Michael Cohen meets with NY prosecutors looking into Trump Org. and Stormy Daniels payments


New York
CNN
 — 

Michael Cohen, the former personal attorney to ex-President Donald Trump, met Tuesday with the Manhattan district attorney’s office, the clearest sign that prosecutors are zeroing in on the Trump Organization’s involvement in hush-money payments made to adult film star Stormy Daniels.

As he arrived at the building Cohen said he was complying with a request to meet with prosecutors.

“Called. Asked to come in. That’s what we’re doing,” he said.

About 90 minutes later, Cohen left with his attorney, Lanny Davis, and said, “The meeting went very well.” He added that prosecutors asked him not to disclose the substance of what was discussed but, Cohen said, “It appears that I’ll probably be meeting with them again.”

Davis said he believed prosecutors were “serious” about the investigation.

Cohen previously met with Manhattan prosecutors 13 times over the course of their sweeping investigation into the Trump Org. Their meeting on Tuesday is the first in more than a year.

The focus of the DA’s investigation has returned to the $130,000 payment made to Daniels to stop her from going public about an affair with Trump just before the 2016 election, people familiar with the matter said. Trump has denied the affair.

The district attorney’s office has also reached out to Keith Davidson, who represented Daniels in the hush money deal, in recent weeks but he has not been scheduled for an interview, a person familiar with the matter said.

Cohen was a key player in the hush-money scheme. He facilitated the payments and was reimbursed by the Trump Org. for advancing the money to Daniels. Cohen pleaded guilty to nine federal charges, including campaign finance violations, and was sentenced to three years in prison.

Prosecutors are also looking into potential insurance fraud after new material came to light from the New York attorney general’s civil investigation into the accuracy of the Trump Organization’s financial statements, the people said.

On Friday, the Trump Organization was sentenced to a $1.6 million fine after it was convicted last month of a running a decade-long tax fraud scheme.

Bragg told CNN on Friday that the sentencing represented the closing of one chapter in the office’s investigation, but they are moving onto the next phase.

“It’ll go as long as the facts and the law require,” Bragg said when asked how much longer the yearslong investigation will continue. “But as I said today, we ended a very important chapter. So, a good part of the year was focused on this very, very consequential chapter and now we move on to the next chapter.”

Bragg inherited an investigation focused on the accuracy of the Trump Organization’s financial statements, but he did not authorize prosecutors to move forward to seek an indictment. At the time, he said when the investigation is over he would either publicly announce charges or that the probe had closed.

This story has been updated with additional details.

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Trump Org. fined $1.6 million for criminal tax fraud

“Our laws in this state need to change in order to capture this type of decade-plus systemic and egregious fraud,” he added. “Nonetheless, this historic sentencing serves, or should serve, as a reminder to all in New York, both companies in their corporate form and their executives, that this type of conduct in New York will not be tolerated and will be held accountable.”

Susan Necheles, an attorney representing the firm, said in court on Friday the company plans to appeal the verdict.

A 12-person jury in December found the Trump Corp. and Trump Payroll Corp., units of the Trump Organization, guilty on 17 counts including criminal tax fraud, conspiracy and falsifying business records. The fines imposed Friday totaled the maximum penalty for each of the counts. The company has 14 days to pay the fines.

“It is interesting that the Trump Corporation once again distances the corporation from the acts of the other individuals,” Judge Juan Merchan said Friday, following statements from the prosecution and defense attorneys. “These are arguments that were made throughout the trial, it’s not what the evidence has shown and it’s certainly not what the jury found.”

Prosecutors said the Trump Organization criminally evaded taxes by concealing compensation to top executives in the form of perks like luxury cars and free lodging, while suppressing its payroll costs with lower reported salaries.

The company’s former Chief Financial Officer Allen Weisselberg, who became the star witness in the case against the Trump Organization, was sentenced earlier this week to five months in jail and five years of probation. Weisselberg was the biggest personal beneficiary of the tax scheme, according to prosecutors, and he testified that he received $1.76 million in off-the-books compensation.

Necheles, the attorney for the Trump Organization, said her appeal of the December verdict would be based on the company’s position that the perks didn’t impact the firm, just its employees.

“We disagree with the people’s contention that this was done with an intent to benefit the Trump Corporation,” she said, adding that the conduct was limited to individuals including Weisselberg.

When Trump vowed to appeal last month, he said in a statement that the verdict was “a continuation of the Greatest Political Witch Hunt in the History of our Country.”

“New York City is a hard place to be ‘Trump,’ as businesses and people flee our once Great City!” he said.

Bragg on Friday said the “conviction was consequential” because it was “the first time ever for criminal conviction of former President Trump’s companies.”

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Stock futures fall as earnings season continues

A trader works on the trading floor at the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) in New York, August 3, 2022.

Andrew Kelly | Reuters

U.S. stock futures were lower on Tuesday night.

Futures tied to the Dow Jones Industrial Average fell by 77 points, or 0.23%. S&P 500 and Nasdaq 100 futures dipped 0.23% and 0.26%, respectively.

Shares of United Airlines rose more than 1% in extended trading after the company beat Wall Street’s estimates in the latest quarter, propelled by strong travel demand.

Meanwhile, shares of Moderna jumped more than 6% in extended trading after the pharmaceutical company said its vaccine targeting respiratory syncytial virus can prevent the disease in older adults.

During the regular session Tuesday, the Dow declined about 391 points, or 1.14%. Shares of Goldman Sachs tumbled —and dragged on the 30-stock index — after the bank posted an earnings miss. The S&P 500 dipped 0.20%. Meanwhile, the tech-heavy Nasdaq Composite was the only one among the major averages to buck the trend, rising 0.14%.

