Trump-says-2-new-Trump-class-ships-will-be-added-to.jpeg

Trump says 2 new ‘Trump-class’ ships will be added to ‘Golden Fleet’

  • President Donald Trump announced new “Trump-class” ships for the US Navy Golden Fleet.
  • Trump said up to 25 ships will be built, with construction starting immediately.
  • The first of these ships is the USS Defiant.

President Donald Trump on Monday shared details about new additions to what he’s calling the US Navy’s “Golden Fleet.”

Two “Trump-class” ships, which the president described as “battleships,” were announced Monday afternoon at a press conference alongside Pentagon chief Pete Hegseth, Navy Secretary John Phelan, and Secretary of State Marco Rubio.

Trump said they would be “AI-controlled” and have “lasers,” and he said that the design would be led by the US Navy with his aesthetic input.

The first of these ships will be called the USS Defiant, Phelan said. Posters of the warship were on display at the press conference held at Trump’s Mar-a-Lago Club in Palm Beach, Florida.

“We’re desperately in need of ships, and I have approved a plan for the Navy to begin construction of two large battleships,” he said. “We used to build the Iowa, the Missouri, the Alabama. These will be 100 times the force and power. Each one of these will be the largest battleships built in the history of our country.”

The president said that eventually “20 to 25” of the “Trump-class” ships will be made, and construction will start “immediately.”

The ships will be triple the size of an Arleigh Burke-class destroyer, according to the US Navy, and they will be capable of launching Conventional Prompt Strike hypersonic missiles and the Surface Launch Cruise Missile-Nuclear.




Source link

The-Trump-administration-pauses-the-green-card-lottery-program.jpeg

The Trump administration pauses the green card lottery program

  • Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem said the Trump administration would pause the diversity visa lottery.
  • In an X post, she said the suspect in the Brown and MIT shootings had entered through the program.
  • The green card lottery program issues about 55,000 visas a year.

Kristi Noem, the Secretary of Homeland Security, says the Trump administration would pause the diversity visa lottery program in the wake of the Brown University and MIT shootings.

In an X post on Thursday, Noem said that the man wanted in connection to the Brown University shooting had entered the US in 2017 through the program, commonly known as the green card lottery.

She added that President Donald Trump had long opposed the lottery.

“At President Trump’s direction, I am immediately directing USCIS to pause the DV1 program to ensure no more Americans are harmed by this disastrous program,” she wrote.

The diversity visa entry program offers 55,000 visas a year to people from countries with low rates of immigration to the US. It’s a multi-step process that includes an interview and medical examination.

Valente, a Portuguese national and former Brown University student, was found dead from a self-inflicted gunshot wound in a New Hampshire storage facility, officials said in a press conference on Thursday.

In addition to killing two and wounding several others in the Brown University shooting, officials said they also believed he is connected to the killing of a Massachusetts Institute of Technology professor earlier this week.




Source link

Trump-sues-the-BBC-for-5-billion-alleging-defamation-over.jpeg

Trump sues the BBC for $5 billion, alleging defamation over January 6 documentary

President Donald Trump sued the BBC for defamation.

On Monday night, Trump’s lawyers filed a civil complaint in a federal court in Florida and are seeking at least $5 billion in damages from the British broadcaster.

The lawsuit claims that the BBC has defamed Trump in a Panorama documentary that aired about a week before the 2024 election. The complaint alleges the program presented a “false, defamatory, deceptive, disparaging, inflammatory, and malicious depiction” of Trump.

The suit’s allegations focus on how the documentary was edited with regard to footage of Trump’s January 6, 2021, speech near the White House.

The White House and BBC did not immediately respond to requests for comment.

This is a developing story; please check back for updates.




Source link

Trump-signs-executive-order-restricting-states-ability-to-regulate-AI.jpeg

Trump signs executive order restricting states’ ability to regulate AI

President Donald Trump signed an executive order on Thursday that limits states’ ability to regulate AI individually.

