Trump Is Now Publicly Tampering With Georgia Witnesses

Trump told former Lt. Gov. Geoff Duncan not to testify before the Fulton County grand jury and is tampering with a witness in the investigation.

On Truth Social, Trump wrote (Bold mine):

I am reading reports that failed former Lt. Governor of Georgia, Jeff Duncan, will be testifying before the Fulton County Grand Jury. He shouldn’t. I barely know him but he was, right from the beginning of this Witch Hunt, a nasty disaster for those looking into the Election Fraud that took place in Georgia. He refused having a Special Session to find out what went on, became very unpopular with Republicans (I refused to endorse him!), and fought the TRUTH all the way. A loser, he went to FNCNN!

Trump tampered with 1/6 committee witnesses. Trump tampered with Mueller investigation witnesses. Trump appears to be tampering with the witnesses in the Jack Smith brought indictments, and Trump is suspected of tampering with the witnesses in the New York cases and investigations of him.

Witness tampering is one of the tactics that Trump learned from his father and Roy Cohen.

Trump accuses Choose Tanya Chutkan of bias in federal election case

Republican presidential candidate and former U.S. President Donald Trump speaks as he campaigns at the Iowa State Fair in Des Moines, Iowa, U.S. August 12, 2023.

Scott Morgan | Reuters

Former President Donald Trump kicked off the week of his expected fourth indictment by railing against the judge overseeing the federal case charging him with illegally conspiring to subvert the 2020 election results.

In a pair of social media posts just after midnight Monday, Trump attacked U.S. District Judge Tanya Chutkan as “highly partisan” and “very biased & unfair!”

“She obviously wants me behind bars,” Trump wrote on Truth Social at 1:14 a.m. ET.

That post was made in reference to Chutkan’s remarks from an October sentencing hearing for Christine Priola, one of the hundreds of people to face criminal charges related to the Jan. 6, 2021, Capitol riot.

“The people who mobbed that Capitol were there in fealty, in loyalty, to one man,” Chutkan said, according to a transcript of the hearing. “It’s a blind loyalty to one person who, by the way, remains free to this day.”

Trump posted that quote in all caps less than an hour after midnight.

Later Monday morning, Trump vented rage at the prosecutor in Fulton County, Georgia, who is expected to bring her state-level election interference case before a grand jury this week. Trump even targeted former Georgia Lt. Gov. Geoff Duncan, a potential witness, as “a loser” and said he should not testify before that grand jury.

Numerous legal experts have told CNBC they expect Trump to face a gag order as he continues to inveigh against the constellation of figures related to his expanding legal troubles.

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The Capitol riot, carried out by a violent pro-Trump mob who believed his false claims of a “rigged” election, is central to special counsel Jack Smith’s second federal case against Trump. The former president appeared in U.S. District Court in Washington, D.C., earlier this month to be arraigned on the four-count indictment accusing him of trying to overturn his loss to President Joe Biden.

Trump’s latest salvo against Chutkan, who has garnered a reputation for giving tough sentences in Jan. 6-related cases, escalated his already aggressive commentary about the criminal proceedings. Trump has previously claimed there is “no way he can get a fair trial” before Chutkan and has said he will seek a new judge and venue for the case.

The most recent posts came three days after she issued a protective order that limited what evidence Trump can share in the election interference case. Chutkan granted a request from Trump’s lawyers for a narrower protective order than what federal prosecutors had proposed, though she gave the Justice Department a say in the specific parameters of the order.

In that hearing, Chutkan warned Trump and his legal team not to post anything that could potentially impact the integrity of the case. “Even arguably ambiguous statements by the parties or their counsel, if they could be reasonably interpreted to intimidate witnesses or to prejudice potential jurors, can threaten the process,” she said.

Trump nevertheless fired off a social media fusillade over the weekend that decried his D.C. case and his other legal troubles.

He shared a post Sunday that included a photo of Chutkan and described her as “an Obama leftwing activist judge in DC, whose husband also got appointed by Obama as a DC judge.”

That post claimed Chutkan “openly admitted she’s running election interference against Trump.” It referenced the judge’s quote from Friday’s protective order hearing that Trump’s presidential campaign cannot take precedence over his criminal case. “If that means he can’t say exactly what he wants to say about witnesses in this case, that’s how it has to be,” she said.

On Friday evening, Trump posted a link to a blog post on a conservative website that promoted the idea of Chutkan’s recusal in the case.

