phim hẹn hò chốn công sở 3

Chính nhờ hiệu ứng tích cực từ phần 1, nhà sản xuất đã công bố sản xuất thêm mùa 2 với dàn cast giữ nguyên, đồng thời làm rõ những chi tiết chưa được giải quyết thỏa đáng ở phần trước. Hẹn Hò Chốn Công Sở của Ahn Hyo Seop - Kim Se Jeong vững vàng ở vị trí thứ 3. A Business Proposal (Hẹn Hò Chốn Công Sở) là bộ phim hài lãng mạn dựa trên webtoon vô cùng nổi tiếng. Nội dung phim kể về cuộc gặp gỡ định mệnh của cô nhân viên văn phòng với CEO của công ty mình, khiến cả hai rơi vào hàng loạt tình huống dở khóc dở cười. Cụ thể trong phim, Ahn Hyo Seop vào vai Kang Tae Moo - người thừa kế tập đoàn. A Business Proposal - Hẹn hò chốn công sở là bộ phim tình cảm hài lãng mạn của đài SBS được ra mắt vào tháng 2 năm 2022. Cùng mình điểm qua profile cực xịn sò của dàn diễn tham gia trong phim nhé! Nam chính Kang Tae Moo do Ahn Hyo Seop thủ vai Các fan của bộ phim Hẹn Hò Chốn Công Sở 2022 có nhu cầu xem phim cũng không cần phải lo lắng vì trong bài viết này chúng tôi sẽ chia sẻ trang web xem phim Hẹn Hò Chốn Công Sở phụ đề tiếng Việt (Vietsub Lồng Tiếng) Full HD chất lượng. bấm vào đây để xem miễn phí Bên cạnh những thước phim cười muốn rụng răng, Hẹn Hò Chốn Công Sở còn đem đến màn khóc sướt mướt của cô Shin khi đi xem buổi ca nhạc trong tập 3 được phát sóng. Hay nét ngây ngô của cặp đôi mới trong buổi đầu hẹn hò khi cả hai vô tình cùng ngắm pháo hoa bên bờ sông Hàn thơ mộng, nơi đánh dấu sự chớm nở trong tâm hồn của đối phương. Hẹn Hò Chốn Công Sở. Sở hữu nội dung phim không quá mới lạ nhưng Hẹn Hò Chốn Công Sở vẫn "gây sốt" nhờ sự gần gũi, thân thiết một cách tự nhiên của dàn diễn viên chính. Trong số đó, Ha Ri (Kim Se Jeong) và Young Seo (Seol In Ah) khiến khán giả vô cùng thích thú với tình bạn vượt qua mọi rào cản. Vay Tiền Trả Góp Theo Tháng Chỉ Cần Cmnd. The legal team for Donald Trump, a famously fickle and combative client, on Friday was in tumult again as the former president faces federal charges for allegedly mishandling classified documents at his Florida said he was turning to different lawyers to fight the charges against him and suggested that two of his top attorneys would be departing the case.“For purposes of fighting the Greatest Witch Hunt of all time, now moving to the Florida Courts, I will be represented by Todd Blanche, Esq., and a firm to be named later,” Trump said on social media.“I want to thank Jim Trusty and John Rowley for their work, but they were up against a very dishonest, corrupt, evil, and sick’ group of people, the likes of which has not been seen before. We will be announcing additional lawyers in the coming days,” Trump two attorneys — Rowley and Trusty — quickly issued a statement saying they had a joint statement, they said they had “tendered our resignations as counsel to President Trump, and we will no longer represent him on either the indicted case or the January 6 investigation.”Rowley and Trusty said that since the Trump indictment has been filed in Miami “this is a logical moment for us to step aside and let others carry the cases through to completion.”The pair called it “an honor to have spent the last year defending him, and we know he will be vindicated in his battle against the Biden Administration’s partisan weaponization of the American justice system.”Blanche, a white-collar criminal defense lawyer who was most recently a partner at the law firm Cadwalader, Wickersham & Taft, joined Trump’s legal team this year to defend him in a criminal prosecution in legal team has been marked by months of infighting, and the team has been seeking high-powered South Florida criminal defense attorneys for at least the past couple of weeks, according to people familiar with the local lawyer who turned down Trump as a client was David O. Markus, who most recently succeeded in defending former Florida Democratic gubernatorial candidate Andrew Gillum against allegations he lied to the FBI and funneled campaign money to personal accounts. He also represented Hillary Clinton in Trump’s failed lawsuit against her. Reached on Friday, Markus declined to team has also talked to Benedict P. Kuehne, who is well known in Miami-Dade County for representing people charged in state and federal courts on corruption cases. In 2014, he secured the acquittal of a Miami-area mayor accused by federal officials of taking a cash kickback in the restroom of a sports bar. Kuehne on Friday declined to Florida litigator Christopher Kise, who joined the team last fall before being quickly alienated by Trump’s other defense lawyers, was said to have a role in the search, according to Trump signaled last night during an interview on CNN that there could be changes to the legal team after he demurred when asked if he would appear with Trump at his arraignment Tuesday. Trump advisers familiar with the matter said the departure of Trusty and Rowley came, at least in part, because of their repeated clashes with another lawyer, Boris Washington Post has previously reported that lawyers on Trump’s team had threatened to resign due to repeated clashes with Epshteyn. In April, Tim Parlatore quit after Trusty, Rowley and Parlatore demanded that Epshteyn recuse himself from the Mar-a-Lago documents case. Epshteyn, however, continued to insert himself as Trump’s in-house counsel.