In the 2025 legislative session, more than 1,000 AI-related bills were proposed across all 50 states. The executive order signed by Trump aims at establishing a federal framework for regulating AI, rather than requiring tech companies to comply with various state laws.

“It’s a massive industry. We’re leading China. We’re leading everybody by a tremendous amount,” Trump said during the signing. “But one of the things that it has is you have to have a central source of approval. When they need approvals on things, they have to come to one source. They can’t go to California, New York, and various other places.”

Trump said on Monday, prior to the signing, that the order aimed to ensure there’s only one “One Rulebook” for AI in the US, stating that the technology would be “destroyed in its infancy” if companies had to comply with different regulations across all 50 states.

“We are beating ALL COUNTRIES at this point in the race, but that won’t last long if we are going to have 50 States, many of them bad actors, involved in RULES and the APPROVAL PROCESS,” Trump wrote on Truth Social. “You can’t expect a company to get 50 Approvals every time they want to do something. THAT WILL NEVER WORK!”

While the full text of the order had not yet been released at the time of publication, a draft executive order seen by Business Insider last month would have directed the Department of Justice to sue states for having “onerous” AI laws.

One thing is clear: Trump is likely to provoke backlash from members of his own party if he follows through with this, as many Republicans have been eager to protect states’ rights when it comes to AI.

The fault lines on this issue became clear over the summer, when Republicans tried to enact a 10-year moratorium on state-level AI regulations via the “Big Beautiful Bill.”

That provision was ultimately watered down over time before being stripped from the bill in a 99-1 vote in the Senate during the final hours before passage.

Trump recently called for Republicans to include a version of that provision in a must-pass annual defense bill, but that didn’t come to pass. On Sunday, lawmakers released the text of that bill, and it did not include the provision.

In the meantime, the Trump administration has sought other ways to prevent states from enacting AI laws. An “AI Action Plan” released by the White House in July calls for withholding federal funding from states with “burdensome” AI laws.




Source link

Trump-gives-Nvidia-the-green-light-to-sell-its-H200.jpeg

Trump gives Nvidia the green light to sell its H200 chips in China

Nvidia just scored a win from President Donald Trump.

In a post on Truth Social on Monday, Trump said he told Chinese leader Xi Jinping that the US would allow Nvidia to sell its H200 chips to “approved customers” in China.

“This policy will support American Jobs, strengthen US Manufacturing, and benefit American Taxpayers,” Trump said in the post.

Trump said, “$25% will be paid to the United States of America.” He has previously proposed having the US take a cut of chip sales to China.

Nvidia’s stock was up in after-hours trading following Trump’s announcement.

“We applaud President Trump’s decision to allow America’s chip industry to compete to support high paying jobs and manufacturing in America,” a spokesperson for Nvidia said in a statement to Business Insider. “Offering H200 to approved commercial customers, vetted by the Department of Commerce, strikes a thoughtful balance that is great for America.”

Nvidia’s powerful H200 chips have been in high demand as AI models become more powerful.

While Nvidia was already able to sell some of its other chips to China, the US government has limited its ability to sell some powerful chips due to national security concerns. Sales of its H20 chips to China during Q3 were “insignificant,” CFO Colette Kress said on its latest earnings call.

“While we were disappointed in the current state that prevents us from shipping more competitive data center compute products to China, we are committed to continued engagement with the US and China governments and will continue to advocate for America’s ability to compete around the world,” Kress said during the Q3 earnings call.

Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang met with Trump last week to discuss export controls on chips.

“I’ve said repeatedly that we support export control, that we should ensure that American companies have the best and the most and first,” Huang told reporters last week.

Nvidia stock was up roughly 2% after hours.




Source link

Netflix-co-CEO-Ted-Sarandos-reveals-how-he-personally-pitched-Trump.jpeg

Netflix co-CEO Ted Sarandos reveals how he personally pitched Trump on the Warner Bros. deal

Before Netflix made its winning bid for Warner Bros., its co-CEO pitched President Donald Trump directly on the merits of the deal.

