Judge imposes maximum fine for Trump's gag order violations
The former president was fined $1,000 for each of his nine violations of the gag order.
The former president was fined $1,000 for each of his nine violations of the gag order.
After Judge Juan Merchan fined former President Donald Trump an additional $1,000 for gag order violations, the jury heard testimony Monday from two Trump Organization employees about payments Trump made to his lawyer Michael Cohen.
In a written order handed down at the start of Tuesday’s court proceedings, Judge Juan Merchan announced fines of $1,000 each for nine posts made on Trump’s Truth Social feed that he said violated his gag order barring attacks on potential witnesses in the hush money trial.
Get caught up on this morning’s news: Israel seizes control of Rafah crossing, Trump fined again and more in today’s edition of The Yodel newsletter
The former president’s criminal hush money trial resumes Monday in Manhattan, where the prosecution will continue presenting its case.
DeVante Parker struck a deal to join the Eagles earlier this offseason.
Craig Kuligowski, who was facing a sexual harassment complaint at Toledo, said he was fired due to his age and his race. He’s a 55-year-old white man.
Microsoft's latest Surface Pro is faster than ever and sports an OLED display for the first time.
The popular mail-order bedding brand slashed prices on sheets, pillows, toppers, quilts and more.
If you’ve noticed deleted photos reappearing on your iPhone, download this software update now.
Kansas City Chiefs receiver Rashee Rice reported for the team's organized team activities amid his involvement in a multi-car crash and alleged nightclub assault during the offseason.
SeekOut, an eight-year-old recruiting startup that uses AI to find candidates, cut about 30% of its workforce this past Thursday, TechCrunch has learned. “Lately, we have been spending roughly $2 to earn $1, and this last fiscal year, we incurred significant cash burn,” SeekOut’s CEO Anoop Gupta and CTO Aravind Bala wrote in a letter to employees. SeekOut laid off 16 employees in October, or about 7% of its workforce at that time, GeekWire reported.
Basketball analyst Dan Titus breaks down what the teams and stars who were booted from the NBA Playoffs must do to remain in good fantasy standing next season.
A crucial earnings report from AI leader Nvidia greets a stock market that hit new records last week.
A new survey from Yahoo News/YouGov says that for younger people, social media is a contributor to loneliness.
Founder-market fit is one of the most crucial factors in a startup's success, and operators (someone involved in the day-to-day operations of a startup) turned founders have an almost unfair advantage in finding that fit. Data shows that a lack of expertise and business acumen in founders contributes to failed VC investments. The same principle applies somewhat to operator VCs (firms typically launched by former startup founders).
Expedia says Rathi Murthy and Sreenivas Rachamadugu, respectively its CTO and senior vice president of core services product & engineering, are no longer employed at the travel booking company. In a statement shared with TechCrunch and other publications, Expedia said Murthy and Rachamadugu are “no longer employed at Expedia Group” due to an unspecified “violation of company policy.” Murthy spoke to TechCrunch about the new AI-powered features announced earlier this week, and she reportedly gave a presentation on those features at an Expedia conference with business partners.
Blue Origin has successfully completed its NS-25 mission, resuming crewed flights for the first time in nearly two years. The mission brought six tourist crew members to the edge of space, including artist and former Air Force Captain Ed Dwight. In 1961, Dwight was selected by President John F. Kennedy to be the country's first Black astronaut candidate, but he never made it to space until today.
Wall Street pros say there's more room to grow with stock markets around record highs.
Man City discarded West Ham and did what no other club had ever done in the 124-year history of English soccer.
The Under Armour meltdown continues.