Those moves follow earnings results from big banks that suggested diverging paths ahead even for names within the same sector. Goldman Sachs’ shares fell more than 6% following a drop in investment banking and asset management revenues. Meanwhile, Morgan Stanley gained 5.9%, boosted by better-than-expected wealth management revenue.

“This is a really pivotal earnings season to find out whether or not companies can weather the storm and how long they can weather it for,” SoFi’s Liz Young said Tuesday on CNBC’s “Closing Bell: Overtime.”

“I still think we’re in a space where the market tends to rally on bad news. And it’s expecting that that means that the Fed will slow down, the Fed will pause, the Fed will pivot, the Fed stops sooner than they say they will. And I think we’re over indexing at this point to the Fed. It’s no longer just about the Fed,” Young added.

Traders are anticipating a slew of economic reports Wednesday, including the latest data for the producer price index and retail sales.

Economists polled by the Dow Jones are expecting the producer price index to have declined 0.1% in December, compared to a 0.3% rise the previous month.

Meanwhile, retail sales in December are expected to dip 1%, according to consensus estimates. The prior reading showed a decline of 0.6%.

Corporate earnings season will continue with earnings from J.B. Hunt Transport Services, Charles Schwab, PNC Financial Services Group and Discover on deck for Wednesday.

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Karine Jean-Pierre shredded after dodges on Biden classified documents: 'Not qualified for this job''

White House press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre was lambasted for her latest press conference where she tried to avoid answering questions about President Biden’s purported mishandling of classified documents.

One reporter grilled Jean-Pierre about documents being found at his Delaware home, asking if more searches are underway.

“We have addressed multiple questions from here. Multiple questions have been answered by the president,” Jean-Pierre responded. “I’m just going to continue to be prudent here. I’m going to let this ongoing review that is happening, this legal process that is happening, and let that process continue under the special counsel.”

“I’m not going to comment from here,” she added, saying the Biden administration has made a habit of staying quiet on Justice Department matters.

WH PRESS SECRETARY GRILLED ON CLASSIFIED DOCUMENTS SEARCH

WASHINGTON, DC - JANUARY 12: White House Press Secretary Karine Jean-Pierre speaks during a press briefing at the White House on January 12, 2023 in Washington, DC. Jean-Pierre spoke on the classified documents found at President Biden's home in Wilmington, Delaware. (Photo by Kevin Dietsch/Getty Images) 

WASHINGTON, DC – JANUARY 12: White House Press Secretary Karine Jean-Pierre speaks during a press briefing at the White House on January 12, 2023 in Washington, DC. Jean-Pierre spoke on the classified documents found at President Biden’s home in Wilmington, Delaware. (Photo by Kevin Dietsch/Getty Images) 
(Kevin Dietsch/Getty Images)

Following the presser, Fox News contributor Joe Concha said the Biden classified documents scandal has exposed Jean-Pierre as not being fit for her role.

“Karine Jean-Pierre has shown that she is not qualified for this job at this level. We’ve seen that now over the last couple of months, because she keeps saying over and over again — as if she’s almost programmed, like she has no ability to think extemporaneously — that the president ‘takes these documents very seriously’,” he said Tuesday on “The Story.”

“In one press conference, she’s literally said that line 17 times. And at the same time, she talks about how transparent the administration has been with the public – while not answering questions.”

Of the lack of official visitor logs for Biden’s Greenville, Del. estate and his Rehoboth Beach, Del., vacation home, Concha said Rehoboth isn’t supposed to be a “Jersey Shore beach house rented out by 20-somethings” but instead a frequent domicile of the president.

PRESIDENT BIDEN IGNORES QUESTION ON WHY CLASSIFIED DOCUMENTS WERE FOUND AT HIS THINK TANK

“You’re telling me there isn’t one person that took a log of who was going in and out to see the sitting president of the United States? I have a very hard time believing that,” he said.

Borrowing a critique of President Richard Nixon’s Watergate scandal, Concha concluded that the issue is often “not the crime – it’s the cover-up.”

He also questioned reports about Hunter Biden, reportedly listing his father’s private residence as his address on his own residency forms, given the allegations about his foreign business dealings.

Former New York federal prosecutor Andrew McCarthy agreed that Jean-Pierre has not helped the president’s situation, telling “The Story” that every time the press secretary speaks, “she’s actually making [the situation] worse.”

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“Biden’s first thing was, I don’t know how they got there. Right. Well, he knows they’re there now. And what is their arrangement? They’re having people who don’t have security clearances do the search,” McCarthy said.

McCarthy questioned what intermediate steps there were in the handling of the classified documents between the end of the Obama-Biden administration and late 2022 when they were found in locations tied to Biden in New Castle County, Del., and Washington, D.C.

Fox News’ Anders Hagstrom contributed to this report.

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What we know about ex-GOP candidate arrested in connection with shootings at homes of New Mexico Democrats



CNN
 — 

An unsuccessful Republican candidate for state office in New Mexico who attributed his defeat to a “rigged” election is accused of masterminding a series of shootings targeting the homes of elected Democrats.

Solomon Peña, who lost his 2022 run for state House District 14, was arrested Monday by Albuquerque police for allegedly paying and conspiring with four men to shoot at the homes of two state legislators and two county commissioners in December and January, authorities said. No one was injured but investigators said Peña intended to cause serious injury or death.

Gunshots were fired into the homes of Bernalillo County Commissioner Adriann Barboa on December 4; incoming state House Speaker Javier Martinez on December 8; then-Bernalillo Commissioner Debbie O’Malley on December 11; and state Sen. Linda Lopez on January 3, according to police.

