'I Was Never Indicted': Donald Trump Denies Four Indictments and Drags Joe Biden in Bizarre Rant
Donald Trump is denying his legal issues — in fact, he says he was "never indicted," RadarOnline.com can reveal. The former president, 77, went on a bizarre tangent after he was backed into a corner when asked about his ex-attorney Sidney Powell, who flipped last week.
“Mr. President, you said Sidney Powell wasn’t your attorney, are you concerned that you won’t be covered by attorney-client privilege?” one reporter asked.
"No, not at all. We did nothing wrong,” he stated before fumbling through his words and blaming Joe Biden for his legal mess.
“We did nothing wrong. This is all Biden, indictments, and impeachments and this is all about Biden, he can’t do anything right. The only thing they know how to do is cheat in elections and election fraud. This is all by himself," Trump stated.
That's when the conversation went sideways, with the ex-president denying his indictments. FYI — there are four: Washington, New York, Florida, and Georgia. He also has a mugshot.
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“All of these indictments that you see. I was never indicted. Practically never heard the word. It wasn’t a word that registered,” Trump said after officially filing for the GOP New Hampshire primary.
Trump's indictments are related to hush-money payments to porn star Stormy Daniels, his efforts to overturn the 2020 election, and retaining classified documents at his home in Mar-a-Lago.
Powell pled guilty to six misdemeanor charges and will get 12 months of probation for each count and a $6,000 fine, CNN reported last week.
Court documents showed she admitted her actions were "for the purpose of willfully tampering with electronic ballot markers and tabulating machines,” and she acted “with the intention of taking and appropriating information, data, and software, the property of Dominion Voting Systems Corporation."
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Judge Scott McAfee told Powell she must "testify truthfully about any co-defendants" involved in the matter and "provide all documents to the district attorney's office" relevant to their case against the other codefendants.