Media captionThis week’s impeachment hearings in three minutes

The US State Department has released records relating to the Trump administration’s dealings with Ukraine.

Documents were released to the ethics watchdog American Oversight after a freedom of information request.

The records show repeated contacts between Secretary of State Mike Pompeo and Mr Trump’s personal lawyer Rudy Giuliani.

US ties with Ukraine are at the centre of an impeachment investigation against Mr Trump.

The president is accused of withholding aid to Ukraine that had been approved by Congress to pressure the country into investigating his political rival Joe Biden.

Mr Trump has declared the inquiry a “witch hunt” and denies any wrongdoing.

What do the documents say?

Mr Giuliani has been accused of trying to discredit former Ukraine ambassador Marie Yovanovitch while running a shadow US foreign policy on Ukraine. There have been questions over what Secretary of State Mike Pompeo knew.

The records show Mr Pompeo and Mr Giuliani repeatedly spoke to one another – although the topics of those conversations remain unknown.

Emails among the documents suggest the pair spoke on the phone on 27 and 29 March.

The second call came after Mr Giuliani’s staff emailed a personal assistant to President Trump, Madeleine Westerhout, to ask if she had a phone number for Mr Pompeo.

Media captionMr Giuliani is alleged to have sought to dig up dirt on Democrat candidate Joe Biden

Ms Yovanovitch was dismissed as ambassador to Ukraine in May.

“We can see why Mike Pompeo has refused to release this information to Congress. It reveals a clear paper trail from Rudy Giuliani to the Oval Office to Secretary Pompeo to facilitate Giuliani’s smear campaign against a US ambassador,” said American Oversight Executive Director Austin Evers in a statement.

“This is just the first round of disclosures. The evidence is only going to get worse for the administration as its stonewall strategy collapses in the face of court orders.”

Ms Yovanovitch testified to the impeachment inquiry last week that she was fired over “false claims” by people with “questionable motives”. She believes her anti-corruption efforts angered influential Ukrainians who then sought to remove her.

The president attacked her in a tweet while she was giving her testimony. The diplomat said it was “very intimidating”.

Media captionTrump’s live-tweets “very intimidating” – Yovanovitch

President Trump again attacked Ms Yovanovitch in a phone call to Fox News on Friday, saying she “wouldn’t hang my picture in the embassy” and “was not an angel”.

But a letter dated 5 April included in the document cache – signed by six former US ambassadors to Ukraine – expresses concern about the allegations against Ms Yovanovitch, describing them as “simply wrong”.

“Ambassador Yovanovitch… has a flawless record as a diplomat,” the letter reads. “She is a professional of the highest integrity.”

What’s the impeachment inquiry about?

The US president is accused of withholding US military aid to pressure Ukraine into investigating a domestic political rival.

At the heart of the inquiry is a phone call on 25 July this year between Mr Trump and Ukraine’s newly elected president.

On the call, Mr Trump urged his counterpart to look into unsubstantiated corruption claims against Democratic White House contender Joe Biden.

Mr Giuliani has been central in pushing those allegations. He has been subpoenaed for documents by impeachment investigators but has previously said he won’t co-operate with Democrats.

Mr Trump’s critics say this alleged political pressure on a vulnerable US ally amounted to abuse of power. The president strongly denies any wrongdoing.

Learn more about the impeachment inquiry

document.createElement(‘header’);
document.createElement(‘nav’);
document.createElement(‘section’);
document.createElement(‘article’);
document.createElement(‘aside’);
document.createElement(‘footer’);


Source Article from https://www.bbc.com/news/world-us-canada-50527849

Mr. Azari Jahromi has said in the past week that the Supreme National Security Council had ordered him to shut down the internet and that he could fully restore it only when the council allowed.

As of Friday, internet access had been restored to less than 20 percent of its normal level, according to NetBlocks, a group that tracks internet usage and cybersecurity. The limited access was for government agencies, universities, security forces and some commercial businesses, but ordinary Iranians still appeared to be disconnected.

Amnesty International said the death toll had climbed to at least 115, but a confirmed tally was impossible to ascertain given limited access to the country. Iranian officials have denounced Amnesty’s figure as speculative but have not specified how many people were killed or injured.

An anecdotal picture of widespread destruction and harsh crackdown has emerged from videos and postings that Iranians managed to share despite the internet restriction. Official accounts have also shown remnants of ransacked stores and burned banks but have said the mayhem was contained within a few days, and have denounced what they called American-backed attempts to stoke more unrest.