“There are certain individuals that made defending the president much harder than it needed to be,” Parlatore said on CNN last month after he resigned from the team, before specifically naming who is close to Trump, is disliked by some of his other has taken the most optimistic view of Trump’s defense, with even the president sometimes mocking him for his sunny predictions. Trump advisers said that the former president will occasionally wave around his phone to show others that Epshteyn is calling and will mockingly predict he is about to get good one dinner this year at Trump’s golf club, Trump joked that Epshteyn would tell him everything was “great” even as he was being hauled off in handcuffs, according to people with knowledge of the Trump advisers said Epshteyn helped kneecap Kise, a longtime respected Florida litigator. Other lawyers have clashed in fights that have had to be mediated by Trump and his for his part, has told others, The Post has previously reported, that much of the heartache could have been avoided if Trump and his team simply had taken a more cooperative stance with the Department of was also representing Epshteyn for the classified documents case, and he remains his Mar-a-Lago classified documentsFollow the alleged path of classified documents at Mar-a-LagoFollow the alleged path of classified documents at Mar-a-LagoIndictment says Trump lied, schemed to keep highly classified secretsIndictment says Trump lied, schemed to keep highly classified secretsTrump indicted over classified documents. What it means, what happens indicted over classified documents. What it means, what happens next. hlstập 1tập 2tập 3tập 4tập 5tập 6tập 7tập 8tập 9tập 10tập 11tập 12 END Server 2tập 1tập 2tập 3tập 4tập 5tập 6tập 7tập 8tập 9tập 10tập 11tập 12 END Hẹn Hò Chốn Công Sở thuyết minh Hẹn Hò Chốn Công Sở vietsub Giả làm bạn của mình, Ha Ri đến buổi xem mắt để xua đuổi đối tượng. Nhưng kế hoạch này đổ bể khi hóa ra anh lại là sếp của cô – và anh đưa ra một đề xuất. Shin Ha-Ri là một phụ nữ độc thân và làm việc cho một công ty. Cô ấy có một người bạn nam và cô ấy đã phải lòng anh ấy từ lâu, nhưng cô ấy biết rằng bạn mình đã có bạn gái. Shin Ha-Ri cảm thấy buồn và quyết định gặp người bạn Jin Young-Seo, con gái của một gia đình chaebol. Jin Young-Seo sau đó yêu cầu Shin Ha-Ri thế chỗ cô ấy trong một buổi hẹn hò giấu mặt vàthậm chí cung cấp một số tiền cho thời gian của cô ấy. Shin Ha-Ri chấp nhận lời đề nghị của bạn cô. Cô ấy hẹn hò mù quáng với tư cách là Jin Young-Seo, trong khi có ý định bị từ chối bởi người hẹn hò của mình. Khi cô ấy nhìn thấy buổi hẹn hò mù quáng của mình, Shin Ha-Ri đã chết lặng. Người hẹn hò mù quáng của cô ấy là Kang Tae-Mu. Anh là Giám đốc điều hành của công ty nơi cô làm việc. Kang Tae-Mu là Giám đốc điều hành của một công ty mà ông của anh ấy đã thành lập Hẹn Hò Chốn Công Sở tập 1 , tập 2 , tập 3 , tập 4 , tập 5 , tập 6 Trump responds to CNN reporting he knew seized docs were still classified 0229 - Source CNN Politics of the Day 17 videos Trump responds to CNN reporting he knew seized docs were still classified 0229 Now playing - Source CNN Bolton makes prediction on Trump's political career after indictment 0106 Now playing - Source CNN 'He is not a victim here' Bill Barr rebuts Trump's claims about DOJ indictment 0159 Now playing - Source CNN 'I go on the president's word and he said he did' Rep. Jordan on Trump declassifying documents 0457 Now playing - Source CNN Trump supporters outside a convention were asked what they thought of indictment. Hear their responses. 0313 Now playing - Source CNN Trump speaks out about DOJ indictment for first time 0235 Now playing - Source CNN Asa Hutchinson reacts to GOP rival's promise to pardon Trump if he's elected 0204 Now playing - Source CNN Why Trump's comparison to Biden's 1,850 boxes is a false equivalency 0152 Now playing - Source CNN 'Jaw-dropping' Reporter reacts to detail from unsealed indictment of Trump 0132 Now playing - Source CNN UK Prime Minister I have confidence in US support of Ukraine 0744 Now playing - Source CNN What happens to charges if Trump gets elected? Hear what legal expert thinks 0048 Now playing - Source CNN See Trump's response to federal indictment 0100 Now playing - Source CNN See Trump's response to federal indictment on Truth Social 0028 Now playing - Source CNN 'Absolutely historic' George Conway reacts to Trump indictment 0244 Now playing - Source CNN Reporter flags 'little ray of hope' for Trump in detail of indictment 0120 Now playing - Source CNN SE Cupp The reemerging threat in the 2024 GOP primary 0350 Now playing - Source CNN Trump knew 'proper declassification process' Former White House official 0220 Now playing - Source CNN CNN — Federal prosecutors have obtained an audio recording of a summer 2021 meeting in which former President Donald Trump acknowledges he held onto a classified Pentagon document about a potential attack on Iran, multiple sources told CNN, undercutting his argument that he declassified everything. The recording indicates Trump understood he retained classified material after leaving the White House, according to multiple sources familiar with the investigation. On the recording, Trump’s comments suggest he would like to share the information but he’s aware of limitations on his ability post-presidency to declassify records, two of the sources said. CNN has not listened to the recording, but multiple sources described it. One source said the relevant portion on the Iran document is about two minutes