CNN has reached out to Peña’s campaign website for comment and has been unable to identify his attorney.

Here’s what we know about Peña:

After losing the November election and before the recent shootings, Peña approached a legislator and some county commissioners at their homes, uninvited, with paperwork he claimed showed fraud was committed in the vote, according to police.

Barboa was one of those officials. Shots were later fired at her home on December 4, police said.

“He came to my house after the election. … He was saying that the elections were fake … really speaking erratically. I didn’t feel threatened at the time, but I did feel like he was erratic,” Barboa told “CNN This Morning” on Tuesday.

Peña lost his race to Democratic state Rep. Miguel Garcia 26% to 74%. A week later he tweeted he “never conceded” the race and was researching his options.

In the mid-November tweet, Peña mentioned former President Donald Trump, whose falsehoods about election results, principally among Republicans and usually without proof, have exploded nationwide since he lost his reelection bid and began propagating lies about the theft of the 2020 presidential election.

The false claims of electoral fraud have stoked anger – and unapologetic threats of violence – against public officials down to the local level.

“Trump just announced for 2024,” Peña tweeted. “I stand with him.”

On December 12, Peña responded to a tweet posted by current House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries, a Democrat, who wrote, “Violent insurrectionists and extreme MAGA republicans are melting down over repeated election losses. So they accuse Dems of undermining democracy. Get lost.”

“I disagree,” Peña tweeted. “New Mexico elections are absolutely rigged. And we will pursue justice.”

On January 2 and again on January 9, Peña reiterated his election denial and fraud claims, tweeting that he “will fight it until the day I die” and vowing “MAGA nation 4ever!”

Peña faces charges stemming from the four separate shootings.

On December 4, shots were fired at Barboa’s home.

Barboa said she discovered evidence of the gunshots after returning from Christmas shopping.

“It was terrifying. My house had four shots through the front door and windows, where just hours before my grandbaby and I were playing in the living room,” Barboa said in a statement.

“Processing this attack continues to be incredibly heavy, especially knowing that other women and people of color elected officials, with children and grandbabies, were targeted.”

Barboa said she is grateful for an arrest in the case, she told “CNN This Morning” on Tuesday.

“I’m relieved to hear that people won’t be targeted in this way by him any longer,” she said.

On December 8, a shooting was reported at the home of Martinez.

“I deeply appreciate our Albuquerque Police Department for their hard work throughout the investigation into these shootings targeting elected officials. I am grateful a suspect is in custody, and I trust our justice system will hold those responsible accountable,” Martinez said in a statement.

“We have seen far too much political violence lately and all of these events are powerful reminders that stirring up fear, heightening tensions, and stoking hatred can have devastating consequences.”

O’Malley’s home was targeted on December 11.

“I am very relieved – and so is my family. I’m very appreciative of the work the police did,” O’Malley told CNN on Monday evening.

O’Malley and her husband were asleep when more than a dozen shots were fired at her home in Albuquerque on December 11, she said.

O’Malley called the police to say the adobe fencing at her home had been damaged by gunfire. While police were investigating, O’Malley mentioned Peña had come to her home a day or two before the incident complaining about the recent election results, the affidavit said.

Ring doorbell camera video shows Peña looking for Debbie O'Malley at an address where she used to live.

Ring doorbell camera footage recorded at O’Malley’s previous residence and obtained by CNN showed Peña outside the door and knocking, holding documents in his hands.

The current resident spoke to him through the camera’s speaker feature, telling him O’Malley no longer lived at that residence and directing him to her new home.

On January 3, Lopez’s home was hit, according to police. At least eight shots were fired at the southwest Albuquerque residence. Police said Peña pulled the trigger on one of the firearms.

“Myself and my children were awakened by some loud noises. Initially, I thought they were fireworks,” Lopez told CNN affiliate KOAT. “It’s very scary. You know, as a mom, it’s something you never want to experience.”

Three shots entered her daughter’s bedroom and two were fired into Lopez’s bedroom, KOAT reported.

Lopez told police she “heard loud bangs but dismissed them as fireworks at the time,” according to the arrest warrant affidavit for Peña.

Lopez’s daughter thought a spider was crawling on her face and sand was in her bed, the state senator told police. Officers found “sheetrock dust was blown onto Linda’s daughter’s face and bed resulting from firearm projectile(s) passing inside her bedroom overhead,” according to the affidavit.

Investigators found evidence “Peña himself went on this shooting and actually pulled the trigger on at least one of the firearms that was used,” Albuquerque police Deputy Cmdr. Kyle Hartsock said.

Albuquerque police released a photo of a "tan and black Glock with a drum magazine" that the affidavit said matches one of the guns seized from the suspect during a traffic stop.

But an AR handgun he tried to use malfunctioned. More than a dozen rounds were fired by another shooter with a separate handgun, according to police.

Shell casings at Lopez’s home matched a handgun confiscated from a silver Nissan Maxima involved in a traffic stop about 40 minutes after the shooting and about 4 miles from the residence, police said.

The Maxima was registered to Peña, though Peña was not driving it when it was stopped, police said.

During the fall campaign, Peña’s opponent, Democratic state Rep. Miguel Garcia, sued to have Peña removed from the ballot, arguing Peña’s status as an ex-felon should have prevented him from running for public office in the state, CNN affiliate KOAT reported.

Peña served nearly seven years in prison after a 2008 conviction for stealing a large volume of goods in a “smash and grab scheme,” the KOAT report said.

“You can’t hide from your own history,” Peña told the outlet in September. “I had nothing more than a desire to improve my lot in life.”

The Second Judicial District Court in Bernalillo County in September cleared Peña to run for office partly because the state constitution allows a felon to vote.

