Former President Trump criticized prosecutors in his case in an online post Saturday, calling them “evil people who hate our country.”
“The deranged Jack Smith, Letitia “Peekaboo” James, Alvin Bragg, the J6 Political Villains Commission (who deleted and destroyed all evidence and findings), and all the remaining Biden prosecutors and “our country” Hate bad people.” “They’re as guilty as Fanny Willis.” Trump posted on his “Truth Social” site. “This is a Biden investigation aimed at election interference. Let’s Make America Great Again!”
Trump’s post comes a day after Fani Willis, the Fulton County, Georgia, district attorney handling the Georgia election interference case, admitted that she had a personal relationship with Nathan Wade, the top prosecutor in the case. Posted in.
The former president’s post oversees his case over federal election destruction related to the Jan. 6, 2021, riot at the Capitol and the storage of classified documents at his Mar-a-Lago mansion. Special prosecutor Jack Smith is also a target. After leaving the White House.
Trump also criticized New York Attorney General Letitia James (D), who sued him in 2022 with evidence of fraud. Judge Arthur Engoron ruled in September that the former president and his adult sons committed fraud by inflating and inflating the assets of the Trump Organization in order to reap certain profits. did.
They included Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg, whose decision last year to convene a grand jury to investigate Trump’s hush-money scandal led to the first criminal charges against a former U.S. president.
Trump is on track to become the Republican nominee for the next election, but he is already embroiled in a web of legal troubles that are beginning to unfold in courts across the country.
He is defending himself against a total of 91 criminal charges, including four state and federal criminal charges. He is also a party to more than six civil lawsuits.
The online post came days after federal election filings showed President Trump’s various political committees spent nearly $30 million in legal fees in the second half of 2023.
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