long, and another source said the discussion is a small part of a much longer meeting. Special counsel Jack Smith, who is leading the Justice Department investigation into Trump, has focused on the meeting as part of the criminal investigation into Trump’s handling of national security secrets. Sources describe the recording as an “important” piece of evidence in a possible case against Trump, who has repeatedly asserted he could retain presidential records and “automatically” declassify documents. Prosecutors have asked witnesses about the recording and the document before a federal grand jury. The episode has generated enough interest for investigators to have questioned Gen. Mark Milley, one of the highest-ranking Trump-era national security officials, about the incident. The July 2021 meeting was held at Trump’s golf club in Bedminster, New Jersey, with two people working on the autobiography of Trump’s former chief of staff Mark Meadows as well as aides employed by the former president, including communications specialist Margo Martin. The attendees, sources said, did not have security clearances that would allow them access to classified information. Meadows didn’t attend the meeting, sources said. Meadows’ autobiography includes an account of what appears to be the same meeting, during which Trump “recalls a four-page report typed up by Trump’s former chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff Mark Milley himself. It contained the general’s own plan to attack Iran, deploying massive numbers of troops, something he urged President Trump to do more than once during his presidency.” The document Trump references was not produced by Milley, CNN was told. Investigators have questioned Milley about the episode in recent months, making him one of the highest-ranking national security officials from Trump’s administration to meet with the special counsel’s team. Milley’s spokesman Dave Butler declined to comment to CNN. The revelation that the former president and commander-in-chief has been captured on tape discussing a classified document could raise his legal exposure as he continues his third bid for the White House. Trump has denied any wrongdoing. A Trump campaign spokesman said “leaks” are meant to “inflame tensions” around Trump. “The DOJ’s continued interference in the presidential election is shameful and this meritless investigation should cease wasting the American taxpayer’s money on Democrat political objectives,” the spokesman added. When asked at a CNN town hall this month if he showed classified documents he kept after the presidency to anyone, Trump answered “Not really. I would have the right to. By the way, they were declassified after.” A lawyer for Meadows declined to comment. A lawyer for Martin declined to comment. Smith’s investigation has shown signs of nearing its end, though it hasn’t yet resulted in any criminal charges. A spokesman for the special counsel’s office declined to comment for this story. The recording that’s now in the hands of prosecutors shows they are not only looking at Trump’s actions regarding classified documents recovered from his Mar-a-Lago resort in Florida, but also at what happened at Bedminster a year earlier. The meeting in which Trump discussed the Iran document with others happened shortly after The New Yorker published a story by Susan Glasser detailing how, in the final days of Trump’s presidency, Milley instructed the Joint Chiefs to ensure Trump issued no illegal orders and that he be informed if there was any concern. The story infuriated Trump. Glasser reported that in the months following the election, Milley repeatedly argued against striking Iran and was concerned Trump “might set in motion a full-scale conflict that was not justified.” Milley and others talked Trump out of taking such a drastic action, according to the New Yorker story. On the recording and in response to the story, Trump brings up the document, which he says came from Milley. Trump told those in the room that if he could show it to people, it would undermine what Milley was saying, the sources said. One source says Trump refers to the document as if it is in front of him. Several sources say the recording captures the sound of paper rustling, as if Trump was waving the document around, though is not clear if it was the actual Iran document. There’s also laughter in the room that’s captured on the recording. The US military has contingency plans and courses of action that apply to countries and situations around the globe. Honig Trump prosecutors have put themselves "into a calendar corner' 0716 - Source CNN The meeting took place well before Trump’s team shipped 15 boxes of presidential records and classified documents back to the National Archives and Records Administration in January 2022 after months of back-and-forth between his team and the records agency. The Justice Department later obtained additional documents with classified markings from Trump, seizing more than 100 during a search of Mar-a-Lago last August. Trump’s legal team hired people to search other Trump properties, including Bedminster, late last year. Investigators from the special counsel’s office also have asked in their document handling and obstruction investigation about other scenarios in which Trump may have shown national security documents, such as maps, to others, sources say. They’ve also