“Based on information we have received, the Americans have gone mad that the riots were over within 48 hours and are disappointed that there is no more disorder in Iran,” Brig. Gen. Ali Fadavi, deputy commander of the Islamic Revolutionary Guards Corps., said on Friday in remarks quoted by Iranian media.

But General Fadavi said protests and riots had raged in more than 100 cities across Iran. He also said the unrest had amounted to “a war” and drew a comparison to a notoriously bloody battle during the 1980-88 Iran-Iraq war, known as Operation Karbala 4, that left 12,000 Iranian troops dead in three days.

Source Article from https://www.nytimes.com/2019/11/22/world/middleeast/iran-protests-sanctions.html

In recent weeks, they have put the weight of the presidency behind an effort to persuade Georgia’s governor to appoint Representative Doug Collins, currently the top Republican on the House Judiciary Committee, to the state’s soon-to-be vacant Senate seat.

Mr. Collins has actively jockeyed for the appointment, which would not only put a reliable defender of the president into a key Senate position before a trial, but could allow someone like Representative Jim Jordan of Ohio or Representative John Ratcliffe of Texas, pugnacious faces of Mr. Trump’s impeachment defense so far, to replace Mr. Collins on the House Judiciary Committee as the impeachment process shifts there.

The ascension of Mr. Jordan or Mr. Ratcliffe would also create another vacancy that Republican leaders could fill with a defender of the president like Representative Mark Meadows of North Carolina.

But even without the reinforcements, congressional Republicans — many of whom are wary of incurring the president’s wrath and being punished for it by their party — have either echoed the White House claims against witnesses or found other ways to try to maintain focus on the Bidens, often in starkly personal terms.

Senator Marsha Blackburn of Tennessee, who has bound herself to Mr. Trump, used Twitter to attack Lt. Col. Alexander S. Vindman, a National Security Council official who was on the July 25 call the president held with Mr. Zelensky, and testified this week that he was immediately alarmed by the request for an investigation into the Bidens.

“Vindictive Vindman is the ‘whistle-blower’s’ handler,” Ms. Blackburn tweeted, referring to the anonymous government official whose concerns about the call prompted the House impeachment inquiry.

Senator Lindsey Graham of South Carolina, the chairman of the Senate Judiciary Committee and a key ally of Mr. Trump’s, has shown his support for the president in other ways.

On Friday, Mr. Graham announced plans to call Hunter Biden as a witness in a Senate trial.

Nicholas Fandos contributed reporting.

Source Article from https://www.nytimes.com/2019/11/22/us/politics/trump-impeachment-defense.html

Former Vice President Joe Biden said that Sen. Lindsey Graham “is about to go down” in reaction to the South Carolina Republican’s request for documents from the State Department related to Biden and his son Hunter Biden.

Biden said that he was “embarrassed” for Graham in an interview with CNN on Friday, and said that President Donald Trump is “holding power” over Graham.

“They have him under their thumb right now. They know he knows, if he comes out against Trump, he’s got a real tough road for re-election,” Biden said. 

Graham, the Senate Judiciary chairman, sent a letter to Secretary of State Mike Pompeo Thursday requesting documentation in the possession of the State Department about Biden’s communications with Ukraine’s former president, and about an alleged business meeting between a Hunter Biden associate and the former Secretary of State John Kerry.

Source Article from https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/politics/2019/11/22/joe-biden-reacts-lindsey-graham-supporting-trump-amid-impeachment/4277666002/

The Department of Justice (DOJ) on Friday urged the Supreme Court to side with President TrumpDonald John TrumpWatergate prosecutor says that Sondland testimony was ‘tipping point’ for Trump In private moment with Trump, Justice Kennedy pushed for Kavanaugh Supreme Court nomination: book Obama: ‘Everybody needs to chill out’ about differences between 2020 candidates MORE in his ongoing legal battle over the release of his tax returns.

The DOJ in a brief filed Friday called on the Supreme Court to hear Trump’s appeal to block a subpoena from Manhattan prosecutors who are demanding that his accounting firm release eight years of his financial records, The New York Times reported.

