Georgia
Trump PAC paid nearly $1 million to defense lawyers in July alone as Georgia and New York probes heated up
Former President Donald Trump’s political motion committee, Save America, paid almost $1 million to civil and legal protection attorneys in July alone as investigations into him and the Trump Group heated up, a brand new Federal Elections Fee submitting by the PAC reveals.
And Trump’s authorized payments may rise much more this month and into the longer term on the heels of an FBI raid of his residence on the Mar-a-Lago resort in Florida, as a part of a legal investigation into his elimination of presidential paperwork from the White Home when he left workplace in January 2021.
Trump additionally faces a legal probe in Georgia, the place a particular grand jury is acquiring testimony and proof associated to efforts by him and his allies to overturn that state’s 2020 election win by President Joe Biden.
Trump’s Save America political motion committee has develop into the previous president’s main PAC, retaining White Home veterans corresponding to Dan Scavino and Lynne Patton on the payroll.
Save America, which has greater than $99 million readily available based on the FEC submitting, has been asking donors for cash it says might be used to defend conservative values and battle Biden.
That cash can also be getting used to pay Trump’s authorized payments, which is allowed beneath the lenient guidelines governing the usage of PAC funds.
A spokeswoman for Trump didn’t instantly reply to a request for touch upon the disbursements.
The FEC submitting this weekend exhibits that the PAC paid 12 totally different legislation corporations and firms $963,682 for authorized providers in July.
That’s greater than $400,000 in authorized expenditures for the PAC in June, and virtually $200,000 greater than what the group spent on such providers in April.
A kind of legislation corporations, Habba Madaio & Associates, obtained greater than $486,000 in funds from the PAC in July, based on the submitting.
Alina Habba, a associate in that small New Jersey agency, is the lead legal professional representing the Trump Group in a civil investigation by the workplace of New York Lawyer Normal Letitia James.
James is probing allegations that the Trump Group improperly manipulated the acknowledged valuations of assorted actual property property to acquire monetary advantages, corresponding to extra favorable mortgage and insurance coverage phrases, and tax breaks.
Trump earlier this month invoked his Fifth Modification proper towards self-incrimination greater than 440 occasions as he refused to reply questions from James’ legal professionals at a court-mandated deposition as a part of that investigation. Two of his grownup youngsters, Donald Trump Jr. and Ivanka Trump, have been deposed by James’ workforce in July.
Save America paid a veteran Trump lawyer, the legal protection legal professional Alan Futerfas, $184,743 in July, based on the FEC submitting.
Futerfas has represented Donald Jr. and Ivanka in James’ probe. He additionally represents the Trump Group in its legal prosecution by the Manhattan District Lawyer’s Workplace.
The corporate, which has denied any wrongdoing, is about in that case to go on trial this fall on costs associated to its alleged 15-year scheme to keep away from the cost of taxes on compensation for prime officers within the Trump Group.
Final Thursday, the corporate’s former chief monetary officer Allen Weisselberg, pleaded responsible to a number of tax fraud costs within the case and agreed to testify towards the Trump Group at trial. Weisselberg will serve 5 months in jail and pay greater than $2 million in taxes as a part of that plea deal.
Save America’s third-highest legal-related cost final month was $100,000 to Drew Findling, an Atlanta legal protection legal professional who’s finest identified for representing hip-hop artists, together with Cardi B and Religion Evans. Findling additionally as soon as served as president of the Nationwide Affiliation of Felony Protection Attorneys.
Findling, who as soon as known as Trump “racist” in a Twitter publish, was employed to characterize the ex-president for the legal probe by Fulton County DA Fani Willis into efforts to overturn Georgia’s 2020 presidential election.
Amongst different actions, Willis is eyeing a Jan. 2, 2021, cellphone name Trump made to Georgia Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger, the state’s prime election official. In that decision, Trump urged Raffensperger to “discover 11,780 votes” in order that Biden’s victory may very well be reversed.
Trump has denied any wrongdoing in Georgia, and known as Willis’s probe, seemingly these of James and the Manhattan DA, a “witch hunt.”
Trump’s former private lawyer Rudy Giuliani, who led the efforts to overturn Biden’s victory, has been named a goal of Wallis’ investigation.
Giuliani final Wednesday appeared for greater than six hours earlier than the particular grand jury in Atlanta that’s amassing testimony behind closed doorways in that probe.
Georgia
Bird flu cases shut down poultry exhibitions, sales in Georgia
ATLANTA, Ga. (Atlanta News First) – Bird flu cases were confirmed in a commercial poultry flock in northeast Georgia.
The state’s department of agriculture has suspended all poultry exhibitions, shows and sales until further notice.
This is the first confirmed case in a poultry operation in Georgia and the fifth overall case in the state. According to the Georgia Department of Agriculture, the operation had approximately 45,000 broiler breeders onsite.
Georgia Agriculture Commissioner Tyler Harper said, “This is a serious threat to Georgia’s #1 industry and the livelihoods of thousands of Georgians who make their living in our state’s poultry industry. We are working around the clock to mitigate any further spread of the disease and ensure that normal poultry activities in Georgia can resume as quickly as possible.”
All commercial operations within a 6-mile radius have been placed under quarantine for at least two weeks.
Copyright 2025 WANF. All rights reserved.
