Trump responds to his fourth indictment
Donald Trump has 10 days to turn himself in, as he faces accusations that he and 18 other people orchestrated a “criminal enterprise” to reverse the results of the 2020 election in Georgia. The sweeping charges, which were brought on Monday night by a local prosecutor in Atlanta, fall under the state’s racketeering statute, which was originally designed to dismantle organized crime groups.
Trump — the current front-runner for the 2024 Republican nomination — now faces 91 felony counts and the possibility of standing trial in four separate cases before next year’s elections. He has denounced the indictment, saying on social media that he would release an “irrefutable” report that he asserted would prove his claims of election fraud in Georgia.
While the effort is unlikely to ward off the immense and expensive legal threats he faces, it may prove popular among his political base. Trump’s small-donor donations and poll numbers both picked up around his previous indictments.
Analysis: “The official Republican Party apparatus, which had been distancing itself from Trump, rallied behind him after his first indictment,” said my colleague Jonathan Swan, who covers Donald Trump for The Times. But, he added, with the Georgia case, other defendants may feel less secure sticking by him — not least because presidents cannot dismiss state charges.
The hidden trauma of Ukraine’s soldiers
Ukrainian soldiers face a crisis of wounded psyches, in addition to broken bodies. Exhausted physically and mentally, some have seen horrors on a daily basis that most civilians never encounter, and they are undergoing therapies to treat their invisible injuries.
Those involved say the mental health needs of Ukraine’s troops are far greater than the available treatments and will be around for years. Soldiers described having made the mistake of trying to tough it out on their own and how they had struggled to prevent themselves from mentally revisiting their every combat move, wracked with guilt.
Among traumatized veterans, there is a common theme with enormous implications: that others cannot possibly comprehend their suffering and that they don’t know how to return to a civilian world that now feels utterly alien. “You can’t understand because you haven’t smelled it, heard the sounds, the feeling of what it’s like to kill someone,” one said.
Ruble troubles: The Russian central bank issued its biggest interest-rate hike since the early weeks of the war in Ukraine, a dramatic move that underlined the scale of concern about Russia’s economic stability.
In Russia: A fire and an explosion at a gas station killed at least 35 people in the Dagestan region in the south. An additional 66 people were hospitalized.
A dearth of Chinese economic data
The Chinese government, facing an expected seventh consecutive monthly increase in youth unemployment, has suspended release of the information. That decision could…
2023-08-15 23:15:53
Source from www.nytimes.com
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