That is America’s most unconsidered workforce, with 80% unable to seek out work

With national labor market data showing that the economy only provides jobs for one out of every five Americans with intellectual and developmental disabilities, the opportunities for those with I/DD in the workforce are clearly lacking. Amy and Ben Wright, co-founders of Bitty and Beau’s Coffee, are entrepreneurs — and parents — making a dent in this disconnect between available labor and market demand, and at a time when employers have struggled to find enough workers to fill all of their open positions.

The Wrights have four children, the youngest two diagnosed with Down syndrome. They opened their coffee franchise, named for these children, to show that a business model can be a success based on hiring the disabled. Bitty & Beau’s has grown to 19 stores and over 400 employees, the majority with disabilities. 

“Any business can take this model of employing at least one person with a disability in their organization,” Ben Wright said during an interview with CNBC’s Sharon Epperson at the Small Business Playbook virtual summit on Wednesday. “What I saw was that when people spent time with our kids, Bitty and Beau, who have Down syndrome, it changed them. They saw them as real people, not just oh, there’s a person with a disability.” 

He stressed that society and the business sector need to reframe their view of people with disabilities, who are, “deserving of the innovation that the business world can bring to bear on them.”

Business owners may also benefit from state and federal tax incentives related to hiring from among the disabled population.

“Above and beyond even the tax credits, I think that there are some intangibles in there. In addition to the tax credits that are available, companies will find that there’s a whole new level of innovation and problem-solving and creativity that will start to creep into a business when they start to have people with I/DD in their four walls,” Ben said.

The numbers have been improving. In 2022, the labor force participation rate (23.1%) and the employment–population ratio (21.3 percent) for disabled workers increased, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics. Those were record levels for this data since the BLS began tracking it in 2008. Unemployment among disabled workers also fell by 2.5 percentage points to 7.6% in 2022. But that is still twice as high as unemployment among the non-disabled. Meanwhile, the employment–population ratio for people with no disability was 65.4% last year (the BLS notes that a disabled population that skews older relative to the non-disabled population is one contributing factor in this gap).

Although the Wrights find the recent improvements encouraging, they say there’s still a long way to go. 

The first Bitty and Beau’s Coffee opened in 2016, in Amy’s hometown of Wilmington, North Carolina, after she quit her job at another one of her ventures — a theater program for kids. Ben left his job in 2020, after working at a financial advisory firm he founded in 2013, to work on the Bitty and Beau’s franchise full-time. Bitty and Beau’s is operational in 11 states with a majority of its 19 locations across the South, Southwest, Midwest and Northeast. 

Bitty and Beau’s Coffee staff celebrate the grand opening of a new location.

Bitty and Beau’s Coffee

At the CNBC small business event, the Wrights provided some starting advice for employers on how to be more inclusive in hiring. 

Start a conversation at your company.

Amy said it is as simple as an owner saying, “this matters to us.”

Spreading the message will have an impact on employees, she says, and sets an example for other businesses in your community by demonstrating that you prioritize it.

She noted that with one in five people having a disability in the U.S., employees are likely to have relatives and friends that would be interested in employment. That could be a “great starting point,” she said.

Identify the best positions for workers with disabilities.

Once business leaders recognize people with I/DD are deserving of employment, they should find the right positions for these employees within their organizations, Ben said.

“Figure out what they can do and what ways you can innovate around them so that you can be successful,” Ben said, adding that in the Wrights experience, it is not always the first job that a disabled worker starts with that ends up being the best job for them.

Amy noted that even though the majority of its workers are disabled, the company employs non-disabled workers who are a key support network for the entire workforce.

Companies that get this right will prove that hiring workers with I/DD can become “a winning competitive advantage for your company,” he said. 

Choose the right language for job postings.

While it is illegal in the U.S. to discriminate against disabled job candidates, Epperson noted during the interview that the top of a Bitty and Beau’s job description for a food service worker position at their D.C. location stated: “Reasonable accommodations may be made to enable individuals with disabilities to perform essential functions.”

That was notable because the language came before listing the job responsibilities.

Amy stressed the importance of such language for other businesses to highlight prominently. If someone would like to start working and “learn something new, we give you a chance and we figure out how we can make accommodations to set you up for success,” she said. “That’s truly how every business should look at it.” 

Hiring untapped talent: Hiring workers with a disability

Wegovy-maker Novo Nordisk extends curb on provide of weight-loss drug, raises outlook

A selection of injector pens for the Saxenda weight loss drug are shown in this photo illustration in Chicago, Illinois, U.S., March 31, 2023. 

