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Oct. 24, 2025, 5:00 AM EDTBy Gary Grumbach and Dareh GregorianNew York Attorney General Letitia James, a longtime political foe of President Donald Trump who previously sued him for making misleading statements to banks, is scheduled to be arraigned Friday in federal court on bank fraud charges.A grand jury in Virginia indicted James, a Democrat, this month, weeks after Trump posted a message on Truth Social pressing Attorney General Pam Bondi to take action against her and two other political adversaries.James is charged with one count of bank fraud and one count of making false statements to a financial institution. The indictment alleges she falsely claimed that a home in Norfolk, Virginia, was her second residence, allowing her to obtain favorable loan terms, and that she rented the property to a family of three.The indictment indicates she is alleged to have saved about $50 a month.After she was charged, James called the allegations “baseless” and said Trump’s “own public statements make clear that his only goal is political retribution at any cost.”James’ office brought a civil fraud suit against Trump and his company in 2022. It alleged they were submitting misleading financial statements to banks and insurers, exaggerating his net worth by billions of dollars and enabling Trump and his company to obtain bank loans and insurance policies at rates they were not entitled to. As a result, James’ office has said, he “reaped hundreds of millions of dollars in ill-gotten gains.”Trump was found liable for fraud and hit with a $464 million judgment last year. A divided state appeals court upheld the fraud finding in August but tossed out the financial penalty, finding it was “excessive.” Trump has denied wrongdoing in the case and is appealing the fraud finding.James is the third prominent Trump critic to be arraigned on federal criminal charges in the past three weeks.John Bolton, Trump’s former national security adviser, was arraigned last week, while former FBI Director James Comey was arraigned the week before that. Both pleaded not guilty.James and Comey were indicted after Trump’s former personal lawyer Lindsey Halligan was named acting U.S. Attorney for the Eastern District of Virginia.Her predecessor, Erik S. Siebert, resigned under pressure last month after Trump said he wanted him “out.” NBC News previously reported that both the Comey and the James investigations were stalled during Siebert’s tenure because federal agents and prosecutors did not believe they had the evidence to secure convictions.Comey has challenged the legality of Halligan’s appointment, something James’ attorneys said in a court filing Thursday that they plan to do, as well.Halligan was sworn in days after Trump’s social media post urging Bondi to take action against James, Comey and Sen. Adam Schiff, D-Calif.Schiff is being investigated in Maryland over allegations of mortgage fraud, and he has denied any wrongdoing. NBC News, citing four people familiar with the investigation, reported Thursday that the investigation has stalled, with prosecutors believing they do not have enough evidence to bring charges.Gary GrumbachGary Grumbach is an NBC News legal affairs reporter, based in Washington, D.C.Dareh GregorianDareh Gregorian is a politics reporter for NBC News.

admin - Latest News - October 24, 2025
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A grand jury indicted James this month after President Donald Trump called for her to be prosecuted.



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Oct. 19, 2025, 7:00 AM EDTBy Margaret HethermanBorn into Victorian tradition in 1866, Alice Austen enjoyed a position in Staten Island society that gave her freedom to pursue what she dubbed “the larky life,” a whirlwind of fashionable gatherings and mischief that challenged social norms. But it was the gift of a wooden box camera from her uncle — and a chance meeting in the Catskills — that set the course for how Austen would be remembered beyond Gilded days: as one of America’s earliest and most adventurous women photographers and for her relationship with Gertrude Tate, which spanned more than half a century.Though her father abandoned her mother when she was an infant, Austen enjoyed a luxurious lifestyle with extended family in their home called Clear Comfort, overlooking the coastline of the New York City borough of Staten Island. She perfected imagery of her natural surroundings, social doings and “the sporting society set” in a darkroom fashioned from a closet. Her photos serve as a portal to the Gilded Age, with images of the annual regatta, boathouse bathers, charity balls and lawn tennis, a sport newly open to women who were too restricted by corsets to actually run for the ball.A self-portrait of Alice Austen on the front porch of Clear Comfort in 1892.Courtesy Collection of Alice Austen HouseWhen cycling took off, so did Austen, similarly constrained by long skirts that could catch in the spokes; even so, with heavy camera equipment mounted on her bicycle, she ferried to Manhattan, where she famously documented turn-of-the-century urban life, enshrining the likes of street sweepers, rag pickers, egg sellers and messengers to gelatin print — producing her 1896 “Street Types of New York” portfolio.As adept at arranging portraiture as igniting flash powder over a night bloom of flowering cactus, Austen also delighted in making gender-bending exposures of female friends. Nicknamed “The Darned Club,” they posed in undergarments with cigarettes, men’s suits with fake mustaches and together in bed in Victorian nighties.“She was in a period where she and her friends were really embracing this concept of the ‘New Woman,’” said Victoria Munro, executive director of the Alice Austen House, the original Austen residence, which also serves as a museum and exhibition space.“She created clubs with these new activities that women were able to do, unchaperoned by men — and they were safe spaces for her and her circle of women friends who were, many of them lesbian, able to be together and have fun and really celebrate,” Munro said. “There was also a certain amount of freedom in the 1880s and 1890s, because women weren’t yet considered to even have a sexuality … so they weren’t even suspected of this kind of perceived bad behavior.”
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