The brief, filed by Solicitor General Noel Francisco, says allowing Manhattan prosecutor Cyrus Vance to obtain the tax returns would create a precedent that “may subject the president to highly burdensome demands for information” and “raises the risk that prosecutors could use subpoenas to harass the president as a result of opposition to his policies,” Reuters reports.

“The United States has a substantial interest in protecting the office of the president and the powers and duties vested in that office,” the brief reportedly reads. “The United States also has a substantial interest in protecting the autonomy of the federal government from potential interference by the states.”

The brief did not say Trump is immune from criminal investigation while in office, but did say that courts should require prosecutors to meet a higher standard, the Times notes.

The filing comes a week after Trump appealed to the high court asking it to reverse a court order requiring his accountants to hand over his tax returns, marking a drastic escalation of his ongoing fight to keep his financial records private.

A week before that, a federal appeals court in New York said Manhattan prosecutors could enforce a subpoena against the president’s accounting firm, Mazars USA, for his personal and corporate financial records between 2011 and 2018.

The Supreme Court is set to announce in the coming weeks whether it will hear the Manhattan case and a second case regarding a subpoena from a House committee, the Times reports.

Source Article from https://thehill.com/regulation/court-battles/471767-justice-department-urges-supreme-court-to-side-with-trump-in-ongoing

Former National Security Adviser John Bolton made a dramatic return to Twitter on Friday following a more than two-month break — and accused the White House of withholding access to his account.

Bolton has repeatedly cropped up in impeachment hearing testimony as a key witness in President Trump’s dealings with Ukraine. House investigators invited him to testify as part of their inquiry but he did not appear.

On Friday, Bolton cryptically tweeted: “Glad to be back on Twitter after more than two months. For the backstory, stay tuned……..”

“We have now liberated the Twitter account, previously suppressed unfairly in the aftermath of my resignation as National Security Advisor (sic),” Bolton added. “More to come…..”

The circumstances of Bolton’s departure from his post in September have been disputed, with him saying he resigned and President Trump saying he was fired.

Bolton’s last tweet before his comeback said: “I offered to resign last night and President Trump said, ‘Let’s talk about it tomorrow.’”

During an interview on “Fox & Friends” Friday morning, Trump was asked about Bolton’s Twitter revival.

“His account was frozen for two months. Did you guys freeze his account?,” host Brian Kilmeade asked.

“No, of course not. Of course not,” Trump responded. “No, I actually had a good relationship with John. We disagreed on some things and some methods, but I actually had a good relationship.”

Hours after his enigmatic missive, Bolton tweeted again that “since resigning as National Security Advisor (sic), the @WhiteHouse refused to return access to my personal Twitter account.”

“Out of fear of what I may say?” he queried. “To those who speculated I went into hiding, I’m sorry to disappoint!”

Bolton then thanked Twitter for “rightfully returning control of my account.”

A senior White House administration official told The Post: “The White House did not block Mr. Bolton from accessing his personal Twitter account and wouldn’t have the technical means to do so.”

Twitter declined comment.

Bolton reached a $2 million book deal with Simon & Schuster, The Associated Press reported earlier this month.

Additional reporting by Marisa Schultz

Source Article from https://nypost.com/2019/11/22/ex-national-security-adviser-john-bolton-white-house-stole-my-twitter-account/

Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell is scheduled to speak at the Greater Providence Chamber of Commerce annual dinner.

The last time we heard from the chairman was when he delivered congressional testimony on economic outlook a week ago. Powell said the central bank is unlikely to adjust interest rates anytime soon so long as the economy remains on its present path. The Fed cut rates three times this year.

Major events (all times ET):

8:30 a.m. CFNAI Chicago Fed National Activity Index

10:30 a.m. Texas Manufacturing Outlook Survey

Major earnings:

HPE (after the bell)

Palo Alto Networks (after the bell)

Source Article from https://www.cnbc.com/2019/11/22/hong-kong-bill-more-earnings-powell-speech-3-things-to-watch-for-monday.html

Additionally, Mr. Clinesmith worked on both the Hillary Clinton email investigation and the Russia investigation. He was among the F.B.I. officials removed by the special counsel, Robert S. Mueller III, after Mr. Horowitz found text messages expressing political animus against Mr. Trump.

Shortly after Mr. Trump’s election victory, for example, Mr. Clinesmith texted another official that “the crazies won finally,” disparaged Mr. Trump’s health care and immigration agendas, and called Vice President Mike Pence “stupid.” In another text, he wrote, in the context of a question about whether he intended to stay in government, “viva la resistance.”