asked several witnesses to share details about Trump’s anger toward Milley. During the summer of 2021, sources say multiple people were making recordings of Trump as he held conversations with journalists and biographers. Trump and his attorneys have given several different, often conflicting, explanations for why Trump didn’t intentionally retain classified materials in violation of federal law. Initially, Trump allies argued he had a “standing declassification order” so that documents removed from the Oval Office were immediately declassified. A few weeks later, Trump told Fox News that he could declassify things “just by thinking about it.” Earlier this year, Trump’s legal team told Congress that classified material was inadvertently packed up at the end of the administration. Most recently, Trump told CNN at a town hall that materials were “automatically declassified” when he took them. However, there’s no indication Trump followed the legally mandated declassification process, and his attorneys have avoided saying so far in court whether Trump declassified records he kept. This story has been updated with a response from former President Trump’s campaign. CNN’s Kristen Holmes and Sara Murray contributed to this report. Phim Hẹn Hò Chốn Công Sở – The Office Blind Date Full Vietsub, Thuyết MinhPhim Hẹn Hò Chốn Công Sở The Office Blind Date 2022 vietsub thuyet minh tron bo hd xoay quanh câu chuyện kể về cô nhân viên Shin Hari vừa nghèo vừa thất tình, được cô bạn thân Jin Young Seo hứa trả cho một số tiền hậu hĩnh nếu Shin Hari chịu đi xem mắt hộ cô nàng. Tại buổi xem mắt này, Shin Hari không ngờ đối tượng lại chính là sếp của mình, Tổng giám đốc lạnh lùng Kang Tae Moo. Sau khi phá buổi xem mắt giống như thỏa thuận với cô bạn thân, Shin Hari tưởng như cô đã hoàn thành xong nhiệm vụ nhưng có vẻ như cô nàng đã thu hút được sự chú ý của Kang Tae Moo, kể từ đây nhiều tình huống dở khóc dở cười xảy ra và qua đó hai nhân vật chính sa vào “lưới tình” lúc nào không hay. Tim MacMahon, ESPN Staff WriterJun 8, 2023, 0800 AM ETCloseJoined in September 2009Covers the Dallas Cowboys and Dallas MavericksAppears regularly on ESPN Dallas FMWith the shot clock running down, Denver Nuggets center Nikola Jokic spun to his left, took two dribbles, stepped behind the 3-point line with his left foot while twisting his body to face the basket, cocked the ball behind his head and released a high-arching, one-legged fadeaway just over the outstretched 7-foot-6 wingspan of Los Angeles Lakers star big man Anthony Davis."Bang!"ESPN play-by-play commentator Mike Breen shouted a few seconds later, his trademark call punctuating Jokic's clutch shot in the Western Conference finals closeout game that left the Lakers players, fans inside Arena and a TV audience of millions shocked because of its high degree of Nowitzki, however, was not the Dallas Mavericks' legend, Hall of Fame Class of 2023 member and godfather of the one-legged fadeaway, wasn't watching live as the Nuggets punched their ticket on May 22 to the franchise's first NBA Finals. Traveling internationally with family, Nowitzki has limited his recent viewing of the playoffs to catching highlights the next morning."[Jokic's] got a knack for making tough shots, so I was not really surprised that he ended up making that," Nowitzki told ESPN. "He can put the release point all the way behind his head and then shoot it super high in the air with unbelievable mark."The "Sombor Sling" - the nickname Nuggets coach Michael Malone and some local media members coined to describe the unforgettable bucket against the Lakers - plays off of the "Sombor Shuffle," Jokic's signature move that is often compared to Nowitzki's types of shots, often delivered after the defense appears to have taken away all the decent options for Jokic, tend to deflate entire arenas while delivering staggering blows to even the best players in the league."I'm happy for him. He's amazing, one of the best players in the world," Nowitzki said. "And he's showing that right now on this stage."Jokic's ability to make unorthodox look easy was on full display in the West finals, when the two-time MVP splashed a series of incredibly difficult shots just before the shot-clock or end-of-quarter buzzer while the Nuggets swept the Lakers."Even when you guard him for one of the best possessions that you think you can guard him," Lakers superstar forward LeBron James said, "he puts the ball behind his head Larry Bird-style and shoots it 50 feet in the air and it goes in, like he did four or five times this series."James was draped all over Jokic when the center swished a bailout 26-foot stepback fadeaway in the second quarter of Game 4."So you do like this to him," James said postgame, taking the cap off his head and tipping shot from the floor during the regular season, a figure typically seen only from centers whose shot diet consists primarily of dunks and putbacks, despite frequently taking jumpers and floaters that are considered tough shots for even the purest of to tracking data, 727 of Jokic's 1,022 field goal attempts during the regular season qualified as tightly contested. He made a preposterous of those shots. Jokic's efficiency has dipped a bit during this playoff run but remains elite, particularly for a player averaging points, rebounds and assists. He's shooting from the floor and on tightly contested shots, several of which