Jim Vondruska | Reuters

Novo Nordisk, which makes blockbuster drug Wegovy, raised its outlook for 2023 Thursday but said it is extending supply restrictions for some doses of the weight-loss drug.

The Danish pharmaceutical company reported a 30% increase in sales, at constant exchange rates, for the first half of this year to 107.7 million Danish kroner ($15.9 million). Net profit increased 43%, coming in at 39.2 million kroner.

The company’s diabetes and obesity division performed particularly well, bolstered by interest in its blockbuster injection Wegovy.

Shares initially rose in pre-market trading, but then flipped to trade almost 2% lower.

“The [sales] growth is driven by increasing demand for our GLP-1-based diabetes and obesity treatments, and we are serving more patients than ever before,” Lars Fruergaard Jørgensen, president and CEO, said in a statement. “The performance in the first six months has enabled us to raise the outlook for the full year.”

For 2023, the company now anticipates sales growth of 27%-33% and operating profit growth of 31%-37%, at constant exchange rates.

Wegovy supply restrictions

High demand for Wegovy has led the company to cut the supply of starter doses of the drug as it strives to keep up with orders.

On Thursday, Novo Nordick confirmed that it will continue to restrict the lower-dose strengths.

Its outlook “reflects expected continued periodic supply constraints and related drug shortage notifications across a number of products and geographies,” the company said.

“Novo Nordisk is investing in internal and external capacity to increase supply both short and long term. While supply capacity for [Wegovy] is gradually being expanded, the supply of the lower dose strengths in the US will remain restricted to safeguard continuity of care.”

Novo Nordisk CEO Lars Fruergaard Jorgensen further stressed a potential supply crunch of Wegovy in the near future. In comments reported by Reuters, he signaled significant demand for the weight-loss drug will outstrip availabilities in the foreseeable future and said that the company will likely have limits of availability of Wegovy into 2024.

Last week, late-stage trial data showed that Wegovy reduced the risk of major cardiovascular events such as heart attacks or strokes by 20%, compared with a placebo, sending shares higher.

The results of the closely watched “SELECT” trial, which exceeded expectations, were seen as a major boost for the company’s hopes of moving beyond Wegovy’s image as a “vanity drug.”

The active ingredient in Wegovy is semaglutide, an FDA-approved drug that works by imitating a naturally-occurring gut hormone that helps to regulate appetite.

— Sam Meredith contributed to this report.

FBI shoots and kills Utah man needed for Biden threats

U.S. President Joe Biden waves as he departs from Delaware Air National Guard Base in New Castle, Delaware, en route to Joint Base Andrews, Aug. 7, 2023.

Brendan Smialowski | AFP | Getty Images

The FBI shot and killed a Utah man on Wednesday while trying to arrest him for threatening to murder President Joe Biden and the New York district attorney who is prosecuting former President Donald Trump in connection with hush money payments.

Many other politicians were also allegedly threatened in social media posts by the man, Provo resident Craig Deleeuw Robertson, who was accused in court documents of vowing to retaliate against the FBI during an investigation.

Court documents say the FBI described Robertson as a white man “approximately 70-75 years old” who was surveilled “wearing a dark suit (later observed as having an AR-15 style rifle lapel pin attached), a white shirt, a red tie, and a multi-colored (possibly camouflage) hat bearing the word “TRUMP” on the front.”

Robertson was also found to be the owner of a sniper rifle and numerous other firearms.

Robertson was fatally shot by at least one FBI agent at 6:15 a.m. in Provo, about 12 hours before Biden was due to visit the state in Salt Lake City. No agents were injured.

“The incident began when special agents attempted to serve arrest and search warrants at a residence,”
the FBI said in a statement. “The subject is deceased.”

The shooting is under review by the FBI’s Inspection Division. 

DA Alvin Bragg at 1 Police Plaza on April 18, 2023 in New York City.

Michael M. Santiago | Getty Images

A senior administration official told NBC News that Biden was briefed on the FBI raid this morning, ahead of scheduled events in New Mexico.

The U.S. Secret Service, which provides protection for Biden, said in a statement, “The Secret Service is aware of the FBI investigation involving an individual in Utah who has exhibited threats towards a protectee.”

“While we always remain in close coordination with our law enforcement partners, this is an FBI-led effort and we would refer any related questions to the FBI,” the Secret Service said.

Robertson allegedly had made a threat naming Biden on Monday, and also threatened in a social media post in March to shoot Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg Jr. during a visit to New York.