In a June 2018 report by Mr. Horowitz about that and other politically charged texts, which identified him as “F.B.I. Attorney 2,” Mr. Clinesmith said he was expressing his personal views but did not let them affect his official actions.

The inspector general apparently did not assert in the draft report that any of the problems he found were so material that the court would have rejected the Justice Department’s requests to continue surveilling Mr. Page. But the people familiar with the draft were uncertain about whether Mr. Horowitz said the problems were immaterial, or instead avoided taking a position on that question.

CNN first reported that the draft accused a lower-level lawyer of altering a document. Mr. Clinesmith’s identification and details about the findings have not previously been reported.

In a phone call to “Fox & Friends” on Friday, Mr. Trump played up the initial revelations to claim that “they were spying on my campaign and it went right to the top and everybody knows it and now we’re going to find out” and “they tried to overthrow the presidency.” The accounts of Mr. Horowitz’s findings do not support that assertion.

And in other crucial respects, the draft inspector general report is said not to corroborate conspiracy theories and insinuations offered by Mr. Trump and his allies about the early stages of the Russia investigation, before Mr. Mueller was appointed as special counsel and took it over.

Source Article from https://www.nytimes.com/2019/11/22/us/politics/russia-investigation-inspector-general-report.html

Sen. Lindsey Graham, R-S.C., one of President Donald Trump’s chief GOP allies, met with the top lawyer at the White House to discuss plans for a Senate trial if the House approves articles of impeachment.

J. Scott Applewhite/AP


hide caption

toggle caption

J. Scott Applewhite/AP

Sen. Lindsey Graham, R-S.C., one of President Donald Trump’s chief GOP allies, met with the top lawyer at the White House to discuss plans for a Senate trial if the House approves articles of impeachment.

J. Scott Applewhite/AP

As the House appears to wrap up the investigative phase of its impeachment inquiry, a group of Senate Republicans met Thursday with White House officials, including counsel Pat Cipollone, to map out how a potential trial on articles of impeachment of President Trump could play out in the upper chamber.

During an extended phone interview with “Fox & Friends” Friday morning, the president said he would like Rep. Adam Schiff, the chair of the House Intelligence Committee, called as a witness.

“Frankly, I want a trial,” he said.

A day earlier the White House hosted a group of GOP Senators which included Sens. Lindsey Graham of South Carolina, Mike Lee of Utah, Ron Johnson of Wisconsin, Ted Cruz of Texas, Tom Cotton of Arkansas and John Kennedy of Louisiana, among others, according to congressional aides. An aide also confirmed that in addition to Cipollone, acting Chief of Staff Mick Mulvaney, Trump’s son-in-law and senior adviser Jared Kushner and White House counselor Kellyanne Conway also attended the meeting.

The group discussed how a Senate trial could begin, and how soon it could be dismissed. Separately, a congressional aide confirmed Washington Post reporting that there was also discussion on whether a Senate trial could last just two weeks: “It depends on how long the Democrats want to make their case,” the aide said.

Graham, a key Trump ally and chairman of the Senate Judiciary Committee, told reporters he wanted to make clear to White House officials that a trial couldn’t be dismissed before it started. He also shared that White House officials are still holding out hope that Trump may not get impeached by the House of Representatives.

“I think they were curious as to like ‘What are you thinking about?'” when it comes to a possible Senate trial, Graham said. “They think they’ve got a better than 50/50 (chance) — that maybe this doesn’t happen in the House. But I don’t know … so eventually we’re going to have to cross that Rubicon.”

The Thursday morning meeting was followed by a lunch between Trump and another group of Republican senators, including Mitt Romney of Utah, Shelley Moore Capito of West Virginia, Susan Collins of Maine, Rand Paul of Kentucky and James Lankford of Oklahoma.

The gathering was part of a new, weekly effort by Trump to meet with various groups of Republican senators as the impeachment inquiry picks up steam. The senators said they discussed prescription drugs, proposals to ban flavored vaping products, trade legislation, as well as impeachment.

“I think he’s understandably unable to defend himself,” Capito said of Trump’s impeachment talk. “He feels that whatever has come forward has been exactly what he says, ‘useless,’ so that was basically it. No surprises.”