have been some variation of Nowitzki's one-legged jumper and many coming with just seconds remaining on the shot or game Jokic's mind, there's a benefit to having the ball in a situation where he needs to beat the buzzer. It eliminates any hesitation Jokic, a pass-first big man averaging a triple-double during the playoffs, might have to let it fly. All he has to do from there is figure out how to get up a shot, which often results in unorthodox releases."It's so easy to shoot when you know you've got to shoot it, so you just find a way to shoot it," Jokic said after sweeping the Lakers, recalling a possession late in Game 4 when he was called for a charge after driving instead of taking an open 3."Being off balance - I'm off balance my whole life, so that's kind of normal for me."Nowitzki's one-legged fadeaway is such an iconic shot that it's honored both inside and outside Dallas' American Airlines Center. Silhouettes of the shot have been featured on the Mavericks' floor - located in the midrange areas above the right blocks, one of his favorite spots - since the season following Nowitzki's retirement after 2018-19. A nearly 24-foot white bronze statue of the shot was unveiled in the plaza in front of the arena on Dec. 25 this fadeaway was always launched off his left leg. The Sombor Shuffle, which Jokic developed in 2017 during shooting workouts while recovering from a sprained left ankle, is launched off his right foot."It's just something that works for him," Nowitzki said. "I never liked shooting off that right foot on that one. I thought I felt it was super hard for me just to coordinate. It was easier off the left foot, but it actually looks pretty smooth for him off the right leg."There's no way to get to it [as a defender] 'cause he's also 7 feet and moving away from the defender on that shot. It's just impossible to get to."Phoenix Suns superstar Kevin Durant, one of several players in the league who has incorporated Nowitzki's one-legged fadeaway into his arsenal, said with a mix of admiration and disdain that he "hates" when Jokic hits such unorthodox shots."It's like, 'Oh yeah, that's a miss,' and then it goes straight in," Durant said after Jokic scored 53 points in the Nuggets' Game 4 loss in Phoenix, a performance highlighted by several tightly contested jumpers and floaters launched with unconventional angles and footwork. "He's incredible."Nowitzki's fadeaway off the left foot has become part of Jokic's repertoire, along with all sorts of feathery midrange shots set up by unique footwork."He has the balance," Nowitzki said. "He's got the touch for it. He's got the high release point. He's got all the things you need to shoot that shot well. He found that."Obviously he's not the fastest, most athletic guy. It's not as easy to keep driving by people and grind all the time. That's just the shot that he can get off at any time, and he makes it look super easy." 1000 ET, June 9, 2023Trump attacks special counsel Jack Smith on social media despite warnings from his legal teamFrom CNN's Kaitlan CollinsSpecial counsel Jack Smith speaks to reporters on June 9 in Washington, DC. Alex Brandon/APFormer President Donald Trump is attacking special counsel Jack Smith in a series of posts on Truth Social following his indictment, despite repeated warnings from his legal team that everything he says publicly could be used against him. Trump has claimed Smith is "deranged," a "Trump hater" and labeled him "a thug" after the special counsel made a brief statement about the former president's indictment unsurprising, given his attacks on the last special counsel who investigated him, Trump's latest diatribe comes as he is still finalizing what his legal team will look like when he arrives in Miami on Tuesday. Todd Blanche has taken the lead on the team but is trying to add another Florida-based attorney before Trump is due in court after two attorneys also handling the case departed abruptly. Whether the client's repeated attacks on Smith hurt those efforts remains to be seen. But Trump's legal team has cautioned him in recent days not to attack Smith — advice he has clearly ignored. 959 ET, June 9, 2023Republican donor class scrambles to boost alternatives to Trump as his legal troubles growFrom CNN's Fredreka SchoutenCritics of former President Donald Trump in Republican fund-raising circles fear that even with his looming legal troubles, the 2024 contest is shaping up as a repeat of 2016 when the brash then-celebrity real-estate developer seized on GOP divisions to bulldoze a path to the nomination and then the White it was in 2016, there are again many candidates to choose from. Former New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie, former Vice President Mike Pence and North Dakota Gov. Doug Burgum all kicked off campaigns for the GOP nomination this Gov. Ron DeSantis, South Carolina Sen. Tim Scott, former South Carolina Gov. Nikki Haley, former Arkansas Gov. Asa Hutchinson, entrepreneur Vivek Ramaswamy and talk radio host Larry Elder all have previously announced their candidacies for the nomination.