Donny Deutsch Thinks New York Courts Will Take Down Donald Trump
"Cohen Visits Capitol Hill Ahead Of Testimony And Robert Mueller Report | The Last Word | MSNBC"
Late Night with Seth Meyers Published on Feb 21, 2019
Donny Deutsch talks about predicting Trump's success in the 2016 primaries, his front row seat to Trump and Michael Cohen's relationship and why he thinks Donald Trump should be very afraid.
Democrats Ready To Charge Across Donald Trump's Red Line With New Probes | Rachel Maddow | MSNBC
MSNBC Published on Feb 18, 2019
Rachel Maddow looks at Donald Trump's outsized panic at the possibility that his business dealings with Deutsche Bank were being investigated by the special counsel and notes that now Democrats are pursuing those avenue of inquiry without the vulnerability of being fired by Trump for crossing his supposed red lines.
We’re entering a new phase of the Trump-Russia investigation
House Intelligence Committee Chairman Adam B. Schiff (D-Calif.) (J. Scott Applewhite/AP)
By David Ignatius Columnist February 14
President Trump has been insisting for so long that any investigation of his personal finances would cross a “red line” that people may have overlooked the outrageousness of his claim. But this self-declared immunity is about to change.
We’re entering a new phase of the Trump-Russia investigation, in which the president’s efforts to contain the probe are failing. Information he tried to suppress about his business and political dealings is emerging — with more to come.
[...]
A Deutsche Bank subpoena would be especially sensitive. Trump was enraged by a December 2017 report that special counsel Robert S. Mueller III had subpoenaed the bank’s records about its dealings with Trump, telling his then-lawyer John Dowd, “This is bull----!,” according to Bob Woodward’s book “Fear.”
The red line apparently held, then. Trump lawyer Jay Sekulow told Reuters: “No [Deutsche Bank] subpoena has been issued or received.” One government source speculates that Rod J. Rosenstein, the deputy attorney general, blocked any attempt to compel disclosure of the bank’s Trump file records to avoid getting himself or Mueller fired.
"Saturday Night Live" host Steve Martin appeared as Roger Stone to roast the former Trump adviser's arrest and indictment on charges related to the Robert Mueller investigation.