Georgia
Georgia’s Pathways to Coverage Program – The First Year in Review Fact Sheet – Georgia Budget and Policy Institute
In July 2023, Georgia launched the Pathways to Coverage program, which offers health care coverage to adults with lower incomes who do not have access to affordable health insurance. To be eligible they must work, attend school, volunteer or complete another qualifying activity for at least 80 hours per month. The program covers the cost of many of the same medical services as traditional Medicaid, including doctor visits, hospital stays and prescriptions. This fact sheet provides policymakers and advocates with an overview of the program’s first year and offers recommendations for improving upon the existing program design.
Here are some key takeaways based on the program’s first year:
Enrollment in the Pathways to Coverage program fell far short of expectations and need. More than 40% of Georgia’s counties still had fewer than 10 enrollees despite the state having one of the highest percentages of uninsured populations in the nation. If the state continues to enroll about 4,231 enrollees per year as it did in the first year and assuming no one is disenrolled, it will take more than 12 years to achieve the original five-year enrollment goal (52,509).
A cumbersome enrollment process and restrictive eligibility criteria appeared to contribute to the program’s low enrollment in the first year. Potentially eligible Georgians face a steep “paperwork” burden – from completing a lengthy online or paper application to compiling documents to verify qualifying activities and hours. Only about half of individuals who showed initial interest in applying to the program submitted a complete application. Preliminary data also indicate that at least one in every five denials for those who do submit a complete application is due to failure to meet the qualifying hours and activities requirement.
Pathways to Coverage is a costly program for Georgia taxpayers, and most spending through the end of the first year covered administrative expenses rather than health care benefits. Since the program was approved through the end of the first year of implementation, a total of almost $58 million in combined state and federal funds was spent on the program. That amounts to an average of $13,000 per enrollee. Spending on upgrades to Georgia’s online eligibility and enrollment system represents the largest proportion of total program costs and was almost five times higher than spending on healthcare benefits for enrollees.
For current enrollment and program cost data, please visit the Data Tracker page at GeorgiaPathways.org
Beyond Year One: Recommendations and Next Steps
With Pathways to Coverage up for renewal in September 2025, the state has an opportunity to leverage lessons learned from the first year to make the program more effective and less costly and to streamline the bureaucratic red tape that burdens both enrollees and state agency staff.
Programmatic recommendations:
- Eliminate monthly reporting and premium collection
- Expand automated verification of qualifying hours and activities at initial application and yearly renewal using electronic data sources
- Expand work requirement exemptions (in alignment with SNAP exemptions) to enable eligible veterans, full-time parents of young children, former foster youth and others to access the program
- Make Pathways to Coverage an ‘opt-out’ versus an ‘opt-in’ program
- Improve education and outreach for potentially eligible Georgians
- Improve communication with applicants and enrollees
System-level recommendations:
- Modernize Georgia’s public benefits eligibility and enrollment infrastructure
- Increase transparency and public data reporting and open up opportunities for stakeholder engagement
For more context on each recommendation and for an additional list of transformational recommendations like full Medicaid expansion, please download the full report “Georgia’s Pathways to Coverage Program – The First Year in Review” from the Resources page at GeorgiaPathways.org.
Georgia
Giuliani settles legal fight with former Georgia election workers and agrees to stop defaming them
NEW YORK – Rudy Giuliani reached a deal Thursday that lets the cash-strapped ex-New York City mayor keep his homes and belongings, including prized World Series rings.
The deal was in exchange for unspecified compensation and a promise to never again speak ill of two former Georgia elections workers who won a $148 million defamation judgment against him.
Giuliani’s legal trouble
The backstory:
Rudy Giuliani, once known as “America’s Mayor” for his leadership after 9/11, faced legal challenges after serving as President Trump’s personal attorney.
Following the 2020 election, Giuliani made false claims about two Georgia election workers, Ruby Freeman and Wandrea “Shaye” Moss, leading to a $148 million defamation judgment against him.
Giuliani’s settlement
What we know:
Giuliani reached a settlement allowing him to keep his homes and World Series rings in exchange for unspecified compensation and a promise not to defame Freeman and Moss again.
The agreement resolves all pending litigation and cancels a trial that was set to determine the ownership of his Florida condominium and rings.
Giuliani stated that the settlement “does not involve an admission of liability or wrongdoing.”
What does Freeman, Moss get?
What we don’t know:
The specifics of the settlement, including the amount Giuliani agreed to pay Freeman and Moss, remain undisclosed.
It is unclear how Giuliani is financing the settlement or if he has any assistance in doing so.
Giuliani’s legal troubles unfolded
Timeline:
Giuliani filed for bankruptcy shortly after the defamation verdict, pausing collection efforts.
Last week, a judge found Giuliani in contempt for failing to disclose information about his assets.
The settlement was reached after three days of negotiations, just before a trial was set to begin.
Freeman, Moss react
What they’re saying:
FFreeman and Moss expressed relief, stating, “The past four years have been a living nightmare… Today is a major milestone in our journey.”
Giuliani remarked, “This litigation has taken its toll on all parties,” and emphasized that no one deserves threats or harassment.
Chapter closed for Giuliani
What’s next:
With the settlement in place, Freeman and Moss can move forward with their lives.
Giuliani retains his assets and has agreed not to speak ill of the women again, marking a significant step in closing this chapter of his career.
The Source: This article is based on original reporting by the Associated Press. Associated Press writer Dave Collins contributed reporting.
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