The pair found common ground, Netflix co-CEO Ted Sarandos said.

“The president’s interests in this are the same as ours, which is to create and protect jobs,” Sarandos said of Trump at the UBS media conference on Monday afternoon.

Sarandos said he’d talked to Trump “many times since the election about the different challenges facing the entertainment industry.”

“The president cares deeply about the entertainment industry, and he loves the entertainment industry,” Sarandos continued.

Trump praised Sarandos on Sunday, calling him a “great person” who he said had done “one of the greatest jobs in the history of movies.” Still, Trump said Netflix’s “big market share” in the streaming space “could be a problem” as it tries to buy Warner Bros. Discovery’s streaming and studio assets.

The Netflix-Warner Bros. deal reached on Friday is worth $82.7 billion, including $72 billion in equity. WBD’s TV networks like CNN or HGTV, aren’t in the proposal.

Rival suitor Paramount Skydance responded on Monday with a hostile bid in the form of a $30-per-share, all-cash offer for all of WBD, including the declining TV networks. Netflix’s offer is $27.75 per share, comprising mostly cash and some stock. There’s debate among analysts about whether Netflix’s or Paramount’s renewed offer is more attractive, as it depends on the value of WBD’s TV networks.

Paramount’s move “was entirely expected,” Sarandos said.

Paramount CEO David Ellison, who Trump has publicly praised, went on CNBC on Monday morning to tout his company’s offer as “pro-consumer, pro-creative talent,” and “pro-competition.” Ellison said his company’s offer had “faster regulatory certainty to close” than Netflix’s. Ellison’s father, Oracle cofounder Larry Ellison, is a longtime Trump ally and one of the richest people on the planet.

However, Netflix also seems to be building rapport with Trump. That could help explain why Netflix’s Sarandos and fellow co-CEO Greg Peters are optimistic about their deal.

“We are very confident that regulators should, and will, approve it,” Peters said of the WBD deal.

Sarandos pitched the streaming giant’s proposed acquisition as a net positive for the labor market, despite the concerns of many in Hollywood. He also said the company is “deeply committed” to releasing movies from Warner Bros. in theaters, “exactly the way they’ve released those movies today.”

That overture could help ease Trump’s concerns. Sarandos pitched Netflix as a great job saver.

“What the president has been interested in, in this deal, has been: To what extent does it protect and create jobs in America?” Sarandos said.

Sarandos warned that Ellison would implement lots of layoffs if his bid won and said the Paramount CEO promised about $6 billion in cost savings from a WBD deal. Those so-called “synergies,” in analyst jargon, translate to a smaller workforce, Sarandos said.

“Where do you think synergies come from? Cutting jobs,” Sarandos said. “We’re not cutting jobs — we’re making jobs.”

Netflix has promised investors $2 billion to $3 billion in its own cost savings from its Warner Bros. deal, however.




Source link

Before-and-after-photos-show-changes-Trump-has-made-to-the-White.jpeg

Before-and-after photos show changes Trump has made to the White House decor, so far

Updated

  • Donald Trump has brought his love of maximalism and gold furnishings to the White House
  • He added gold embellishments to the walls and ceiling of the Oval Office and Cabinet Room.
  • He has also renovated the Rose Garden and demolished the East Wing to build a ballroom.

The Oval Office is looking a little bit different lately.

Every US president makes new interior design choices upon entering the White House, often reflecting their personal tastes or political views.

In his second nonconsecutive term, President Donald Trump has incorporated his love of maximalism and gold furnishings into the Oval Office.

More White House renovations are in the works. The East Wing was demolished in October to make way for the construction of a $200 million, 90,000-square-foot state ballroom.

Take a look inside Trump’s redecorated White House to see the changes he’s made since former President Joe Biden left office.

