Trump accuses Obama of treason
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Obama, Tulsi Gabbard and Russia
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After focusing his second-term ire on other individuals and institutions, President Trump is again seeking prosecution of his most prominent rivals — this time with aides more inclined to carry out his wishes.
Tulsi Gabbard recently referred evidence supposedly showing Obama Administration officials conspiring to subvert Trump’s 2016 election victory and subsequent presidency to the Justice Department for criminal prosecution.
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In a Friday afternoon press release accompanied by a thread on X, Gabbard claimed “Americans will finally learn the truth,” about the 2016 election, and alleged the Obama administration and FBI officials “manufactured and politicized intelligence” to create doubt around Trump’s election victory in 2016.
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France 24 on MSNWhite House revives 'Obama coup' claim to deflect Epstein scandalThe White House on Wednesday accused Barack Obama of leading a "treasonous conspiracy" against Donald Trump, in an apparent attempt to shift attention from renewed scrutiny over Trump’s ties to Jeffrey Epstein and the administration’s stalled promise to release case files.
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Newly declassified documents suggest senior Obama administration officials, and possibly former President Barack Obama himself, manipulated intelligence findings to support the discredited narrative that President Donald Trump ’s 2016 campaign welcomed the backing of the Russian government.
Tulsi Gabbard, in a newly declassified report, alleged that Obama admin ‘manipulated' intelligence on possibility of Russian interference in 2016 election
A recipient of the 2025 Elite Trial Lawyers Lifetime Achievement Award, Morgan & Morgan's John Yanchunis spoke with the National Law Journal about his storied career, from bringing one of the nation’s first privacy lawsuits over internet “cookies” to forcing Florida to comply with federal law for nursing home residents.
Obama-appointed federal judge Darrin P. Gayles was randomly drawn to oversee the president’s lawsuit against The Wall Street Journal over its claims that he wrote a sexually suggestive birthday greeting to Jeffrey Epstein in 2003 (Getty Images/U.S. Senate Judiciary Committee)