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A felony complaint against Robertson filed in U.S. District Court in Utah charged him with making threats against the president, making interstate threats, and influencing, impeding, and retaliating against federal law enforcement officers by threat.

Bragg charged Trump earlier this year with falsifying business records related to a 2016 payment to porn star Stormy Daniels to keep her quiet about her alleged sexual tryst with Trump a decade earlier.

Trump denies having sex with Daniels, and has pleaded not guilty in the case, which is scheduled to go to trial next year.

This is breaking news. Check back for updates.

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Jonathan Wright Reveals Pop Star He’d Type

Renowned hair guru and Bad Boys star Jonathan Wright linked up with host Thembi for the latest installment of The Shade Room‘s Keep It 100! series, where stars spill tea while trying to put together a fire ‘fit for $100 (or less)!

While cuttin’ up and surfin’ the clothing racks at MOIST on Melrose Ave., Jonathan dished on some top-tier actors who have inspired him and how he does his best to stay out of difficult client situations.

He Aspires To Play Madea’s “Long-Lost Son” In A Tyler Perry Film

While shopping, Jonathan reflected on how he started doing hair after stepping in to help out a fashion client ahead of the BET Awards.

However, Jonathan Wright didn’t always have his sights set on being one of the BADDEST hair stylists in the game. In fact, he spoke on how some high-profile Black actors inspired him to consider following in their footsteps.

“I wanted to be kind of like an actor. Like, Tyler Perry. Tyler Perry inspired me. I always wanted to be in one of the Madea films.”

Aside from Tyler Perry, Wright was sure also to give Martin Lawrence and Jamie Foxx a shoutout. However, he was dead set on wanting a role in a Madea production, and he had the perfect premise for his character!

“Tyler, I’m telling you — I’m Madea’s long-lost son. From when she was stripping back in the day, I’m the one that she had.”

Wright Talks Which Pop Star’s Hair He’d Love To Style

Being a hair connoisseur, Jonathan spoke about whose hair he’d style! When Thembi threw Britney Spears in the mix, he agreed with enthusiasm!

“Oh, I really do want to do Britney Spears. Her personality and her personality and my personality…,” Jonathan said, interlocking his hands.

And after the hair slay, Jonathan playfully said he wants to dance battle the pop star.

Jonathan Wright Speaks On Cutting Ties With Kelsey Harris & Ridin’ With Megan Thee Stallion

Aside from speaking on some of his aspirations, Jonathan Wright acknowledged how he has to navigate disagreements between many clients.

He believes that this approach is one of the reasons why his “career is where it’s at.”

“I’m so much [more] focused on leveling up myself [and] advancing my career. And that’s why my career is where it’s at.”

After being cool with Kelsey Harris and Megan Thee Stallion following the Tory Lanez assault, Wright discontinued his ties with Harris after her court testimony.

RELATED: BREAKING: Tory Lanez Sentenced To 10 Years In State Prison In Megan Thee Stallion Assault Case

“I was being cool with the situation because I know both of them. Because I know the type of person that Kelsey is — she’s a cool person. But after the court stuff and all that, I cut ties with her. Because of the simple fact… girl, don’t go on that bench and do that. Like, keep it all the way real.”

After acknowledging that he’s ridin’ with Megan, Jonathan said he and Kelsey are “not cool” because he doesn’t “have respect for one of the situations on the bench.”

“We not cool. [But] Megan my girl.”

Peep the full episode of Keep It 100! featuring Jonathan Wright down below.

RELATED: Jonathan Wright Assists Chrisean Rock Following Her Release From Jail (Video)

China shopper costs fall first time in 2 years, deflation fears develop

Customers at a fresh food market in Shanghai, China, on Monday, Aug. 7, 2023.

Bloomberg | Bloomberg | Getty Images

BEIJING — China reported inflation data for July that pointed to a modest improvement from June.

The consumer price index fell by 0.3% in July from a year ago, but was up by 0.2% when compared with June, according to the National Bureau of Statistics Wednesday.

The year-on-year CPI print for July was slightly better than expectations for a 0.4% decline, according to analysts polled by Reuters. It was still the first year-on-year decline since early 2021, according to official data accessed via Wind Information.

The producer price index fell by 4.4% in July from a year ago, better than the 5.4% decline in June, the data showed.

However, the year-on-year PPI read was worse than the 4.1% forecast by a Reuters poll.

