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New hearing of the case against Trump for the assault on the Capitol is postponed to September

Federal Judge of the District of Columbia Tanya Chutkan postponed until September 5 the new hearing of the case against the former president of the United States and Republican candidate, Donald Trump, for the 2021 assault on the Capitol that was scheduled for August 16.

Chutkan accepted the request of the special prosecutor of the case, Jack Smith, who had asked for more time to be able to study the implications of the Supreme Court’s ruling, which in July determined that the former presidents have judicial immunity for the “official acts” they carried out when they were in power.

“The prosecutor’s office continues to evaluate the new precedent established last month in the Supreme Court’s decision,” the prosecution told the judge.

The prosecutor’s request implies a change of focus on the part of the prosecutor’s office, which until now had tried to speed up the case, which contrasted with the Republican’s defense strategy, which has delayed all processes to prevent the trial from being held before the November 5 elections.

Trump is accused in the federal court of the District of Columbia of having conspired to reverse the results of the 2020 elections in which he lost against the current president, Joe Biden, and having instigated the January 2021 Capitol assault to stop the transition of powers.

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The case returned last Friday at the hands of Judge Chutkan after being paralyzed for eight months because Trump appealed to the Supreme Court alleging that he has judicial immunity for being a former president.

The high court ruled last month that the former presidents have immunity from the “official acts” carried out when they were in power, and left it to the lower courts to determine whether what Trump did after the elections was part of the functions of his office.

The case of the assault on the Capitol is one of the four criminal accusations that have weighed on Trump. In May, he was found guilty in New York of falsifying commercial records, but the sentence is still not known.

In Georgia he is accused of leading a mafia plot to try to reverse the 2020 election results in that state and, in Florida, he was accused of illegally withholding classified documents when he left the White House, although the judge dismissed the case last month.

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International

Colombian president Petro requests extradition of smuggling kingpin from Portugal

Colombian President Gustavo Petro formally requested Portugal on Friday to extradite Diego Marín, known as ‘Papa Smurf’ or ‘Pitufo’, who is considered Colombia’s biggest smuggling kingpin.

Marín was arrested last December in northern Portugal after fleeing from Spain.

“I hope Portugal extradites the largest smuggler in Colombia’s contemporary history. Large-scale smuggling is nothing more than money laundering for major drug traffickers,” Petro stated on his X account.

According to Petro, “Diego Marín deeply infiltrated government institutions to sustain his destruction of national industry and facilitate money laundering through smuggling.”

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International

Cuban president Díaz-Canel condemns U.S. actions as a threat to global peace

One million signatures to take Cuba off terrorist list

Cuban President Miguel Díaz-Canel stated on Friday that the aggressive actions of the United States pose a threat to international peace and criticized its recent decisions to use the Guantánamo Naval Base (in eastern Cuba) to detain 30,000 undocumented migrants and to relist the island as a state sponsor of terrorism.

“We will not remain silent in the face of such infamy, nor will we lose hope in humanity’s progress,” said the Cuban leader during the closing session of the 6th International Conference for the Balance of the World, held in Havanaand dedicated to Cuba’s national hero, José Martí (1853-1895).

Díaz-Canel pointed out that “the dominant political forces embrace fascist ideologies that humanity has sought to eradicate since the last century. These trends are a product of capitalism.”

Two days ago, following U.S. President Donald Trump’s announcement that he would send 30,000 undocumented migrants to the Guantánamo base, Díaz-Canel condemned the decision as an “act of brutality” and emphasized that the military facility is “located on illegally occupied Cuban territory.”

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International

Trump: “I won’t allow the stupidity of buying venezuelan oil again”

U.S. President Donald Trump declared on Friday that he would not allow the purchase of oil from Venezuela, as his predecessor Joe Biden did when he lifted a series of sanctions.

“Biden went and bought millions of barrels of oil. I’m not going to allow something that stupid to happen again,” Trump said in remarks to the media in the Oval Office.

The president was asked about the visit of his special envoy, Richard Grenell, to meet with Nicolás Maduro at the Miraflores Palace in Caracas on Friday.

“He (Grenell) is meeting with a lot of different people,” Trump responded.

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