“Too big a Republican field is just handing Donald Trump the nomination on a silver platter,” said Chicago executive William Kunkler, an avowed Never Trumper and a longtime GOP deep-pocketed groups, including one aligned with billionaire industrialist Charles Koch, have pledged to elevate a Trump rival, although it’s not clear at this stage whether all the outside organizations that oppose Trump will coalesce around a single for comment Thursday before the indictment news broke, Trump spokesperson Steven Cheung did not directly address the actions of the groups opposed to the former president but said that Trump was “dominating in poll after poll – both nationally and statewide – because voters want someone who can beat Joe Biden and retake the White House.”Trump has denied any wrongdoing, and has cast the federal investigation and indictment as “election interference.” His campaign – which saw a surge in donations after his March indictment in a separate New York case connected to an alleged hush-money scheme – also quickly sought to raise political donations off the latest indictment CNN poll in May underscores the challenges Trump’s rivals face. He was the first choice of 53% of Republican and Republican-leaning voters in the primary, even after his earlier indictment. Trump’s support was roughly double the 26% who backed DeSantis as their first more823 ET, June 9, 2023DOJ believes it will take prosecutors about a month to present their case against Trump to a juryFrom CNN's Katelyn Polantz The Justice Department believes it will take prosecutors in the classified documents case against former President Donald Trump 21 business days, or about a month, in court to present their case to a jury at trial, according to a document that prosecutors filed with the court alongside the estimate does not include how long the defense might take to present its case, which includes the possibility that Trump could choose to testify in his own ET, June 9, 2023The federal indictment against Donald Trump and one of his aides was unsealed. Here's what we learnedFrom CNN staffTrump seen on January 6, 2018. Saul Loeb/AFP/Getty Images/FILEThe federal indictment against Donald Trump and his aide, Walt Nauta, was unsealed Friday, providing more details about the special counsel’s investigation into the former president's handling of classified faces a total of 37 counts, including 31 counts of willful retention of national defense information, according to the former president, who has denied any wrongdoing, is expected to appear in a Miami courthouse on Tuesday what else we learnedSensitive information The classified documents that Trump supposedly stored in boxes at Mar-a-Lago included information regarding defense and weapons capabilities, US nuclear programs and potential vulnerabilities of the US and its allies to a military attack, the indictment said. Some were classified at the highest levels and some were so sensitive they required special handling, according to the indictment. Sharing classified documents Trump is accused of showing classified documents on two occasions to others, according to the indictment. One of those occasions was a 2021 meeting in Bedminster, New Jersey, where Trump “showed and described a plan of attack’ that Trump said was prepared by the Defense Department." He also showed a classified map related to a military operation at Bedminster in August or September documents were stored Trump allegedly kept classified documents in various places at Mar-a-Lago, including “in a ballroom, a bathroom and shower, an office space, his bedroom, and a storage room." Other classified documents were found spilled out of the boxes onto the floor of the storage documents were moved Boxes were initially stored in a ballroom at Mar-a-Lago, prosecutors alleged, before Nauta moved some of them to a business center at the estate in March 2021. The indictment alleges some movement of the documents was directed by Trump. According to the indictment, two people who worked for Trump discussed over text message whether they were able to move boxes holding classified documents. Alleged attempts to conceal documents Trump told his attorney to tell the Justice Department that he didn’t have the documents sought by the subpoena, prosecutors say in the indictment. In addition, it alleges Trump directed Nauta to move documents to hide them from Trump’s own attorneys and FBI agents and even suggested to his lawyer to “hide or destroy documents” sought by the subpoena. It also said Nauta lied to investigators about moving ET, June 9, 2023Here's how GOP lawmakers have reacted since Trump's indictment was unsealedFrom CNN staffSome Republican members of Congress have quick to condemn the historic federal indictment against former President Donald Trump and come to his defense in the hours since the document was unsealed on most notably the top two Senate Republicans, Minority Leader Mitch McConnell and Minority Whip John Thune, have remained conspicuously silent thus Don Bacon of Nebraska, meanwhile, proved to be a rare member of his party willing to criticize Trump over the probe and defend the Department of Justice's investigation, saying he's “shocked” at Trump’s “alleged callousness” and calling the obstruction allegations in the newly unsealed indictment “inexcusable.”Here are some of the other remarks from members of the GOP since the document became publicSen. Cynthia Lummis of Wyoming said that although she does have “serious concerns with the classified documents being handled improperly in this case,” she questions the prosecutors' motivations.