Romney and Collins remain two of Trump’s toughest Republican critics. In return, Trump has called Romney a “pompous ass” on Twitter. Still, Romney said the lunch meeting was cordial.

“Overwhelmingly the meeting was about issues we all raised,” he said, later adding, “The president didn’t say anything new with regards to that topic [impeachment] that I haven’t heard multiple times on TV.”

Speaking to reporters, Graham, who attended the morning meeting with Trump, said he doesn’t want White House officials to believe there’s sufficient ground or enough Senate votes to stop a trial before it even begins. He said such a move, before any evidence is heard, would be inconsistent with what Americans know trials to look like.

“The idea that you would dismiss a trial before they presented a case is a nonstarter,” Graham said. He added, I don’t want them (White House officials) to believe there’s an ability to dismiss the case before it’s heard … I just think the best thing for the country is to get this done quickly, but it’s got to be done in a way that is acceptable to the body.”

Some Republicans have highlighted the possibility that a senator could move to dismiss the trial through a procedural motion to cut the effort short. The move harks back to the late West Virginia Democratic Sen. Robert Byrd, who unsuccessfully moved to dismiss the impeachment trial for President Clinton in 1999.

Graham suggested Trump’s potential Senate trial could begin with a resolution establishing procedures. He referred to own his experience in the Senate during Clinton’s trial, when the upper chamber established those procedures in a unanimous 100-0 vote. But that will be up to the Senate leaders of both parties, he noted.

“Hopefully (Senate Majority Leader) Mitch (McConnell) can work with (Senate Minority Leader Chuck) Schumer,” he said.

Graham said while the Clinton model is a good one for a potential Trump trial, it doesn’t have to be in terms of timing. Clinton was impeached by the House of Representatives for high crimes and misdemeanors on Dec. 19, 1998, triggering a Senate trial that began Jan. 7, 1999, and ended just over a month later with his acquittal on Feb. 12, 1999. A congressional aide said a Senate trial could potentially be as short as two weeks.

Graham also warned that if the White House seeks Senate trial witnesses who weren’t part of the House impeachment inquiry — such as former Vice President Joe Biden, a potential Trump rival in the 2020 presidential election — that it would delay the trial even further.

“They’ll make a request for witnesses but that would have to be granted by the Senate,” Graham said. And “I don’t know what appetite there is in the Senate by either party to make this a long drawn out thing.”

However, later Thursday Graham’s office announced he was seeking U.S. State Department documents linked to Biden and his son, Hunter. He is also seeking documents linked to other administration officials under President Obama.

Trump said in his Fox interview on Friday that he would like to see the anonymous whistleblower at the center of the House impeachment inquiry to testify in the Senate. The whistleblower called the alarm on a July 25 call between Trump and the Ukrainian president.

That call is at the heart of the Democratic-led impeachment inquiry that is seeking to answer whether Trump sought an investigation into the Bidens from the Ukrainian leader in exchange for the release of military aid and a White House visit. Trump has labeled the call perfect, and denied any such link was made.

Source Article from https://www.npr.org/2019/11/22/781827752/republican-senators-white-house-map-out-impeachment-trial

President Trump attacked former U.S. Ambassador to Ukraine Marie Yovanovitch on Friday, saying she was “not an angel” and claiming she refused to hang his framed photograph in the embassy in Kiev for at least a year.

“This ambassador that everybody says was so wonderful, she wouldn’t hang my picture in the embassy,” Mr. Trump told “Fox and Friends” in an interview. “She wouldn’t hang it.”

A member of Yovanovitch’s legal team said the embassy hung photos of Mr. Trump, Vice President Mike Pence and the secretary of state “as soon as they arrived from Washington, D.C.” The embassy in Kiev did not return a request for comment.

The president said he had heard “bad things” about Yovanovitch, who was appointed by President Obama in 2016, and claimed she was disliked by Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky, who was elected in May.

“This was not an angel, this woman, OK?” Mr. Trump said. “There were a lot of things that she did that I didn’t like.”

Mr. Trump and Zelensky discussed Yovanovitch during the July 25 phone call that launched House Democrats’ impeachment inquiry into the president. During the call, Mr. Trump called Yovanovitch “bad news.” 

Three House committees are examining whether the president withheld military aid to Ukraine to push Zelensky to announce investigations of Mr. Trump’s political rival, former Vice President Joe Biden.