“In other words, our State Constitution provides that if a convicted felon is qualified to vote by satisfying any statutory requirements to be able to vote, that person is also qualified to hold public office,” court documents said.

Peña was arrested by Albuquerque police on Monday.

“It is believed he is the mastermind” behind the shootings, Albuquerque Police Chief Harold Medina told reporters, referring to the suspect.

An investigation confirmed “these shootings were indeed politically motivated,” Albuquerque Mayor Tim Keller said Monday.

“At the end of the day, this was about a right-wing radical, an election denier who was arrested today and someone who did the worst imaginable thing you can do when you have a political disagreement, which is turn that to violence,” said Keller, a Democrat. “We know we don’t always agree with our elected officials, but that should never, ever lead to violence.”

Police are still investigating whether those suspected of carrying out the shootings were “even aware of who these targets were or if they were just conducting shootings,” according to Hartsock.

Firearm evidence, surveillance video, cell phone and electronic records and witnesses in and around the conspiracy aided the investigation and helped officials connect five people to the alleged conspiracy, Hartsock said.

“After the election in November, Solomon Peña reached out and contracted someone for an amount of cash money to commit at least two of these shootings. The addresses of the shootings were communicated over phone,” Hartsock said Monday, citing the investigation. “Within hours, in one case, the shooting took place at the lawmaker’s home.”

Detectives served search warrants Monday at Peña’s apartment and the home of two men allegedly paid by Peña, according to police.

“Solomon provided firearms and cash payments and personally participated in at least one shooting,” the arrest affidavit said. “Solomon intended to (cause) serious injury or cause death to occupants inside their homes.”

Officers arrested Peña on suspicion of “helping orchestrate and participate in these four shootings, either at his request or he conducted them personally, himself,” Hartsock added.

Peña is being held on preliminary charges of felon in possession of a firearm; attempted aggravated battery with a deadly weapon; criminal solicitation; and four counts each of shooting at an occupied dwelling, shooting at or from a motor vehicle, and conspiracy, according to a warrant.

Police said last week they had a suspect in custody and had obtained a firearm connected to one of the shootings. A car driven at one of the shooting scenes was registered to Peña, according to police.

Charges are expected to be filed against the other men who participated in the shootings, police said.

One conspirator initially instructed shooters “to aim above the windows to avoid striking anyone inside,” the affidavit said, citing a confidential witness with knowledge of the alleged conspiracy.

But Peña eventually wanted the shooters to be “more aggressive,” according to the affidavit, citing the confidential witness.

Peña “wanted them to aim lower and shoot around 8 p.m. because occupants would more likely not be laying down,” said the affidavit, citing the confidential witness.


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Aaron Rodgers says he can win MVP again, but perhaps not with Packers

After taking home back-to-back MVP awards the last two seasons, Aaron Rodgers missed out on the playoffs in 2022.

However, the Green Bay Packers quarterback still has high hopes for himself. The four-time MVP says he can add to his hardware collection.

“Do I still think I can play? Of course. Can I play at a high level? Yeah. The highest,” Rodgers said during his weekly spot on “The Pat McAfee Show.” “I think I can win MVP again in the right situation.”

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Green Bay Packers quarterback Aaron Rodgers waves to fans as he leaves the field following a game against the Los Angeles Rams in Green Bay, Wis. Dec. 19, 2022. 

Green Bay Packers quarterback Aaron Rodgers waves to fans as he leaves the field following a game against the Los Angeles Rams in Green Bay, Wis. Dec. 19, 2022. 
(AP Photo/Morry Gash)

However, Rodgers did note that his current situation with the Packers may not give him that opportunity.

“Right situation — is that Green Bay or is that somewhere else? I’m not sure,” Rodgers added. 

Rodgers and the Packers’ front office have had some tumultuous drama over the past few offseasons. Green Bay selected quarterback Jordan Love in the first round of the 2020 NFL Draft, and after the 2021 season, there was legitimate conversation of the future Hall of Famer leaving Green Bay before they eventually agreed on a three-year extension worth over $150 million.

Now, after an 8-9 season in which the Packers missed a playoff appearance with a Week 18 loss to the Detroit Lions, Rodgers’ immediate future in Wisconsin is once again in doubt.

Green Bay Packers quarterback Aaron Rodgers (12) passes during the first half of a game against the Miami Dolphins, Sunday, Dec. 25, 2022, in Miami Gardens, Fla.

Green Bay Packers quarterback Aaron Rodgers (12) passes during the first half of a game against the Miami Dolphins, Sunday, Dec. 25, 2022, in Miami Gardens, Fla.
(AP Photo/Jim Rassol)

MOTHER OF ANTONIO BROWN’S CHILDREN RIPS SNAPCHAT FOR ALLOWING HIM TO POST EXPLICIT PHOTOS OF HER

“Look, I think you have a feeling where you are leaning, but there’s a lot of things that come into play,” he said. “I think just some on my side, it’s the physical part, it’s the emotional part, it’s the spiritual part. It’s the ability to go back out there and give it 100 percent. It’s also the situation and where the team is at and the focus moving forward, short term, long term. 

“Then it comes down to intuition and what it feels like in your body and what it feels like in your mind. Once you commit, then you commit. You move forward, whatever the decision is, so you know. I just need some time right now. I don’t need to ask anybody to respect my time or whatever. That’s going to be the answer until I’m ready, and when I’m ready to give my opinion like I was last year, I’m either all in or I’m out. …

Aaron Rodgers of the Green Bay Packers looks to throw a pass against the Tennessee Titans during the first quarter in a game at Lambeau Field Nov. 17, 2022, in Green Bay, Wis. 