The White House did not respond to a request for comment.

The West Wing Colonnade was unadorned during the Biden years.

Philippine President Ferdinand Marcos Jr. and Joe Biden in the West Wing colonnade.

CAROLYN KASTER/POOL/AFP via Getty Images

President Joe Biden walked through the West Colonnade alongside Philippine President Ferdinand Marcos Jr. in May 2023.

Trump added a “Presidential Walk of Fame” where Biden was depicted with a photo of an autopen producing his signature.


The White House

The “Presidential Walk of Fame” along the West Wing Colonnade.

Demetrius Freeman/The Washington Post via Getty Images

Trump has criticized Biden’s use of an autopen and sought to invalidate Biden’s pardons and commutations that were signed with the device.

The Palm Room, which connects the White House Residence to the West Colonnade, was previously furnished with plants, green benches, and a tile floor.


The Palm Room of the White House during the Biden years.

The Palm Room of the White House in 2023.

BRENDAN SMIALOWSKI/AFP via Getty Images

The Palm Room leads out into the Rose Garden.

In September, Trump refinished the room with a new chandelier and a white marble floor.


The Palm Room of the White House.

The restyled Palm Room of the White House.

Andrew Harnik/Getty Images

“New lobby leading to Oval Office — Magnificent marble floor, compliments of President Donald J. Trump!” Trump wrote on Truth Social.

During Biden’s time in the White House, the door to the Oval Office was not decorated in any way.


Joe Biden leaves the Oval Office.

Joe Biden leaving the Oval Office.

Tom Williams/CQ-Roll Call, Inc via Getty Images

Aside from a presidential seal above the door to the West Wing, the walls were empty.

President Donald Trump added new gold signage outside the Oval Office.


Gold signage outside the Oval Office.

A new sign outside the West Wing of the White House marks the entrance to the Oval Office.

Brendan Smialowski/AFP via Getty Images

The gold lettering spelling out “The Oval Office” was set in the Shelley Script font. Trump also added a gold decal to the top of the door.

Biden’s dark-blue Oval Office rug was originally designed for Bill Clinton.


Joe Biden's blue Oval Office rug.

Joe Biden’s Oval Office rug.

Official White House Photo by Adam Schultz

The rug, which featured the presidential seal in the center, was designed by Kaki Hockersmith, an interior designer based in Little Rock, Arkansas.

Upon returning to the White House, Trump replaced it with a lighter rug used by Ronald Reagan.


Donald Trump's Reagan rug in the Oval Office.

Donald Trump’s Oval Office rug during his first term.

Official White House Photo by Joyce N. Boghosian

The rug’s design includes the presidential seal, a sunbeam pattern, and olive branches along the border as a symbol of peace.

Trump also used the rug during his first term.

Biden only had two flags in the Oval Office.


Joe Biden in the Oval Office.

Joe Biden in the Oval Office.

Alex Wong/Getty Images

Biden displayed an American flag and a flag with the presidential seal.

Trump added the flags of different branches of the US military.


Donald Trump in the Oval Office in 2025.

Donald Trump at the Resolute Desk.

JIM WATSON/POOL/AFP via Getty Images

Trump’s Oval Office features the flags of the Army, the Marine Corps, and the Navy.

During Biden’s presidency, the Oval Office’s ceiling didn’t feature any additional embellishments.


Joe Biden in the Oval Office.

Joe Biden on a video call in the Oval Office.

Official White House Photo by Erin Scott

The crown molding on the ceiling matched the cream wallpaper.

Trump added gold trim to the crown molding on the ceiling.


Gold trim in the Oval Office.

Donald Trump’s Oval Office.

Avi Ohayon /Handout/Anadolu via Getty Images

The gold embellishments matched the gold curtains, which remained in place from Biden’s presidency.

Biden’s Oval Office featured a prominent portrait of President Franklin D. Roosevelt.


Donald Trump and Joe Biden in the Oval Office.