Yovanovitch was abruptly recalled from her post earlier this year, following what she described as a smear campaign led by Rudy Giuliani, Mr. Trump’s personal attorney, and “foreign corrupt interests in Ukraine.”

A 33-year veteran diplomat, Yovanovitch testified before the House Intelligence Committee last week about her removal and the attacks on her. During her appearance, Mr. Trump tweeted insults at the former ambassador, alleging “everywhere Marie Yovanovitch went turned bad.”

Mr. Trump told “Fox and Friends” he questioned why House Republicans were being “nice” to Yovanovitch during her testimony.

“I said ‘why are you being so kind?’ ‘Well, sir, she’s a woman. We have to be nice,'” the president claimed. “She’s very tough.”

While Mr. Trump claimed Yovanovitch refused to hang his portrait, the Washington Post reported in September 2017 federal buildings around the world, including U.S. embassies, were missing pictures of him and Pence because they hadn’t yet decided when to sit for the photos.

Source Article from https://www.cbsnews.com/news/trump-claims-marie-yovanovitch-refused-to-hang-portrait-in-embassy-in-ukraine/

Moments ago, President Donald Trump participated in the NCAA Collegiate National Champions Day at the White House.

» Subscribe to NBC News: http://nbcnews.to/SubscribeToNBC
» Watch more NBC video: http://bit.ly/MoreNBCNews

NBC News is a leading source of global news and information. Here you will find clips from NBC Nightly News, Meet The Press, and original digital videos. Subscribe to our channel for news stories, technology, politics, health, entertainment, science, business, and exclusive NBC investigations.

Connect with NBC News Online!
Visit NBCNews.Com: http://nbcnews.to/ReadNBC
Find NBC News on Facebook: http://nbcnews.to/LikeNBC
Follow NBC News on Twitter: http://nbcnews.to/FollowNBC
Follow NBC News on Instagram: http://nbcnews.to/InstaNBC

Source Article from https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aFNPajOJolg

WASHINGTON (Reuters) – More overseas companies investigated by U.S. authorities for national security concerns have abandoned investments in the United States since President Donald Trump took office, a report showed on Friday.

The report, released by the Committee on Foreign Investment in the United States (CFIUS), shows that foreign companies abandoned roughly 14 percent of U.S. investments that were investigated by CFIUS in 2017 “in light of CFIUS-related national security concerns.” The percentage in 2018 was 11 percent.

Those figures were sharply up from the period immediately before Trump took office. About 4 or 5 percent of such transactions probed by the committee were dropped annually from 2014 to 2016, the report showed. The Committee, led by the Treasury Department, reviews foreign investment in the United States for national security issues.

The document offers few details about the deals. The Trump administration has beefed up oversight of foreign investment in key sectors, from critical technology to sensitive personal data and real estate, with new powers from Congress.

A law approved last year, known as FIRRMA, expanded the powers of CFIUS to probe transactions previously excluded from its purview, including attempts by foreigners to purchase non-controlling stakes in U.S. companies. It also instituted mandatory filing requirements for certain transactions.

A focus of the law was keeping China from acquiring sensitive U.S. technologies, which prompted Congress to mandate stricter oversight of U.S. controls on exports as well.

Before those laws were passed, China accounted for the most investments in American critical technology in the 2016-2017 period, blowing past Canada, the United Kingdom and France to account for more than a fifth of the total for that period, the report shows. Meanwhile, the number of Chinese transactions rose from just 29 in 2015 to 60 in 2017.

The data also showed the proportion of deals that CFIUS decided to investigate doubled from 2014 to 2018.

Additional Reporting by Diane Bartz; Editing by David Gregorio

Source Article from https://www.reuters.com/article/us-usa-investment-trump/more-foreign-firms-abandoned-u-s-deals-amid-trump-administration-scrutiny-report-idUSKBN1XW1VJ

He also said Ukraine interfered in the 2016 election with the goal of helping Hillary Clinton, an unsubstantiated theory. “Don’t forget. Ukraine hated me. They were after me in the election.

“This guy, Sondland: hardly know him,” Mr. Trump said.

I’ve had a couple of conversations with him,” Mr. Trump said. I see him hanging around when I go to Europe.”

Mr. Sondland is posted in Brussels and testified that he had spoken to the president on the phone some 20 times.

