Jul 20, 2017 · The list of lawyers representing President Donald Trump, his family and top aides in the Russia probe is growing as more revelations become public. IE 11 is …
Nov 19, 2020 · In an unprecedented, wild press conference, Rudy Giuliani and Trump’s legal team alleged a vast, foreign-led conspiracy to throw the election to …
Lisa Read Bloom is an American attorney known for advising Harvey Weinstein amid various sexual abuse allegations, and for representing women whose sexual harassment claims precipitated the firing of Bill O'Reilly from Fox News. Bloom founded and owns the Bloom Firm, a law firm that has represented clients including Kathy Griffin and Mischa Barton. Bloom was …
May 12, 2020 · President Donald Trump abruptly ended his Monday press conference after a contentious exchange in which he asked an Asian-American journalist to "ask China" about her question and then refused to ...
His hiring comes amid reports the president is growing frustrated with Kasowitz, who remains in New York and commutes to Washington. Cobb is a partner at the law firm Hogan Lovells, which is set to face off against the Trump administration in the upcoming Supreme Court case over the president’s travel restrictions.
Jay Sekulow: Sekulow is a lawyer with his own radio show and has largely been the public face for Trump’s legal team. He is the chief counsel for the American Center for Law and Justice, a Pat Robertson founded group meant to be the conservative answer to the American Civil Liberties Union.
Cooper, a founding member of the Washington law firm Cooper & Kirk who once clerked for late Supreme Court Justice William Rehnquist, had been under consideration to be the next solicitor general but withdrew his name after Sessions’ contentious confirmation hearings.
Futerfas made his name as a defense attorney by successfully representing mobsters in New York City. He later expanded to defending corporate and white collar crimes, and more recently cyber crimes. In 2016, he defended a Russian man who was convicted in the U.S. of creating computer malware. Federal Election Commission records filed last month show Trump's re-election campaign began paying Futerfas' law firm more than a week before the June 2016 meeting became public.
Andrew Rafferty. Andrew Rafferty has been a political reporter for NBCNews.com since 2013. Rafferty writes and reports on politics for the web, and shoots and produces video for all NBC platforms. Prior to joining NBCNews.com, Rafferty was a campaign reporter covering the 2012 presidential election.
Following a controversial 2017 photo shoot in which comedienne Kathy Griffin clen ched a severed and bloodied mask that resembled the face of President Donald Trump, Bloom held a joint press conference with Griffin, then her client, to address the controversy. Their appearance was widely panned in the media for its self-victimization and lack of focus.
In 2001, Bloom left her mother’s firm, having developed a career in cable news punditry, eventually serving as a legal analyst on CBS News, CNN, HLN, and MSNBC, and appearing on The Early Show, The Insider, Dr. Phil, Dr. Drew, The Situation Room, Reliable Sources, The Joy Behar Show, Issues with Jane Velez-Mitchell, and The Stephanie Miller Show. Bloom returned to practicing law in 2010 when she founded the Bloom Firm, a small, general-practice law firm that handles family, civil and criminal matters. She is licensed to practice law in both New York and California.
Bloom is the only child of civil rights attorney Gloria Allred and Peyton Huddleston Bray Jr.
She is licensed to practice law in both New York and California. At the Bloom Firm, Bloom has represented several notable clients, including model and actress Janice Dickinson in her defamation case against comedian Bill Cosby, as well as model and actress Mischa Barton in her revenge porn case.
In 2017 Bloom represented three women accusing then- Fox News anchor Bill O’Reilly of sexual harassment. Jehmu Greene, a television commentator who had appeared on Fox News, also approached Bloom with sexual harassment allegations against O'Reilly, although she ultimately declined Bloom's services. One of Bloom's clients, Wendy Walsh, filed the complaint that led Fox News' parent company, 21st Century Fox, to initiate an investigation that resulted in O'Reilly's dismissal and the end of his eponymous program.
During the 2016 U.S. presidential election, Bloom offered to represent four women who alleged sexual misconduct by then-presidential candidate Donald Trump. Two of these women came forward publicly with their allegations, including Jill Harth and Lisa Boyne, and two who did not, including a woman from Virginia and another woman who claimed Trump had raped her when she was thirteen years old.
In October 2014, Carol Swanson Chitwood (n/k/a Carol Swanson Smith) retained Lisa Bloom and the Bloom Firm to pursue domestic violence claims against her then-husband, Martin Chitwood, a prominent Atlanta attorney, who had sued her for divorce in Atlanta two months earlier.
President Donald Trump has consistently attacked the media for asking questions he doesn't like during his coronavirus press briefings. Trump has berated reporters across multiple news outlets — including NBC, CBS, the Associated Press, and CNN — asking questions about his response to the pandemic. In April, the president was so fed up ...
When Chambers asked about a confusing start to the Paycheck Protection Program, Trump cut her off by saying he wished she asked the question differently by saying that the program got off to "a tremendous start" and that the problems had been worked out.
On April 5 , Trump cut off a reporter in the middle of a question about the slow government response to the coronavirus pandemic, and asked him, "Who are you with?"
On March 20, Trump called NBC News' Peter Alexander a "terrible reporter" for asking what Trump would say to Americans who felt afraid over the virus. —Oliver Darcy (@oliverdarcy) March 20, 2020.
During the April 19 briefing, Diamond asked Trump why he continued to issue "self-congratulating" praise over his handling of the pandemic when more than 40,000 Americans had died from the coronavirus.
Jiang asked Trump to clarify a statement made one day earlier by Kushner, a White House senior adviser and the president's son-in-law, which implied the Strategic National Stockpile was reserved for the federal government rather than states.
Fox News' Kristin Fisher first attempted to ask Trump about the inspector general's report after a survey of hospitals suggested that testing remained severely limited, but Trump dismissed the report as " wrong ."