Donald Trump and Joe Biden in the Oval Office.

Alex Wong/Getty Images

Biden also hung portraits of Thomas Jefferson and Alexander Hamilton together to symbolize the benefits of different opinions, as well as portraits of George Washington and Abraham Lincoln.

Trump added additional portraits and numerous gold embellishments to the space.


Donald Trump's gold-filled Oval Office.

Donald Trump in the Oval Office.

Demetrius Freeman/The Washington Post via Getty Images

Trump added more portraits with decorative frames to create an Oval Office gallery wall. He also replaced Biden’s portrait of FDR with one of George Washington and displayed historic gold urns and baskets from the White House collection on the mantle.

Trump also incorporated smaller gold details, such as coasters, branded with his name.


A gold

A gold coaster in Donald Trump’s Oval Office.

MANDEL NGAN/AFP via Getty Images

Trump’s love of gold decor is well-known. His Trump Tower penthouse in New York City features numerous gilded ceilings, furniture pieces, and artwork. Trump’s Mar-a-Lago club in Palm Beach, Florida, also includes a ballroom covered in gold from floor to ceiling.

Before Trump took office for the second time, the presidential seal on the ceiling of the Oval Office was a subtle adornment.


The Oval Office ceiling.

The ceiling of the Oval Office before President Donald Trump took office.

PAUL J. RICHARDS/AFP via Getty Images

President Franklin D. Roosevelt added the plaster relief of the presidential seal to the Oval Office during a 1934 White House renovation.

Trump added gilded gold detailing to the design, making it more visible.


The seal of the president on teh ceiling of the Oval Office gilded with gold.

The new ceiling of the Oval Office.

ALLISON ROBBERT/AFP via Getty Images

Both the seal and the stars surrounding it were covered in gold paint.

Biden chose to display President Barack Obama’s official White House portrait in the Entrance Hall.


The Bidens stand next to a portrait of Barack Obama at the White House.

The Bidens in the White House Entrance Hall next to a portrait of Barack Obama.

BRENDAN SMIALOWSKI/AFP via Getty Images

The hyperrealistic portrait, painted by Robert McCurdy, was unveiled at the White House in 2023.

Trump replaced Obama’s portrait with a painting of himself.


A painting of Donald Trump surviving an assassination attempt hanging in the White House.

A new painting of Donald Trump in the White House Entrance Hall.

Win McNamee/Getty Images

Artist Marc Lipp painted a rendering of an Associated Press photo that captured Trump raising his fist in the air following an assassination attempt at a rally in Butler, Pennsylvania.

The White House Rose Garden previously featured a grass lawn.


Joe Biden in the White House Rose Garden.

Joe Biden in the Rose Garden.

SAUL LOEB/AFP via Getty Images

Before it was used for press conferences and events, first lady Ellen Wilson originally designed the outdoor space as a formal flower garden in 1913.

First lady Melania Trump added a limestone border around the lawn in 2020.

Trump decided to pave over the grass in the Rose Garden, turning it into an outdoor terrace rebranded as “The Rose Garden Club.”


Donald Trump's new White House Rose Garden.

The new Rose Garden.

ANDREW CABALLERO-REYNOLDS / AFP

Trump told Fox News that the grass in the Rose Garden was impractical for large events because it stayed wet when it rained and was too soft for attendees who wore high heels.

“The grass just doesn’t work,” Trump told Fox News host Laura Ingraham in March.

Workers began transforming the lawn into a patio in June, replacing the grass with concrete and stone tiles. “The Rose Garden Club” was completed in August.

Biden and previous presidents occasionally held large events, such as state dinners, in decorative tents on the White House lawn.


Joe Biden hosts a state dinner in a tent on the grounds of the White House.

Joe Biden hosted a state dinner for Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese in a tent on the White House lawn.