Aaron Rodgers of the Green Bay Packers looks to throw a pass against the Tennessee Titans during the first quarter in a game at Lambeau Field Nov. 17, 2022, in Green Bay, Wis. 
(Patrick McDermott/Getty Images)

BUCS’ RUSSELL GAGE JR. HAS MOVEMENT IN ALL EXTREMITIES AFTER SCARY HIT, REMAINS HOSPITALIZED, TEAM SAYS

“But I don’t think you should shut down any opportunity. But, like I said during the season, it’s got to be both sides actually wanting to work together moving forward.”

The Packers traded Davante Adams to the Las Vegas Raiders in March, and he had a third-straight first-team All-Pro campaign. His absence was clearly felt, but rookie Christian Watson burst onto the scene late in the season. In his final eight games, the North Dakota State product scored eight touchdowns while catching 31 passes for 523 yards. He eclipsed 100 receiving yards three times in that span.

Green Bay Packers quarterback Aaron Rodgers (12) passes against the San Francisco 49ers during the first half of a game in Santa Clara, Calif., Sept. 26, 2021. 

Green Bay Packers quarterback Aaron Rodgers (12) passes against the San Francisco 49ers during the first half of a game in Santa Clara, Calif., Sept. 26, 2021. 
(AP Photo/Tony Avelar)

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Rodgers turned 39 on Dec. 2. He has two years remaining on his deal.

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Dick Cheney Fast Facts



CNN
 — 

Here’s a look at the life of Dick Cheney, the 46th vice president of the United States.

Birth date: January 30, 1941

Birth place: Lincoln, Nebraska

Birth name: Richard Bruce Cheney

Father: Richard Herbert Cheney, worked for the Department of Agriculture

Mother: Marjorie Lorraine (Dickey) Cheney

Marriage: Lynne Ann (Vincent) Cheney (August 29,1964-present)

Children: Mary and Elizabeth

Education: Attended Yale University, 1959-1960; Attended Casper College, 1963; University of Wyoming, B.A. in political science, 1965; University of Wyoming, M.A. in political science, 1966; Attended University of Wisconsin as a Ph.D. candidate, 1968, did not finish

Religion: Methodist

When Cheney was 13, his family moved to Casper, Wyoming, where his father worked for the US Soil Conservation Service.

Cheney was co-captain of the Natrona High School football team and senior class president. Lynne Vincent, his future wife, was the homecoming queen.

Has had at least five heart attacks since 1978.

His younger daughter, Mary, is openly gay. Cheney has said in the past that he supports same-sex marriage, but regulations should be handled at the state level.

His oldest daughter, Liz, is a US Representative from Wyoming.

1966 – Drops out of the doctoral program at the University of Wisconsin to work as staff aide for Governor Warren Knowles.

1968 – Cheney is awarded an American Political Science Association congressional fellowship with Congressman William Steiger and moves to Washington, DC.

1969 – Assigned to work for Donald Rumsfeld, director of the Office of Economic Opportunity in President Richard Nixon’s administration. Rumsfeld appoints Cheney to the position of special assistant.

1970 – Rumsfeld becomes a White House counselor. Cheney becomes his deputy.

1971-1973 – Assistant director of the Cost of Living Council.

1973 – Rumsfeld asks Cheney to join him in Brussels, Belgium, when Nixon appoints Rumsfeld ambassador to NATO. Cheney declines and instead accepts a post as vice president at Bradley, Woods and Company, a Washington, DC, investment firm that counsels corporate clients on politics and federal policy.

August 1974 – Gerald Ford succeeds President Nixon and appoints Rumsfeld to head his transition team. Rumsfeld recruits Cheney to serve as his deputy.

September 1974 – Named deputy assistant to the president.

November 5, 1975-1977 – White House chief of staff.

June 18, 1978 – Has a heart attack.

January 3, 1979-March 17, 1989 – US Representative from Wyoming. Is reelected five times.

1981-1987 – Chairman of the House Republican Policy Committee.

1984 – Has a second heart attack.

1987 – Elected chairman of the House Republican Conference.

1988 – Becomes House minority whip.

1988 – Has a third heart attack and undergoes quadruple bypass surgery.

March 1989 – President George H.W. Bush nominates Cheney for secretary of defense after John Tower’s nomination for the position fails to win Senate confirmation.

1989-1993 – Serves as secretary of defense. He directs two military campaigns during this time: Operation Just Cause in Panama and Operation Desert Storm in the Middle East.

July 3, 1991 – Awarded the Presidential Medal of Freedom by President Bush for his leadership during the Gulf War.

March 1992 – Cheney and other current and former congressmen are named in a scandal involving overdrafts at the House bank. Cheney later acknowledges the overdrafts. The House Ethics Committee, formerly the House Committee on Standards of Official Conduct, offers recommendations that stop short of a formal inquiry. (The bank of the Sergeant-at-Arms of the House of Representatives ceased all banking activities at the end of 1991.)

1995 – Becomes chairman and CEO of Halliburton, an engineering and construction company for the petroleum industry.

March 2000 – Asked by George W. Bush to be his running mate. Cheney declines, instead accepting a position vetting potential vice presidential candidates. He accepts in July when Bush asks again.

November 22, 2000 – Cheney checks himself into a hospital with chest pains. Doctors say he had a mild heart attack and insert a stent to open an artery.

December 12, 2000 – The US Supreme Court reverses a Florida Supreme Court decision ordering a recount of thousands of votes – effectively ceding the presidency to Bush and Cheney.

2001-2009 – Serves as vice president of the United States.

March 5, 2001 – Cheney checks himself into George Washington University Hospital with chest pains. He undergoes angioplasty to reopen the artery treated in November 2000. It is determined he did not suffer a heart attack on this occasion.

