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Kentucky Senate passes bill making it a crime to insult the police
On March 11, the Republican-majority Kentucky state Senate voted 22 to 11 to approve a bill that would make insulting a police officer a crime. Senate Bill (SB) 211 makes it so that a person could be charged with disorderly conduct a misdemeanor with a penalty of up to 90 days in jail and up to a $250 fine if one “accosts, insults, taunts, or challenges a law enforcement officer with offensive or derisive words, or by gestures or other physical contact, that would have a direct tendency to provoke a violent response from the perspective of a reasonable and prudent person.”
Twice impeached, can Trump run for president again in 2024?
Experts say it depends on Senate impeachment trial outcome
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President Donald Trump and First Lady Melania Trump dance at the Freedom Ball on Jan. 20, 2017 in Washington, D.C. Trump attended a series of balls to cap his Inauguration Day. (2017 Getty Images)
President Donald Trump became the first U.S. president to be impeached by the House twice, but without action from the Senate, that might not prevent him from running for election again in four years.
Being formally impeached by a majority of Congress is only the first step in the impeachment process.
President commutes sentence of Miami Beach’s ‘King of Medicare fraud’
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NORTH MIAMI, Fla. – Philip Esformes was known as the King of Medicare fraud with the epicenter of his swindling happening here in South Florida.
On Tuesday night, Esformes didn’t exactly become a free man, but he did get out of jail.
He was one of 20 people granted clemency by President Donald J. Trump, who gave the 52-year-old a get-out-of-jail-free card.
Well, the clemency does not mean is is completely free .
Caroline Mala Corbin, a professor of constitutional law at the University of Miami, explains:
“A pardon completely eliminate the punishment, a commutation only reduces it.”