Mr. Holmes in public testimony on Thursday described in detail the phone call between Mr. Trump and Mr. Sondland during a lunch with two other officials from the State Department, as they dined outdoors at a Kyiv restaurant and shared a bottle of wine.

Mr. Holmes said Mr. Sondland and Mr. Trump were discussing a recent meeting with Mr. Zelensky, just one day after the phone call between the leaders, which is at the heart of the impeachment investigation.

According to Mr. Holmes, the president asked Mr. Sondland if Mr. Zelensky would pursue the investigations he sought into Democrats. Mr. Sondland assured Mr. Trump that “he’s going to do it,” and that the Ukrainian leader would do “anything you ask him to.” When the call ended, Mr. Holmes said the ambassador told him Mr. Trump did not care about Ukraine, only about “big things” like the investigations into former Vice President Joseph R. Biden Jr. and his son, Hunter Biden.

A day before Mr. Holmes’s testimony, Mr. Sondland publicly implicated the president and other senior administration officials in the pressure campaign against Ukraine.

Source Article from https://www.nytimes.com/2019/11/22/us/politics/trump-impeachment-inquiry-interview.html

Tens of thousands of texts amounting to what prosecutors call months of “wanton and reckless” psychological abuse were presented Friday during the arraignment of a Boston College student accused of prodding her boyfriend to take his own life, then failing to intervene when he did so.

Inyoung You, 21, a native of South Korea, appeared emotionless as prosecutors in Suffolk County Superior Court in Boston laid out their case for how she allegedly drove her boyfriend, Alexander Urtula, 22, to suicide. You, who is on leave from Boston College, pleaded not guilty to manslaughter and failing to act.

During the 18 months that You dated Urtula, who was also a student at the college, prosecutors say their relationship grew increasingly abusive and You would repeatedly text him to “kill himself or go die.”

A grand jury indicted You last month, and Suffolk County District Attorney Rachael Rollins said the texts appeared to become “more frequent, powerful and demeaning,” even though You knew Urtula was going through a “spiraling depression.”

Inyoung You, a former Boston College student from South Korea, arrives to be arraigned on involuntary manslaughter charges in connection with the suicide of her boyfriend, in Suffolk County Superior Court in Boston on Nov. 22, 2019.Katherine Taylor / Reuters

Prosecutors have alleged that You exerted control over Urtula, tracking his movements via his cellphone and sending thousands of texts in the run-up to his death. Before their relationship began, Urtula had no documented mental health issues, did not exhibit risk factors for suicide or mention self-harm in his journals prior to January 2018, prosecutors said.

In the two months before he took his own life on May 20 — the same day he was to graduate from Boston College — Urtula and You exchanged about 75,000 text messages, with about 47,000 of them coming from her.

At times, You would threaten harm to Urtula, once texting before his upcoming graduation, “I want to bash your head against a wall,” and would also claim she was going to harm herself because of him, a tactic that kept him from leaving her, assistant prosecutor Caitlin Grasso said at Friday’s arraignment.

The threats would escalate, Grasso added, when Urtula didn’t respond to her fast enough, asked for space or wanted permission to go to sleep.

The texts, which prosecutors say were uncovered through a forensic extraction of Urtula’s phone, as well as journal entries showed how You allegedly broke down Urtula emotionally and how he grew more and more isolated from his friends earlier this year.

He texted on April 11 to her that “I’ll leave this f—— earth just please don’t do anything don’t hurt yourself anymore” and “I’ll go die for you,” prosecutors said.

When Urtula attempted to assert himself and accused You of being the abusive one, prosecutors added that she turned it on him, texting on April 29: “ABUSE U THINK I ABUSE U U WANNA SAY I ABUSE U … UR THAT F—— IDIOTIC AND STUPID REALLY ABUSE.”

Alexander Urtula.Suffolk County District Attorney

Two days before his death, Urtula struggled with cutting off contact with his friends at Boston College, which You allegedly asked him to do. In a message sent on May 18, prosecutors say she wrote: “did I NOT F—— TELL U TO READ [MY TEXT] NOW IF YOU DO NOT F—— READ IT RIGHT NOW I’M LITERALLY GOING TO F—— SLASH MY THROAT AND TAKE A VIDEO SAYING IT WAS BECAUSE OF YOU.”

Urtula at times would try to stand up for himself. Grasso said he was distraught that one of the people he said “I love most in the world” was telling him to take his own life.