June 30, 2001 – Doctors insert a “pacemaker-plus” device to monitor Cheney’s heart rhythm and slow it down if it becomes irregular.

November 2, 2004 – Bush and Cheney are reelected.

September 24, 2005 – Undergoes surgery at George Washington University Hospital for an arterial aneurysm behind his right knee. A similar procedure will be performed on an aneurysm in an artery behind the left knee at a later date.

December 18, 2005 – Makes a surprise visit to troops in Iraq. It is his first trip to the country since 1991.

February 11, 2006 – During a quail hunting trip in Texas, Cheney accidentally shoots and wounds his hunting companion, Harry Whittington.

July 13, 2006 – Cheney, along with Karl Rove, Scooter Libby, and a number of unnamed defendants, are named in a federal civil lawsuit by Valerie Plame and Joseph Wilson. The suit contends Plame was the victim of intentional and malicious exposure, and that both she and Wilson “suffered a violation of rights guaranteed them under the United States Constitution and the laws of the District of Columbia.” The lawsuit is later dismissed.

March 5, 2007 – Doctors at George Washington University Hospital find a blood clot in Cheney’s lower left leg.

July 28, 2007 – Cheney has the battery replaced in his heart defibrillator.

November 26, 2007 – He is diagnosed with atrial fibrillation (an irregular heartbeat), after he visits his doctor complaining of a lingering cough. He undergoes a routine heart procedure intended to shock the heart back into normal rhythm.

September 17, 2009 – Undergoes elective back surgery to deal with pain caused from a case of lumbar spinal stenosis.

February 22, 2010 – Cheney is hospitalized at George Washington University Hospital after experiencing chest pains. It is determined Cheney suffered a mild heart attack.

August 2011 – On a tour to promote the release of his upcoming memoir “In My Time,” Cheney criticizes former Bush administration officials Condoleezza Rice, Colin Powell and George Tenet.

March 24, 2012 – His office says he is recovering after undergoing successful heart transplant surgery.

2013 – The medical memoir “Heart: An American Medical Odyssey,” co-written by Dick Cheney and Dr. Jonathan Reiner, is published.

December 3, 2015 – A bust of Cheney is unveiled at the US Capitol.

January 3, 2017 – Attends the swearing-in ceremony of daughter Liz Cheney. In November, she won the Wyoming congressional seat once held by her father.

March 27, 2017 – Says that alleged Russian meddling in the 2016 election could be considered an “act of war” during a speech at an economic forum in India. He also declares that he believes the Russian efforts were directed by President Vladimir Putin.

December 25, 2018 – The movie titled “Vice,” starring Christian Bale as Cheney, opens in US theaters.

January 6, 2022 – Cheney and his daughter Rep. Liz Cheney are the only Republicans on the House floor during a remembrance of the January 6th riot. Later, he makes a statement saying he is “deeply disappointed at the failure of many members of my party to recognize the grave nature of the January 6 attacks and the ongoing threat to our nation.”

August 4, 2022 – Cheney appears in a new campaign ad for his daughter, Rep. Liz Cheney. In the ad he criticizes former President Trump as a “threat to our republic” and a “coward.”

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Murders are becoming even more concentrated in a handful of urban counties, report shows

Murders in the U.S. are becoming increasingly concentrated in densely populated urban centers in just a handful of counties, according to a newly released report.

Some 73% of all murders in the U.S. took place in just 5% of counties while 52% of all counties reported no murders at all, according to a Crime Prevention Research Center study published this week and provided to Fox News Digital.

“Murders in the United States occur in very small areas, and that concentration has increased since 2014,” the study stated. “The concentration in 2020 is now greater than in 2010.”

The report comes as a violent crime wave that ballooned in 2020 still rages in some parts of the country.

“Murder isn’t a nationwide problem,” the study found. “It’s a problem in a small set of urban areas and even in those counties murders are concentrated in small areas inside them, and any solution must reduce those murders.”

MASSIVE INCREASE IN BLACK AMERICANS MURDERED WAS RESULT OF DEFUND POLICE MOVEMENT: EXPERTS

A graph created by the Crime Prevention Research Center shows "how few counties have a significant number of murders."

A graph created by the Crime Prevention Research Center shows “how few counties have a significant number of murders.”
(Crime Prevention Research Center)

Murders spiked in 2020 as COVID-19 lockdowns upended daily life and protests and riots swept the nation following the killing of George Floyd during an interaction with Minneapolis police. Murders increased by nearly 30% in 2020 compared to the prior year, marking the largest single-year increase in killings since the FBI began tracking such crimes.

The center, led by founder John Lott, divided counties into three different groups based on the amount of murders recorded: a majority of counties that experience no murder; a smaller group of counties that see low murder rates; and a “tiny set of counties where murders are very common.”

The 52% of counties with no reported murders covered 10% of the population, the study said. Some 68% of counties did not exceed one murder in 2020, which accounts for 2.6% of all murders in 2020, according to the report.

Most murders took place in the “worst” 5% of counties that year while the worst 1% — only 31 counties — recorded 42% of the murders in 2020, the study said. That area is where 21% of the entire U.S. population lives.

“The worst 2% of counties (62 counties) contain 31% of the population and 56% of the murders. The worst 5% of counties contain 47% of the population and account for 73% of murders. But even within those counties, the murders are very heavily concentrated in small areas,” the report continued.

A graph created by the Crime Prevention Research Center shows the percentage of murders in the "worst" U.S. counties in 2020.

A graph created by the Crime Prevention Research Center shows the percentage of murders in the “worst” U.S. counties in 2020.
(Crime Prevention Research Center)

Illinois’ Cook County, home to Chicago and about 40% of the state’s population, had the highest amount of recorded murders of any location in 2020 with a whopping 775, according to the report.