“The Department of Justice should never be weaponized to target President Biden’s political opponent," she Cindy Hyde-Smith of Mississippi said in a statement “The Justice Department shouldn’t be weaponized against the President’s political opponents, regardless of party. It’s an affront to our faith in the American legal and justice system when they are used for political purposes, whether real or perceived.”Sen. Mike Lee of Utah called the indictment an "affront to our country’s glorious 246-year legacy of independence from tyranny."Sen. Marsha Blackburn of Tennessee accused the DOJ of pursuing “its political agenda to take down a former president.”Sen. Mike Braun of Indiana said the "Biden administration is arresting their top political adversary for something Biden himself admitted to doing just this year. President Biden’s weaponization of our justice system against his enemies will do lasting damage to the rule of law."Rep. Chris Stewart of Utah said the charges "are equally unprecedented and unconscionable. This is a sad day for any American who believes in the rule of law. The National Archives have confirmed that every single president since Ronald Reagan has mishandled classified materials."710 ET, June 9, 2023Fact check Trump’s baseless "1,850 boxes" attacks on Biden’s University of Delaware documents collectionFrom CNN's Daniel DaleIn the weeks before Donald Trump was indicted over his alleged mishandling of classified defense documents and alleged attempt to cover it up, the former president kept arguing that it would be unfair to prosecute him given that President Joe Biden took “1,850 boxes” of documents to the University of made similar comments on Thursday after learning he was being indicted by a federal grand jury, posting on social media that “Joe Biden has 1850 Boxes at the University of Delaware.”But Trump’s vague insinuations that there is something improper about the existence of the Biden collection at the University of Delaware are baseless. The collection of donated documents is from Biden’s 36-year tenure as a US senator for Delaware. Unlike presidents, who are subject to the Presidential Records Act, senators own their offices’ documents and can do whatever they want with them – donate them to colleges, keep them at their homes, give them to journalists, even throw them in the has been public knowledge for more than a decade that Biden donated his Senate documents to the University of Delaware, from which he graduated in 1965. Biden announced the donation in a public appearance at the school in 2011, generating media did impose conditions on public access to the collection. According to the university website, the papers will only be made widely accessible two years after Biden retires from public life. Until then, they can only be accessed with Biden’s express restriction has frustrated Biden critics who want the documents to be made available publicly much sooner, but it is common for senators to place timing conditions on the documents they have donated to claim in late April that Biden has “been totally uncooperative – won’t show the documents under any circumstances” is not true. Reid reported in February that the FBI had conducted two searches at the university, with the consent and cooperation of Biden’s legal team, in connection with the federal investigation into Biden’s handling of classified more details ET, June 9, 2023How GOP presidential candidates are reacting to the Trump indictmentFrom CNN staffClockwise, from top left Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis, former Vice President Mike Pence, former New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie and Republican presidential candidate Vivek Ramaswamy AP, Getty Images/FileDonald Trump's rivals in the race to be the Republican nominee for president are reacting to the former president's indictment. Here's what some of them have saidRon DeSantis People close to DeSantis' political operation told CNN after the indictment was unsealed Friday that they do not expect him to deviate from the statement he made the day Florida governor tweeted Thursday, “The weaponization of federal law enforcement represents a mortal threat to a free society. We have for years witnessed an uneven application of the law depending upon political affiliation."“Why so zealous in pursuing Trump yet so passive about Hillary or Hunter? The DeSantis administration will bring accountability to the DOJ, excise political bias and end weaponization once and for all,” he Republican fundraiser close to the campaign said Friday that within the governor's close circle of confidants, there is not a push for him to change his posture toward Trump's alleged actions. They have been satisfied with the tack he has taken since Trump's first indictment in March, according to the Haley The former South Carolina governor and ambassador to the United Nations released a statement Friday that characterized the indictment as "prosecutorial overreach,” adding that it was time to “beyond the endless drama and distractions.”“This is not how justice should be pursued in our country," Haley Christie On the heels of the indictment, Christie’s super PAC “Tell It Like It Is” is launching its first TV ad of the 2024 cycle this weekend. The spot takes a direct shot at the former president’s qualifications to run.