“Stop telling me how worthless and pathetic I am … and how much I deserve to die,” Grasso said he texted on March 31.

Urtula, a biology major originally from Cedar Grove, New Jersey, and a member of the Philippine Society of Boston College, died after authorities say he jumped from the roof of a parking garage less than two hours before he was supposed to walk at commencement.

Prosecutors said You was able to track Urtula to the garage through his cellphone location function that morning, and in a few minutes of her arriving at 8:31 a.m., he jumped.

They allege that she knew he was threatening to harm himself and that “she did not contact law enforcement and medical personnel to intervene and prevent his death,” nor tell the parking garage staff who would have been in a position to assist.

During a news conference after her arraignment, You’s defense attorney, Steven Kim, blasted the handling of the case as “unjust and callous behavior by a district attorney in what I can only conclude is a cheap pursuit of headlines.”

The charge against You, Kim added, is traumatizing to her “but also happens not to be true. When the facts come out, it will be clear that these two young individuals were very needy emotionally and were involved in a relationship that became a toxic blend of fear, anger, need and love.”

Kim suggested a jury pool could be tainted because of the intense media attention in the case. He also clarified that You remains a student at Boston College; prosecutors had referred to her as a former student.

The matter has drawn comparisons to another high-profile case in Massachusetts in which a young woman, Michelle Carter, was convicted of involuntary manslaughter in 2017 after her boyfriend died by suicide.

The case against Carter hinged on text messages in which she appeared to prod her boyfriend, Conrad Roy III, to “take action.” Both Carter and Roy suffered from depression, attorneys said at the trial.

The judge at You’s arraignment allowed her release on $5,000 bail, an amount arranged with prosecutors because she had voluntarily returned to the U.S. from South Korea to face charges and has no prior criminal record. She must surrender her passport and remain in Massachusetts before pretrial hearings next year.

If you or someone you know is in crisis, call the National Suicide Prevention Lifeline at 800-273-8255, text HOME to 741741 or visit SpeakingOfSuicide.com/resources for additional resources.

Source Article from https://www.nbcnews.com/news/us-news/former-boston-college-student-pleads-not-guilty-boyfriend-s-texting-n1089581

“We have to stand with Hong Kong, but I’m also standing with President Xi [Jinping]; he’s a friend of mine. He’s an incredible guy, but we have to stand … I’d like to see them work it out, okay?” the president said. “I stand with freedom, I stand with all of the things that I want to do, but we are also in the process of making one of the largest trade deals in history. And if we could do that, it would be great.”

Source Article from https://www.washingtonpost.com/business/2019/11/22/trump-says-he-might-veto-legislation-that-aims-protect-human-rights-hong-kong-because-bill-would-impact-china-trade-talks/

Billionaire Mike Bloomberg has launched a $5 million TV ad campaign as he prepares to enter the Democratic primary for president, an advertising monitoring group said Friday.

Data compiled by Advertising Analytics, which tracks ad buys throughout the 2020 election, shows that the former New York mayor has invested the seven-figure sum in over 25 markets, including in Florida, Texas, Massachusetts, California, Pennsylvania, Mississippi and Michigan.

Many of these states represent key primary contests for Democrats in the 2020 race.

In Florida, the investment is focused on West Palm Beach, the market that includes President Donald Trump’s resort Mar-a-Lago. The most expensive ad buy is in Los Angeles for just over $760,000, the company said.

The data gathering firm said the ads were booked Friday morning and will run through the end of Thanksgiving week.

A spokesman for Bloomberg did not return a request for comment on details pertaining to the ads.

The ad buys are the latest in a series of moves by Bloomberg, who has a net worth of just over $55 billion, and his team in the buildup to his likely run for the Democratic presidential nomination.

The former New York mayor filed paperwork on Thursday for a presidential run, although his spokesman said it was only procedural and did not represent some form of an announcement.

He has also filed to compete in various primaries including Alabama, Texas and Arkansas, and his aides have been hiring staff to gear up for a primary battle.

Bloomberg’s team has previously said he plans to spend over $100 million if he runs. Apart from his ambitions to run for president, the 77-year-old Bloomberg has committed $100 million to a digital ad campaign against Trump.

Data from Advertising Analytics:

Source Article from https://www.cnbc.com/2019/11/22/mike-bloomberg-launches-5-million-ad-blitz-as-he-prepares-2020-bid.html