President Donald Trump's legal team filed a notice of appeal on his conviction in the Manhattan case that found him guilty in May 2024 of falsifying business records.
The president's new criminal lawyers have begun the potentially yearslong process of appealing his sentencing and conviction. Read the first filing.
Seeking a second term, Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg may not be facing significant challenges on the campaign trail. But he will be running for reelection in a supercharged political
U.S. President Donald Trump's lawyers on Wednesday formally notified a New York state court of Trump's intent to appeal his criminal conviction on charges stemming from hush money paid to a porn star.
The disgraced movie mogul asked for his trial to be accelerated, calling Rikers Island a “hellhole.” He faces three sex-crime charges.
EXCLUSIVE: President Donald Trump has retained counsel from top law firm Sullivan & Cromwell to represent him in his ongoing appeal efforts in the case brought against him by Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg and New York Attorney General Letitia James,
I don’t think I have to pitch how Bragg failed. I think we all see it with our own eyes,’ Republican district attorney candidate, Maud Maron, tells
The woman’s attorney, Eric Ross Bernstein, said he was not at liberty to comment when asked whether she had run into trouble with federal authorities amid the Trump administration’s
Harvey Weinstein is due back in court Wednesday as a judge is set to decide when the disgraced movie mogul’s #MeToo retrial will start and whether it will include an allegation involving a woman who wasn’t in the original case.
A man who was pushed onto New York City subway tracks in the path of an oncoming train is recounting the harrowing, near-death experience.
That’s what Sen. John Fetterman did on “The View.” In the course of chatting about the current political landscape, the Pennsylvania Dem told the hosts that thinks Trump’s NYC hush-money trial was “politically motivated. That wouldn’t otherwise have been prosecuted if it was someone else.”
President Trump declared that “the weaponization of our Justice Department will end” during his second Inaugural Address.