Astrid Riecken For The Washington Post via Getty Images

The East Room, the largest state room in the White House, has a seating capacity of 200 people. When Biden hosted Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese in 2023, he held the state dinner in a tent outside the White House to accommodate the larger crowd of over 300.

Trump announced plans to build a state ballroom with a capacity of 650 in July and demolished the East Wing for its construction in October.


The demolished East Wing of the White House.

The rubble of the East Wing of the White House.

Eric Lee/Getty Images

The 90,000-square-foot ballroom, which the White House called a “much-needed and exquisite addition,” will cost approximately $300 million to construct. Trump and other “patriot donors” will foot the bill for the project, the White House said.

During the Biden administration, the Cabinet Room featured minimal artwork and decor.


Joe Biden in the Cabinet Room.

The Cabinet Room during the Biden administration.

ANDREW CABALLERO-REYNOLDS/AFP via Getty Images

Located in the West Wing near the Oval Office, the Cabinet Room overlooks the Rose Garden and features a large, oval-shaped mahogany table purchased by President Richard Nixon in 1970, according to Obama’s archived White House website.

Seating at the table is assigned in order of when each department was established, with the oldest departments sitting nearest to the president.

Trump added additional paintings to the walls and gold furnishings along the ceiling.


The Cabinet Room with new gold furnishings added by Donald Trump.

Donald Trump in a Cabinet meeting.

Anna Moneymaker/Getty Images

Trump chose portraits of past presidents, including George Washington, John Adams, Andrew Jackson, James Polk, Abraham Lincoln, Franklin D. Roosevelt, and Dwight Eisenhower, to decorate the Cabinet Room.

“The vaults are where we have a lot of great pictures and artwork,” Trump told reporters in July. “And I picked it all myself, I’m very proud of it.”

The Cabinet Room featured eagle-shaped wall sconces during Biden’s presidency.


Joe Biden in the Cabinet Room.

Joe Biden in the Cabinet Room.

Demetrius Freeman/The Washington Post via Getty Images

The eagle sconces were installed as part of a 2004 refurbishment of the Cabinet Room that also included a new rug, curtains, and paint color.

Trump added 24-karat gold decals to the walls and installed matching gold curtains.


The Cabinet Room decorated with gold furnishings on the walls.

Donald Trump in a Cabinet meeting in the Cabinet Room.

MANDEL NGAN/AFP via Getty Images

“Some of the highest quality 24 Karat Gold used in the Oval Office and Cabinet Room of the White House,” Trump wrote in a Truth Social post in September. “Foreign Leaders, and everyone else, ‘freak out’ when they see the quality and beauty.”




Source link

Trump-says-Netflix-Warner-deal-could-be-a-problem.jpeg

Trump says Netflix-Warner deal ‘could be a problem’

President Donald Trump is getting involved in the Netflix-Warner Bros. deal.

On Friday, Netflix announced that it would acquire Warner Bros., including its TV and film studios, HBO and HBO Max, for $72 billion. If the deal goes through, it will be Netflix’s biggest acquisition to date.

Speaking to reporters at the Kennedy Centre on Sunday, Trump said Netflix is a great company that has done a “phenomenal job.”

But he added, “They have a very big market share, and when they have Warner Brothers, you know, that share goes up a lot.”

“So I don’t know, that’s going to be for some economists to tell. And also, I’ll be involved in that decision, too,” Trump said.

Trump added that Netflix’s CEO, Ted Sarandos, visited him in the Oval Office last week. He said Sarandos was a “great person” who has done “one of the greatest jobs in the history of movies.”

“But it is a big market share, there’s no question about that. It could be a problem,” he added.

Representatives for Netflix and Warner Bros. did not respond to requests for comment from Business Insider.

The announcement of Warner Bro.’s sale has drawn criticism. Paramount CEO David Ellison was at the White House last week, where he objected to the deal on antitrust grounds, per a report by The New York Post. Paramount Skydance had been competing with Netflix and Comcast to buy Warner Bros.