“Both CPI and PPI are in deflation territory,” said Zhiwei Zhang, president and chief economist of Pinpoint Asset Management, in a note following the data release. “The economic momentum continues to weaken due to lacklustre domestic demand.”

“The CPI deflation may put more pressure on the government to consider additional fiscal stimulus to mitigate the challenge,” he added.

A 26% year-on-year drop in pork prices, a staple food in China, contributed to the overall decline in the CPI in July. Tourism prices rose by 13.1% from a year ago.

Core CPI, which excludes food and energy prices, rose by 0.8% from a year ago — the highest since January, according to official data accessed via Wind Information.

Producer prices will likely turn higher on a year-on-year basis before the consumer price index does, said Bruce Pang, chief economist and head of research for Greater China at JLL.

He expects consumer prices will still be dragged down in the coming months by falling pork prices and a high base effect, while core CPI may gradually rise.

Sluggish consumer demand

Read more about China from CNBC Pro

Oxford Economics expects China’s consumer price index to grow by 0.5% this year and the producer price index to fall by 3.5%.

“China’s weak demand follow-through in Q2 can be attributed to its relatively contained demand-side stimulus during Covid, years of regulatory tightening, and an ongoing housing correction,” Louise Loo, lead economist at Oxford Economics, said in a note Tuesday.

It’s a “positive development” that authorities are choosing targeted easing, rather than large-scale stimulus, Loo said.

China reported trade data Tuesday that showed a sharp plunge in both overseas and domestic demand.

Lack of confidence, not stimulus is the real problem facing the Chinese economy: Analyst

Exports fell by 14.5% in July from a year ago, while imports dropped by 12.4% in U.S. dollar terms — both worse than analysts had expected.

The sharp decline in the imports figure was partly due to commodity price declines, but Loo’s estimates indicate imports declined in real volume terms by around 0.4%.

China is set on Aug. 15 to release retail sales, industrial production and other data for July.

Correction: This article has been updated to accurately reflect that Oxford Economics expects China’s producer price index to fall 3.5% this year. An earlier version of the story misstated it.

Goldman Sachs CEO David Solomon bets on asset administration

David Solomon, Chairman and CEO, Goldman Sachs, participates in a panel discussion during the annual Milken Institute Global Conference at The Beverly Hilton Hotel on April 29, 2019 in Beverly Hills, California.

Michael Kovac | Getty Images Entertainment | Getty Images

Goldman Sachs is known as Wall Street’s top brand, a juggernaut employing some of the world’s best traders and investment bankers.

But it’s facing an inflection point: Those high-profile businesses have fallen out of favor with investors since the 2008 financial crisis. Instead, it’s been steady, fee-generating areas like wealth and asset management that are valued far more than boom-or-bust activities like trading or advising on mergers.

Goldman shares have been stuck at a relatively low price-to-tangible-book value, a key industry metric that measures how the market sizes up a firm compared to the value of its hard assets. Goldman trades for just above one times price to TBV, while rivals including JPMorgan Chase and Morgan Stanley are valued at roughly double that.

Which is why Goldman CEO David Solomon has hitched his fortunes to asset and wealth management. His latest move positions Goldman to take advantage of two big trends in finance: The rise of alternative assets including private equity and growth in the fortunes of the ultrarich.

Still, concerns surfaced recently after former asset management co-head Julian Salisbury departed Goldman for a smaller rival. Salisbury, who was most recently chief investment officer for AWM, is joining San Francisco-based private equity firm Sixth Street. His former co-head, Luke Sarsfield, also left earlier this year, helping fuel worries about a brain drain at the firm.

Goldman, which put former trading co-head Marc Nachmann in charge of AWM in October, says the company has a deep bench and that the average tenure of partners is its longest in a decade.

What is asset management, exactly?

Simply put, Goldman portfolio managers make bets across the universe of financial instruments, either on behalf of clients or using the bank’s own funds.

That runs the gamut from the least risky, plain-vanilla holdings like money market funds, to fixed-income products like corporate bonds funds, stock ETFs and mutual funds, and finally to alternative assets including private equity, private credit (i.e. loans to corporations), real estate and hedge funds.

Compared to rivals JPMorgan and Morgan Stanley, which are big players in traditional assets like stock funds, Goldman is more weighted to the esoteric world of alternative investments, which is why it’s sometimes said that Goldman wants to build a “mini-Blackstone” within the bank.

Goldman gets paid through management and incentive fees, which swell as funds attract more assets. Altogether, Goldman has $2.71 trillion in assets under supervision as of June 30, which includes wealth management assets.  