“The latest round of indictments serve as another reminder that the Republican Party needs a new direction,” Colin Reed, senior adviser for Tell It Like It Is PAC, said former New Jersey governor tweeted Thursday that "no one is above the law." "Let’s see what the facts are when any possible indictment is released. As I have said before, no one is above the law, no matter how much they wish they were. We will have more to say when the facts are revealed," he Hutchinson The former Arkansas governor – who said he read through the indictment against Trump after it was unsealed Friday – called the charges against the former president “serious” and argued that Republicans should not lightly dismiss the Thursday night, Hutchinson had called for Trump to drop out of the 2024 race after the former president said he has been doubled down in an interview with CNN on Friday, arguing that Trump should end his campaign “for the good of the country and for the good of the office of presidency.”Mike Pence Before the indictment was unsealed Friday, the former vice president called on US Attorney General Merrick Garland to release the document so Americans can "judge for themselves whether this is just the latest incident of weaponization and politicization at the Justice Department or it's something different."Pence had also said he thought any demands for Trump to suspend his campaign had been "premature," saying "everyone is innocent until proven guilty" and that Trump has a right to make his did not acknowledge a question about his reaction to the indictment's unsealing later Friday as he met with New Hampshire Gov. Chris Sununu. Vivek Ramaswamy The entrepreneur released a statement Thursday saying, “This is an affront to every citizen we cannot devolve into a banana republic where the party in power uses police force to arrest its political opponents.” Ramaswamy also repeated his pledge to pardon Trump should he be Kit Maher, Omar Jimenez and Brian Rokus contributed to this ET, June 9, 2023National Archives pushes back against claims made by Trump and allies related to classified documentsFrom CNN's Jamie Gangel, Zachary Cohen and Elizabeth StuartThe National Archives is pushing back on claims made by former President Donald Trump, his lawyers and his allies over his retention of classified documents, for which he now faces a federal indictment. On Friday, the Archives took the rare step of releasing a public statement rebuking claims suggesting that Trump was allowed to keep classified materials under the Presidential Records Act. "Recent media reports have generated a large number of queries about Presidential records and the Presidential Records Act PRA. The PRA requires that all records created by Presidents and Vice-Presidents be turned over to the National Archives and Records Administration NARA at the end of their administrations," according to the statement released by the National Archives on Friday afternoon. Former Trump attorney Tim Parlatore, who worked on the classified documents case before leaving the former president's legal team in recent weeks, mischaracterized the Presidential Records Act repeatedly during media appearances this week, including on CNN on Thursday said that a president "is supposed to take the next two years after they leave office to go through all these documents to figure out what's personal and what's presidential."In its statement Friday, the National Archives flatly disputed that claim, stating, "There is no history, practice, or provision in law for presidents to take official records with them when they leave office to sort through, such as for a two-year period as described in some reports."Parlatore also suggested Thursday that the National Archives was somehow delinquent in its duty to set up a separate government facility for Trump after he left office in 2021. In the past, this has been true for presidents who notified NARA before leaving office that they intended to build a presidential library — something Trump did not do."Prior to the end of his administration, President Trump did not communicate any intent to NARA with regard to funding, building, endowing, and donating a Presidential Library to NARA under the Presidential Libraries Act," the Archives said in its statement. "Accordingly, the Trump Presidential records have been and continue to be maintained by NARA in the Washington, DC, area, and there was no reason for NARA to consider a temporary facility in Florida or elsewhere," the statement ET, June 9, 2023Trump suggested his lawyer "hide or destroy documents" sought by subpoena, indictment saysFrom CNN's Kara ScannellProsecutors allege former President Donald Trump took several steps to obstruct the investigation into his handling of classified documents, according to the federal indictment unsealed told his attorney to tell the Justice Department that he didn’t have the documents sought by the subpoena, prosecutors say in the addition, it alleges, Trump directed his aide Walt Nauta to move documents to hide them from Trump’s own attorneys and FBI agents, and even suggested to his lawyer to “hide or destroy documents” sought by the subpoena. The charge Trump and Nauta both face a count of conspiracy to obstruct justice, according to the federal indictment. “The purpose of the conspiracy was for TRUMP to keep classified documents he has taken with him from the White House and to hide and conceal them from a federal grand jury,” the indictment read.

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