This is not the first time Trump has become involved in an antitrust case. In 2017, he opposed AT&T’s proposed acquisition of Time Warner, saying it was “not good for the country.”

Netflix’s stock price is down about 7% in the past five days, while Warner Bro.’s stock price is up more than 8% in the same period.




Source link

Trumps-hush-money-judge-alerted-lawyers-about-a-Facebook-comment-claiming.jpeg

Trump’s hush-money judge alerted lawyers about a Facebook comment claiming Trump would be convicted 24 hours before it happened. The commenter describes himself as a ‘professional s—poster.’

About 24 hours before a Manhattan jury made Donald Trump the first-ever former president to become a convicted felon — a person going by the name “Michael Anderson” made a little-noticed Facebook comment.

“Thank you for all your hard against the MAGA crazies!” he wrote in a comment on an unrelated post on the official page of the New York State Unified Court System.

“My cousin is a juror on Trumps criminal case and they’re going to convict him tomorrow according to her. Thank you 🙏 New York courts!!!! ❤️”

In a Friday afternoon letter, New York Supreme Court Justice Juan Merchan, who presided over the trial, alerted prosecutors and Trump’s defense lawyers about the comment.

“Today, the Court became aware of a comment that was posted on the Unified Court System’s public Facebook page and which I now bring to your attention,” Merchan wrote.


juan merchan trump juror comment letter

A portion of the Friday filing from New York Supreme Court Justice Juan Merchan.

New York courts



But it’s far from clear that the comment is genuine.

Anderson — if that is his real name — claims to be a troll.

Business Insider located the Facebook comment, which was timestamped 4:39 p.m. on May 29, a day before the jury verdict. It was made in response to an unrelated Facebook post about a program from the New York state court system to promote diversity.

“Now we are married ❤️ 😁,” he posted in response to another Facebook comment, which criticized his purported cousin.


michael anderson facebook screenshot

A screenshot of Michael Anderson’s Facebook comment.

Facebook



On his Facebook page, Anderson describes himself as “Transabled & a professional shit poster.” His profile picture is an image claiming his account is restricted. His cover photo broadcasts the slogan: “Facebook: Wasting peoples lives since 2004.”

Few posts are publicly visible on Anderson’s page. Visible ones appear to be food videos and comedic Reels, a product from Facebook owner Meta that seeks to emulate TikTok videos.


michael anderson facebook screenshot

Michael Anderson’s Facebook page describes him as a “professional shitposter.”

Facebook



“As appropriate, the Court informed the parties once it learned of this online content,” Al Baker, a spokesperson for the New York State Unified Court System, told Business Insider, declining to comment further on the incident.

Trump lawyers Todd Blanche and Susan Necheles, as well as representatives for the Manhattan District Attorney’s office, did not immediately respond to requests for comment from Business Insider.

Anderson did not immediately respond to a request for comment from BI sent through Facebook, but in a public post added to his profile shortly after BI reached out, he wrote, “Take it easy, I’m a professional shitposter,” along with a laughing emoji and the Wikipedia definition of shitposting.

While it remains unclear how significant the Facebook post will become during the proceedings leading up to Trump’s sentencing, it could complicate things.

Neama Rahmani, a former federal prosecutor, told BI that the social post, though apparently trolling, could raise questions about whether outside influences managed to find their way into the jury deliberation room, which is one of the few times the defense could use jury deliberations as grounds to appeal for a new trial.

However, he said, the burden for a new trial is high and would require the defense to show an outside influence prejudiced the jury enough that the outcome may have been different without exposure to it.

“A stray comment on social media is not enough for a new trial,” Rahmani said. “But if the defense can get a declaration from a juror that they discussed the case with family members, then Judge Merchan would hold an evidentiary hearing to examine the juror to determine whether the improper influence and prejudice took place.  I don’t think a statement from the family member is enough if it’s not supported by a juror affidavit.”


Source link