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Judge Sets Trump’s Trial Date

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The federal judge overseeing the Justice Department prosecution of former President Donald Trump on charges related to his mishandling of national security information and obstruction of justice has set a preliminary trial date for mid-August.

Judge Aileen Cannon for the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of Florida on Tuesday issued an order scheduling Trump’s trial to begin on Aug. 14, though Trump’s team is expected to file a number of motions seeking to delay the proceedings on various grounds.

The order also leaves open the possibility of continuances based on the complexity of the case and issues around classified documents and security clearances.

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Cannon’s order requires pre-trial motions to be filed in just over a month, on July 24.

READ ALSO: Trump Risks 10 Yrs In Prison Over Classified Documents Case Indictment

That deadline could prove tricky for Trump to meet as he continues to scramble to assemble a legal team to defend him.

Trump’s current lawyers also reportedly do not yet have security clearance to view the classified documents at the center of the case.

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Cannon’s order is her first major action since Trump was arraigned last week on 37 felony counts.

Cannon has faced calls for her recusal because of Trump-friendly rulings she previously made in the investigation of the documents, which were later forcefully struck down by a federal appeals court.

She has so far resisted those calls, and Tuesday’s order is the latest sign that she has no intention of stepping away from the case.

READ ALSO: Trump Campaigns, Calls Classified Documents Indictment ‘Ridiculous And Baseless’

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Trump was indicted by a federal grand jury earlier this month on charges that include willful retention of national defense information, conspiracy to obstruct justice, withholding a document or record, corruptly concealing a document or record, concealing a document in a federal investigation, a scheme to conceal and making false statements.

According to prosecutors, Trump held on to a cache of incredibly sensitive, classified national security materials after leaving office; stored them in areas accessible to the public; refused to turn the documents back over to the government; hatched and executed a plan to hide documents from his lawyers and the government in defiance of a federal subpoena; and, in two separate incidents, knowingly showed classified documents to people who did not have clearance to see such information.

Trump’s legal team is expected to challenge several aspects of the indictment before a trial gets underway, including an order from a federal judge that allowed prosecutors to pierce attorney-client privilege and question Trump’s ex-attorney Evan Corcoran.

His notes are central in the evidence presented in the indictment.

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READ ALSO: Trump Vows To Ban Nigerians, Others From Birthright Citizenship In US

The complexity of the case and the classified materials at the heart of it also mean that the Justice Department and the other parties in the Trump will have to come to an agreement about how to present classified evidence at trial – another process that could push back the start of the trial.

Trump is the current front-runner for the Republican presidential nomination. A conviction on the charges, which could include prison time, could upend that race.

But should Trump win the GOP nomination and then the general election – and if his team is also able to delay the trial until after the election – Trump could then install a friendly attorney general that could effectively dismiss the case.

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Iran Gets Interim President After Raisi’s Death

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Iran’s supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei assigned vice president Mohammad Mokhber to assume interim duties after the death of president Ebrahim Raisi in a helicopter crash a day earlier.

“In accordance with Article 131 of the constitution, Mokhber is in charge of leading the executive branch,” said Khamenei in a statement, adding that Mokhber will be required to work with the heads of legislative and judicial branches to prepare for presidential elections “within a maximum period of 50 days”.

Recall that President Raisi was confirmed dead on Monday after his helicopter crashed in a mountainous region of the country.

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READ ALSO: UK Regulator Reports Air Peace Over Alleged Safety Violation

Raisi was travelling with Foreign Minister Hossein Amir-Abdollahian who also died in the accident.

Rescue teams had been scouring the area since Sunday afternoon after a helicopter carrying Raisi, the foreign minister and other officials had gone missing.

Early Monday, relief workers located the missing helicopter, with state TV saying the president had died.

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The servant of Iranian nation, Ayatollah Ebrahim Raisi has achieved the highest level of martyrdom whilst serving the people,” state television said Monday, with Mehr news agency also saying he was dead.

State television broadcast photos of Raisi, with the voice of a man reciting the Koran playing in the background.

READ ALSO: Iran Declares 5 Days Of Mourning Over President Raisi’s Death

Iran’s vice president for executive affairs Mohsen Mansouri posted on X a Koranic verse used to express condolences.

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Meanwhile, Iran’s supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei has announced a five days of mourning for President Raisi.

“I announce five days of public mourning and offer my condolences to the dear people of Iran,” said Khamenei in an official statement a day after the death of Raisi and other officials in the crash in East Azerbaijan province.

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UK Threatens To Deport Physically-challenged Nigerian After 38 Years

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The United Kingdom has threatened to deport a physically-challenged Nigerian man, Anthony Olubunmi George, over an alleged forged entry stamp in his passport.

George who has lived in the UK for 38 years, after he left Nigeria at the age of 24 in 1986, according to the Guardian UK.

The 61-year-old Nigerian has no criminal convictions and made several applications for leave to remain in the UK, which the Home Office has rejected, most recently on 7 May.

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George’s case became the second African facing a huge disappointment with the UK Home Office after spending several years in Britain.

READ ALSO: US Sets Deadline For Troop Withdrawal From Niger

Vanguard reported last week that a 74-year-old Ghanaian Nelson Shardey, who has resided in the UK since 1977, was refused indefinite leave to remain despite being in the country for most of his adult life.

As the case of the Nigerian, he has never left the UK and has no criminal convictions, with the reports of having two strokes, which left him with problems with speech and mobility in 2019.

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When George arrived, Margaret Thatcher was prime minister and Rishi Sunak is the ninth to hold office since George has lived in the UK.

He has endured many periods of homelessness and disclosed he has lost count of the number of friends who have given him shelter over the years, adding that he no longer has any close family in Nigeria.

READ ALSO:Step-by-step Guide To Applying For 2024 MTN Scholarship

The Guardian UK said in 2005, his previous solicitors submitted a forged entry stamp in his passport and have subsequently been reported to the police and the legal regulatory bodies.

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George told the Guardian he knew nothing about the passport stamp until many years later. His current lawyer, Naga Kandiah of MTC Solicitors, cited his poor previous legal representation as the reason for George’s problems.

In his most recent refusal, Home Office officials said: “Unfortunately this is not something that is considered an exceptional circumstance.”

READ ALSO: List Of Persons On Board Iranian President’s Missing Helicopter

Kandiah has lodged an appeal against the latest refusal.

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A previous Home Office rejection of his case states: “It’s open to your family and friends to visit you in Nigeria.”

George said, “I don’t know how many different sofas I’ve slept on – too many to count. I don’t have my life, living the way I’m living now. My health problems since I had my stroke are my biggest worry. All I’m asking for is some kindness from the Home Office.”

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JUST IN: ICC Prosecutor Seeks Arrest Warrants For Netanyahu, Hamas Leaders

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The chief prosecutor of the International Criminal Court has applied for arrest warrants for Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and Hamas’s leader in Gaza for war crimes.

According to BBC, Karim Khan said there were reasonable grounds to believe that both men bore criminal responsibility for war crimes and crimes against humanity from at least 7 October 2023.

The ICC, based in The Hague, has been investigating Israel’s actions in the occupied territories for the past three years – and more recently the actions of Hamas as well.

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READ ALSO: Iran Declares 5 Days Of Mourning Over President Raisi’s Death

Mr Netanyahu recently called the prospect of senior Israel figures joining the ICC’s wanted list “an outrage of historic proportions”.

Last week, 13 Western countries including the United Kingdom, Germany, Japan, Italy, Japan and others cautioned Israel over its resolve to launch a full-scale operation in Rafah.

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