What about wealth management?

The industry has coalesced around a model where financial advisors charge fees, often 1% to 2% of a typical client’s assets annually, to manage investments. They also can earn fees for loans or other products geared towards the wealthy.

Goldman does particularly well with the ultra-rich, defined as those with at least $30 million to invest; it has about 8% of that cohort in the U.S., according to a company presentation. In fact, Goldman’s average ultra-high net worth client keeps about $60 million at the bank.

Where Goldman fares less well is serving the merely rich; it has only about 1% of the high-net worth market, or those who have between $1 million and $10 million to invest.

The bank has more than $1 trillion in wealth management client assets. While significant, key rivals are both larger and growing faster: Morgan Stanley had $4.9 trillion in client assets as of June 30.

Why does it matter?

Goldman is still very much tethered to the ups and downs of Wall Street. The bank’s trading and advisory division generated two-thirds of Goldman’s $23.1 billion in revenues so far this year.

A pandemic-era boom in deals and trading in 2020 and 2021 was quickly followed by a bust, and last quarter marked the industry’s lowest investment banking haul in a decade. That’s caused Goldman to report the steepest profit drop this year of the six biggest U.S. banks, making the push for sustainable sources of growth even more urgent.

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For Solomon, who has battled criticism over his ill-fated retail banking push, leadership style and hobbies, success in AWM would provide a welcome counterpoint to those who say he’s made too many errors.

Has it been smooth sailing?

Not exactly. Solomon has made tough decisions to consolidate the various pockets of investment at the firm, and then to focus on raising outside funds while shrinking wagers made with house money. That’s upset some insiders used to autonomy over decades of operation.

He’s also shuffled the deck several times. In a 2020 reorganization, Solomon pulled apart asset and wealth management and assigned Salisbury and later Sarsfield to co-lead the asset manager, a move he reversed when he reunited the businesses and named Nachmann to lead AWM.

That upheaval has led to the departure of the ex-asset management co-heads, as well as other senior leaders.

How’s the business doing now?

Despite the turbulence, AWM has been making progress against its fee and fundraising goals, supporting the idea that Goldman’s reputation for savvy investing gives it an edge.

The bank is on track to reach its goal of generating at least $10 billion in fee revenue by next year. And its total assets under supervision rose by $42 billion to $2.71 trillion in the second quarter.

While Solomon cautioned that Goldman’s “asset management journey” would take two to three years before meaningfully helping margins, he sounded optimistic.

“I feel very, very good about the strategic decisions that we’re making,” Solomon told investors in July. “We see a clear line of sight, and we’re going to make progress.”

An More and more Frightened Trump Says Mike Pence Has Gone Over To The “Darkish Facet”

Trump is showing how scared he is by claiming that his former vice president Mike Pence is not a good person and has gone over to the ‘dark side.’

Trump posted on Truth Social:

WOW, it’s finally happened! Liddle’ Mike Pence, a man who was about to be ousted as Governor Indiana until I came along and made him V.P., has gone to the Dark Side. I never told a newly emboldened (not based on his 2% poll numbers!) Pence to put me above the Constitution, or that Mike was “too honest.” He’s delusional, and now he wants to show he’s a tough guy. I once read a major magazine article on Mike. It said he was not a very good person. I was surprised, but the article was right. Sad!

There is no evidence that Pence was about to lose his seat as governor of Indiana, but his former vice president speaking out against him has gotten under Trump’s skin. Pence stayed quiet to the country’s detriment for more than two years, but now that he is talking, he is telling all. Pence even shouted at Trump supporters in a parking lot.

Interestingly, Trump views ‘the dark side’ as following the law and speaking the truth.

If Donald Trump is convicted for his attempted coup, it will be because Mike Pence provided valuable evidence against Trump.

Donald Trump claiming that Mike Pence is a bad person is like the former president insulting himself.

If Pence is such a bad person, why did Trump add him to the ticket?

Trump is scared and worried about what Mike Pence could say.

The ex-president is trying to discredit a potential Jack Smith witness, and his comments about Pence could be viewed as witness tampering.

Listed below are the 5 price-target modifications and Four trades we made throughout this busy earnings week

CNBC Investing Club with Jim Cramer

Rob Kim | NBCUniversal

In a jam-packed week of earnings, the Club executed multiple trades and elevated price targets for some of our biggest stocks. Many of these moves stemmed from what we saw in quarterly numbers and heard on conference calls. Here’s a day-by-day look at the portfolio action.