ONE OUT OF EVERY 179 AMERICANS WILL EVENTUALLY BE MURDERED IF CRIME RATE CONTINUES, STUDY FINDS

Cook County was followed by:

  • Los Angeles County, 691 murders
  • Harris County, Texas, 537 murders
  • Philadelphia County, 495 murders
  • New York City’s five counties, a combined 465 murders
  • Wayne County, Michigan, 379 murders
  • Shelby County, Tennessee, 311 murders
  • Maricopa County, Arizona, 299 murders
  • Baltimore City county, 291 murders
  • Dallas County, 281 murders
  • Marion County, Indiana, 234 murders
Map created by the Crime Prevention Research Center shows where murders are concentrated in the U.S.

Map created by the Crime Prevention Research Center shows where murders are concentrated in the U.S.
(Crime Prevention Research Center)

The data was compiled through the FBI’s 2020 Supplementary Homicide Report, according to the center. Though not all states reported such data that year, or underreported data, researchers also used states’ open crime data as a substitution.

The study found that within the counties themselves, murders and other violent crimes are also concentrated in certain areas, and the study pointed to Los Angeles County zip codes as examples.

In L.A. County, the worst 10% of zip codes reported 41% of the murders, the worst 20% of zip codes accounted for 67% of the murders, and the worst 30% at 82% of murders.

Members of the forensics team gather evidence at the scene of a fatal shooting in Long Beach, California.

Members of the forensics team gather evidence at the scene of a fatal shooting in Long Beach, California.
(Brittany Murray/MediaNews Group/Long Beach Press-Telegram via Getty Images/File)

US MURDER RATE CONTINUED GRIM CLIMB IN 2021, NEW FBI ESTIMATES SHOW

The data show murders have become more concentrated since 2010. The country’s most dangerous 5% of counties accounted for 71% of U.S. murders in 2010, which fell to 69% in 2014 but jumped to 73% in 2020.

Chicago police officer investigates a crime scene of a gunshot victim in Chicago.

Chicago police officer investigates a crime scene of a gunshot victim in Chicago.
(Reuters/File)

“Between 2010 and 2014, the percentage of murders in the worst 5% of the counties fell from 71% to 69%,” the report found.

“But between 2014 and 2020, they had consistently climbed back by four percentage points, so murders were even more concentrated than in 2010,” it said. “The one percent of worst counties drove that increase. The share of murders in these worst counties rose over this period, but there was no change in these counties’ populations.”

AFTER 2020’S RECORD BLOODY YEAR, LARGE CITIES ACROSS THE NATION STILL FACE SKY-HIGH MURDER RATES 2 YEARS LATER

The murder spike of 2020 has been attributed to a handful of variables, according to experts who previously spoke to Fox News Digital, including: anti-police rhetoric voiced by Black Lives Matter and defund the police proponents; the pandemic; a culture of lawlessness promoted by liberal district attorneys; and the “Ferguson effect” — when police pull back, violent crimes spike.

CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP

Some urban areas across the country have continued seeing violent crime spikes, including New Orleans, Philadelphia, Milwaukee and Portland.

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When should I sell my mutual funds?

When is the best time to get out of a mutual fund?

After a recent stock market dip, Ian Bloom, a financial planner in North Carolina got a panicked call from a VIP client: his mom.

“I have to sell everything!” she told him.

He assured her, as he does all his clients, that if she did she would lose much more than she would gain, because they had created a financial plan that already accounted for market sell-offs.

wealth-coach-card

Now would come the hard part: sticking to it.

Fluctuations in the market can leave investors looking at their mutual funds with disdain. They may feel their money could work harder elsewhere.

That may be true. There are situations in which selling mutual fund shares works to your advantage. But you could also encounter adverse consequences.

The time to sell a mutual fund is when you need the liquidity and you have planned ahead to make the move, says Eric Gabor, certified financial planner and founder of Eagle Grove Advisors.

“Any kind of decline in the market or reaction to a geo-political event is not the time to sell,” he said.

Individual investors should only sell funds when their situation calls for a need to make a change, says Amy Hubble, a certified financial planner and principal investment adviser at Radix Financial. Investors may need cash, she says, or need to reduce risk as a need for cash draws nearer.

“Or maybe your target allocation to that asset class has grown outside its tolerance compared to the rest of the portfolio,” says Hubble. “For example, you had a strategic allocation of 10% and it’s now 17% of your portfolio.”

But it can be hard for investors to remember that they need to sit on their hands when they hear bad news.

It’s not uncommon for a novice investor to want to sell their investments when they see declines in the market, says Leah Hadley, a certified divorce financial analyst and chief executive of Great Lakes Investment Management. “That’s why we work with clients to determine an appropriate level of liquidity so that there is less temptation to sell when the market is down.”

Keep in mind that your mutual funds might include more than just US stocks, says Bloom, head of Open World Financial Life Planning.

“Your portfolio will include funds that include different parts of the market,” he says. “Sure there’s the S&P, but there might also be bonds, international and emerging markets. When the market goes down, no one is talking about the other parts, the international investments, the bonds. The part that stands out is the part that is in the red: the S&P.”

While your plan is to stick with your strategy for the duration of your timeline, there are mutual fund red flags that could merit a change.

“I will consider making a change in portfolios if there has been a change in the fund’s strategy and it no longer makes sense in my overall strategy with the client,” says Hadley. “I will also sell out of a mutual fund that is consistently under-performing the relevant benchmark.”

Gabor recommends watching the fund manager, too. “If a manger leaves a fund they have managed for many years and a new successor is named, that may be a time to re-evaluate how it fits into your portfolio.”

