Special counsel wants documents on Trump, numerous campaign associates
March 5, 2018 by admin
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WASHINGTON — The grand jury investigating alleged collusion between Russia and Donald Trump’s presidential campaign has sent a witness a subpoena seeking all documents involving the president and a host of his closest advisers, according to a copy of the subpoena reviewed by NBC News.
According to the subpoena, which was sent to a witness by special counsel Robert Mueller, investigators want emails, text messages, work papers, telephone logs and other documents going back to Nov. 1, 2015, 4½ months after Trump launched his campaign.
The witness shared details of the subpoena on condition of anonymity. The news site Axios reported Sunday that a subpoena was sent to a witness last month.
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NBC News reported last week that Mueller’s team is asking pointed questions about whether Trump knew about hacked emails from Hillary Clinton’s campaign before the public found out. The subpoena indicates that Mueller may be focused not just on what Trump campaign aides knew and when they knew it, but also on what Trump himself knew.
In addition to the president, the subpoena seeks documents that have anything to do with these current and former Trump associates:
- Steve Bannon, who left the White House as chief strategist in August.
- Michael Cohen, a personal lawyer for Trump who testified before congressional investigators in October.
- Rick Gates, Trump’s former deputy campaign manager, who pleaded guilty last month to conspiracy and lying to the FBI.
- Hope Hicks, who resigned last week as Trump’s communications director.
- Corey Lewandowski, Trump’s campaign manager until June 2016.
- Paul Manafort, a former Trump campaign manager and Gates’ business partner, who pleaded not guilty to money laundering, conspiracy and making false statements last week.
- Carter Page, a former Trump campaign aide.
- Keith Schiller, a former bodyguard for Trump who left as director of Oval Office operations in September.
- Roger Stone, a longtime Republican political operative and Trump campaign adviser who sources have told NBC News is the focus of investigators interested in his contacts with WikiLeaks during the campaign.
Once Hicks’ resignation takes effect in the next few weeks, Cohen will be the only person listed in the subpoena who hasn’t left the employment of Trump or of the White House.
Katy Tur reported from Washington. Alex Johnson reported from Los Angeles.
CORRECTION (March 5, 2018, 12:28 a.m. ET): The headline on an earlier version of this story misstated the recipient of Mueller’s subpoena. The subpoena seeking all documents involving President Donald Trump and a host of his closest advisers was given to a witness, not to the president himself. The story itself was correct.
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Kobe Bryant wins Oscar for animated short film ‘Dear Basketball’
March 5, 2018 by admin
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Jimmy Kimmel hosted the 90th annual Academy Awards. Here are the must-see moments from Hollywood’s big night.
USA TODAY
Los Angeles Lakers legend Kobe Bryant added another trophy to his large collection of career accolades Sunday. Except this one has a much different feel than the five Larry O’Brien trophies the future Hall of Famer won over his storied basketball career.
Bryant’s Dear Basketball won an Oscar for Best Animated Short Film at Sunday’s Academy Awards. The six-minute film is based on a poem Bryant wrote that was published in The Players Tribune in 2015, when he announced his retirement from the NBA. Glen Keane, who has animation credits for Aladdin and Beauty and the Beast, helped direct the film.
“I don’t know if it’s possible. I mean, as basketball players we’re really supposed to shut-up and dribble but I’m glad we do a little bit more than that,” Bryant said as he accepted the Oscar.
“Thank you, Academy, for this amazing honor. Thank you, John Williams, for such a wonderful piece of music. Thank you, Verizon, for believing in the film. Thank you, Molly Carter, without you we wouldn’t be here. And to my wife Vanessa, our daughters Natalia, Gianna, and Bianka. Ti amo con tutto il mio cuore. You are my inspiration. Thank you so much, guys, thank you.”
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Backstage, Bryant got a healthy applause, a bit unusual for an Oscar winner in the media room.
“I feel better than winning a championship,” Bryant said. “It’s crazy.”
As for his strong start to his post-NBA career, Bryant acknowledged it wasn’t an easy transition.
“It’s a hard thing for athletes to start over. You have to begin again.”
He called Williams a ”real-life Obi-Wan Kenobi.” Fitting, after receiving the award from Mark Hamill, who of course plays Luke Skywalker in the Star Wars franchise.
Bryant, 39, who was accompanied Sunday by his wife Vanessa, previously told The Undefeated that the Oscar nomination served as validation that he was more than just a basketball player.
More: Kobe takes swipe at ‘shut up and dribble’ during Oscars acceptance speech
Kobe: Oscar nom shows he ‘can do something other than dribble’
“I’ve always been told that as basketball players the expectation is that you play. This is all you know. This is all you do,” he told the outlet. ”Don’t think about handling finances. Don’t think about going into business. Don’t think that you want to be a writer — that’s cute. I got that a lot.
“What do you want to do when you retire? ‘Well, I want to be a storyteller.’ That’s cute. This is … a form of validation for people to look and say, ‘OK, he really can do something other than dribble and shoot.’”
Bryant, who retired in 2016 after 20 years in the NBA — all with the Lakers — also won two Olympic gold medals, two NBA Finals MVP awards, one regular-season MVP and was an 18-time All-Star.
Alexander reported from Los Angeles.
Follow Scott Gleeson on Twitter @ScottMGleeson and Alexander @BryAlexand
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