Trump wants a payout, reportedly up to $230m, for the past ‘persecution’ of his behavior

President Donald Trump said on Wednesday that he owes “a lot of money,” in response to a newspaper report that he wanted $230 million in US damages related to his damage.
The New York Times reported that Trump had filed administrative charges before he was ousted in November, regarding his 2022 knowledge of classified documents between Russia and his 2016 presidential campaign.
The status of the claims and any discussions over them at the justice department were not immediately clear. A spokesperson for the Department of Justice told the media that regardless of the situation, all officials in the Department of Justice follow the guidance of professional ethics officers. “
But Trump, in his response to comments in the oval office on Tuesday, said any decision “has to go across my desk.”
“Ethical conflict is so basic and basic, you don’t need a law professor to explain it,” Bennett Gershman, professor of ethics at Pace University, told the New York Times, calling this situation “interest.”
The latest revelation comes with Democratic confirmation that the Justice Department is helping Trump target political rivals, as three of the critics have recently revealed.
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The New York Times said one of the management’s claims, filed in 2024 and reviewed by the Associated Press, seeks compensatory and punitive damages to search his mar-a-lago estate in August 2022.
His lawyer who filed this claim said that this case ‘this prosecution’ was made by the administration of Joe Baniden to damage Trump’s bid to spend tens of millions of dollars on his defense.
But prosecutors allege that Trump, who was a private citizen at the time, resisted repeated requests to return all of the documents and sought to prevent other documents from being released after the subpoena was issued. Trump faces 37 felony counts, including violations of the Espionage Act, and prosecutors say the documents include 18 classified documents, 54 classified documents and 31 classified documents.
It was one of the four pillars of crime dealing with the expertise that exists between those who are two different things, and Jack Smith was appointed in November 2022 to oversee the case. A Florida judge eventually dismissed the documentary case, but an organized appeal from Smith’s group was interpreted as Trump winning the election last year.
“The idea that politics is going to play a role in major cases like this, it’s completely and utterly contrary to my experience as a prosecutor,” Smith said in a recent, unusual interview, from an unusual, unusual interview, from an unusual, unusual interview.
The New York Times said the other complaint seeks damages related to the concluded Trump-Russia investigation, which continues to impeach the President. Special counsel Robert Mueller said in 2019 that charging Trump was never on the table, but he insisted that the investigation would not take place with the prohibited allegations.
Mueller’s report said that while collusion between members of the Trump campaign and Russian officials was not established, many times Trump associates lied to investigators and some of their Russian contacts. Trump’s campaign also accepted Russia’s efforts to harm Trump’s opponent, Democrat Hillary Clinton.
It repeats the false 2020 election claims
Beyond the two claims, Trump on Tuesday appeared to raise the bar of possible compensation related to “the deception of [2020] election. “
UmAGUNGS, review and assessment of funds in the stages of the war in the states 2020 all the victory of the guaranteed bid. Judges, including some appointees, rejected a number of his legal challenges.
William Barr, Attorney General in 2020 and a staunch defender of Trump, told the media that election after election after election there was no evidence that the majority of the election would have changed the result of fraud that would have changed the result of fraud that would have changed the result of fraud that would have changed the result of fraud that would have changed the result of fraud that would have changed the result. He later told the religious committee that the fraud claims were ‘bullshit.’
John Bolton has pleaded guilty to 18 counts of divulging classified information and, in a written statement, vowed to defend “official malfeasance” and expose us to the power of the president of Donald Trump”.
Nevertheless, a large number of Trump supporters descended on the US Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021, to block the bid winning certificate. Smith, the special counsel, was also overseeing the lawsuit that became Trump’s role in the implementation of that protest, another case against Trump’s 2024 Election victory.
Trump earlier this year pardoned almost everyone accused of participating in the attack, including leaders of armed groups charged with treason.
At least 11 protesters were also arrested, charged or convicted of other crimes including child sexual abuse, plotting the murder of FBI agents and driving under the influence, according to Washington residents. That includes the man who was recently charged with threatening to kill Democratic minority leader Hakeem Jeffries.
Trump first publicly signed his compensation package during a White House appearance last week with Deputy Attorney General Todd, FBI Director Kash Patel and Attorney General Pam Bondi.
“We knew some administrators wanted to pay ‘restitution’ to believers on January 6,” said Adam African Sen. Adam Shift on Social Media Tuesday. “Now the President wants to pay a lot to the one who revived it.”
Schiff, the boss during Trump’s first term in the House of Representatives in late 2019, is reportedly being investigated for securities fraud. Some of Trump’s critics have been exposed in recent weeks: Former FBI director James Attorney Letitia James – and National Security Advisor – and John Bolton, who is accused of mishandling classified documents.
Trump said that if the Department of Justice signed off on the investigation, gave money to the diversion or put it in the renovation of the White House, in the middle of the renovation of the White House, moving forward with the plans to restore the ballroom of the White House.