He adds that investors should also be on the lookout for tax inefficient funds.

“You could get out if there are large inverse tax consequences,” says Gabor. “That’s why I like tax-managed mutual funds, and exchange traded funds.”

Watch out for high turnover ratios, says Hubble, like those over 25% per year. “Funds with high turnover ratios mean the fund is managed tax inefficiently and you’re likely to receive unannounced short-term capital gain distributions at the end of the year, which have high tax costs.”

Another red flag is high expense ratios. “This is the most important number to look at in a fund,” says Hubble. “Do not pay managers more than 1% to underperform the market half the time in long-term savings accounts. Do yourself a favor and for long-term money, skip the active managers altogether and invest in low-cost index funds.”

If an investor does decide to liquidate the fund, keep an eye on your tax liability.

“If the investor has held the fund for a less than a year, all capital gains will be taxed at their income level,” says Timothy Kenney, a certified financial planner and founder of TK Pacific Wealth. “If they have held the fund for greater than a year, they can get a little break in the capital gains tax, maybe 5% or 20% depending on your tax bracket, but they may have a big tax bill to pay next year since we’ve been in a bull market for so long.”

If you have a fund you are looking to sell and it happens to be at a loss, Kenney suggests paying attention to the capital gains distribution.

Funds tend to pay capital gains toward the end of the year, and by selling before the distribution you avoid getting hit with the tax.

Have an investing question? Ask us here to be included in a future column.

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Jonathan Turley: Biden's lawyers 'likely witnesses in a criminal investigation'

FIRST ON FOX: George Washington University (GWU) law professor Jonathan Turley says that President Joe Biden’s lawyers are “likely witnesses in a criminal investigation” as the probe into Biden’s handling of classified documents continues.

Two stashes of classified documents from Biden’s time as vice president were found in the Penn Biden Center in Washington, D.C., as well as at the president’s Wilmington, Delaware, house in the garage by his Corvette, spiraling the White House into an ongoing scandal after five more classified documents were discovered at his Wilmington home over the weekend.

Turley told Fox News Digital that we “do not know what the evidence will show” and that the “most serious discovery would be evidence that Biden worked off their documents or removed them from their classification folders.”

NO VISITOR LOGS EXIST FOR BIDEN’S WILMINGTON HOME, SITE OF CLASSFIED DOC DISCOVERY, WH COUNSEL’S OFFICE SAYS

George Washington University law professor Jonathan Turley warned that President Biden’s lawyers are "likely witnesses in a criminal investigation" as GarageGate continues to develop.

George Washington University law professor Jonathan Turley warned that President Biden’s lawyers are “likely witnesses in a criminal investigation” as GarageGate continues to develop.
(Fox News)

“That would not only destroy the ‘inadvertence’ defense but make his public comments potentially deceitful of both the public and investigators,” Turley said. “While gross mishandling does not require evil intent, unintentional violations are often addressed outside of the criminal justice system. The most serious violations have been prosecuted where material was intentionally removed.”

“Intent can be established not only at the time of the removal but during the storage of the documents.” he continued. “If these documents were used or knowingly possessed over the six years, it would qualify as an intentional act to unlawfully possess the material.”

Biden is currently facing a special counsel investigation into his handling of classified documents after at least two stashes were found at his Wilmington home and a pro-Biden think tank in Washington, D.C.

Biden is currently facing a special counsel investigation into his handling of classified documents after at least two stashes were found at his Wilmington home and a pro-Biden think tank in Washington, D.C.
(Screenshot/Twitter)

Turley added that the “use of private counsel without clearances following the first discovery on Nov. 2 could itself be viewed as reckless and gross mishandling.”

“Moreover, those lawyers are now likely witnesses in a criminal investigation,” Turley said.

Richard Painter, a law professor at the University of Minnesota, told Fox News Digital that the “White House needs to cooperate fully with this investigation, which involves helping the special counsel find out how the documents got to the Penn Biden Center and to his home and who knew they were there (if anybody), as well as cooperating with a DOJ or intel assessment of who may have access to the documents.”

“This is particularly a concern with respect to the Penn-Biden center where the Penn president raised tens of millions from the Chinese, and many people (including Penn donors) had access to the center and must have had a chance to look in Biden’s office and notice the locked closet, raising curiosity about what was inside and perhaps a desire to find out,” Painter said.

Painter served as former President George W. Bush’s White House ethics chief before switching parties and mounting an unsuccessful bid for Senate as a Democrat in 2018.

Republicans on Capitol Hill demanded the visitor logs this weekend following revelations that Biden’s lawyers had discovered five more classified documents inside the home’s garage. While it is common practice to keep comprehensive visitor logs at the White House, Biden’s lawyers say no such records exist for his home in Wilmington.

Two stashes of classified documents from Biden’s time as vice president were found in the Penn Biden Center in Washington, D.C., as well as the president’s garage by his Corvette last week, spiraling the White House into a compounding scandal.

Two stashes of classified documents from Biden’s time as vice president were found in the Penn Biden Center in Washington, D.C., as well as the president’s garage by his Corvette last week, spiraling the White House into a compounding scandal.
(Joe Biden for President/File)

“Like every President in decades of modern history, his personal residence is personal,” the White House Counsel’s Office told Fox News Digital in a statement on Monday. “But upon taking office, President Biden restored the norm and tradition of keeping White House visitors logs, including publishing them regularly, after the previous administration ended them.”

CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP

The Secret Service reported Sunday that while a detail is assigned to the home, they do not record visitors.

Fox News Digital’s Anders Hagstrom and Peter Doocy contributed reporting.

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