President-elect Trump, I am sure we’ll have a lot to talk about,” he said, adding that Russia was ready for “negotiations and compromises.”
The Kremlin recently welcomed Trump’s sharp criticism of President Biden’s decision to allow Kyiv to use U.S.-supplied missiles to strike Russian territory — a major escalation in the nearly three-year conflict that Mr. Biden’s administration said was necessitated by Putin drafting in thousands of North Korean soldiers to bolster his own ground forces.
Russia’s troops have been advancing in eastern Ukraine for months, with Putin repeatedly touting their prowess on the battlefield.
“We are moving towards resolving the primary aims that we set at the start of the special military operation,” Putin said, using Russia’s term for the conflict. “Our guys are fighting heroically. The capabilities of the armed forces are growing.”
Moscow’s army in November advanced at its fastest pace in east Ukraine since the first month of its 2022 attack.
But asked by a woman from the Kursk region when residents will be able to return to their homes there, after thousands were evacuated from frontline areas amid the Ukrainian assault, Putin said he could not name a date.
“We will absolutely kick them out. Absolutely. It can’t be any other way. But the question of a specific date, I’m sorry, I cannot say right now,” he admitted.
Putin challenges West to shoot down powerful new Russian missile
Putin appeared to repeat his threat to strike Kyiv with Russia’s powerful new multiple-warhead ballistic missile, dubbed Oreshnik. Russia has touted the Oreshnik as a hypersonic weapon virtually impossible to intercept, but an official at the U.S. Defense Department told CBS News it was assessed to be a variant of Russia’s existing RS-26 rocket, an “experimental” intermediate-range ballistic missile (IRBM.
Asked Thursday by a military journalist if the weapon had any flaws, Putin suggested a “high-tech duel” between the West and Russia to test his claims that it is impervious to air defenses.
“Let them set some target to be hit, let’s say in Kyiv. They will concentrate there all their air defenses. And we will launch an Oreshnik strike there and see what happens,” Putin proposed.
Assad’s ouster in Syria no “defeat” for Russia, Putin says
In his first public comments since the fall of ex-Syrian President Bashar al-Assad, Putin rejected claims that his toppling was a “defeat” for Russia.
“You want to present what is happening in Syria as a defeat for Russia,” Putin said in response to a question from a journalist. “I assure you it is not… we have achieved our goals.”
Putin said he has not yet met Assad, who fled to Moscow as rebels closed in on Damascus, but plans to soon.
Putin came to Assad’s rescue more than once over the course of the grueling civil war in Syria, and he stands to lose a significant military foothold in the volatile Middle East with his long-time ally now decisively out of power.
Putin says Russia’s economy “stable, despite external threats”
Putin was also pressed Thursday on the economic headwinds facing Russia — the fallout from a huge ramp up in military spending and deep labor shortages caused by the conflict.
He insisted that the situation was “stable, despite external threats,” citing low unemployment and industrial growth.
Asked about soaring inflation, Putin said that “inflation is a worrying signal,” and that price rises for foods such as butter and meat were “unpleasant.”
He acknowledged that Western sanctions were also a factor — “while they do not have key significance” — and criticized his country’s central bank, saying it should have taken measures beyond raising rates to lower inflation.