| Saturday's biggest stories from Reuters and Adamfoxie..Enjoy your weekend☺ A truck with an American flag and a pro-Trump flag drives past the Paul G. Rogers Federal Building and U.S. Courthouse in West Palm Beach, Florida, August 18, 2022. REUTERS/Marco Bello U.S.A U.S. judge said he is leaning toward releasing some of the evidence presented by the Justice Department to justify its search of Donald Trump's Florida home last week, in a case pitting news organizations against federal prosecutors. Half of Republicans say federal law enforcement officials behaved irresponsibly since searching Mar-a-Lago, a Reuters/Ipsos poll found.
A longtime senior executive at Trump's family business pleaded guilty to helping the company engineer a 15-year tax fraud, in an agreement that will require him to testify about its business practices at an upcoming trial. Allen Weisselberg, 75, the former chief financial officer at the Trump Organization, entered his plea to all 15 charges he faced in a New York state court in Manhattan.
New U.S. Internal Revenue Service hires over the next decade will mainly replace retiring Baby Boomers, answer taxpayer questions and program new computers, Treasury officials and tax experts said, responding to Republican claims that the IRS will recruit 87,000 new agents to harass Americans on their taxes.
The man accused of stabbing novelist Salman Rushdie last week in western New York pleaded not guilty to second-degree attempted murder and assault charges and was held without bail.
Three men have been indicted on multiple felony charges in the 2018 prison beating death of James 'Whitey' Bulger, who lived a double life as one of Boston's most notorious mobsters and as a secret FBI informant before going on the run for 16 years.
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BUSINESSGerman producer prices jumped at the fastest pace on record in July, underscoring the gloomy outlook for Europe's largest economy, which is stuck in a stranglehold of soaring costs and weakening growth due to the Ukraine war. The German economy became more dependent on China in the first half of 2022, with direct investment and its trade deficit reaching new heights, according to research seen by Reuters.
London's transport network ground to a halt as train and bus workers held strikes over pay and conditions, the latest in a summer of labor market disputes as double-digit inflation eats into wages. Britain's financial watchdog has told firms offering 'buy now, pay later' loans to spell out the cost of late repayments to customers as the cost-of-living crisis intensifies.
Investors flooded social media platforms such as Reddit with criticism of Ryan Cohen's sale of his stake in Bed Bath & Beyond, blaming him for helping fuel a meme stock rally only to then walk away with a $60 million profit. The billionaire investor disclosed yesterday he had sold his 9.8% stake in the struggling home goods retailer.
A U.S. judge ordered Starbucks to reinstate seven employees at a Memphis, Tennessee, cafe who were allegedly fired for supporting a union organizing campaign, as the company seeks to halt pending nationwide union elections.
A Shanghai court sentenced Chinese-Canadian billionaire Xiao Jianhua, not seen in public since 2017, to 13 years in jail and fined his Tomorrow Holdings conglomerate $8.1 billion, a record in China. Xiao and Tomorrow Holdings were charged with illegally siphoning away public deposits, betraying the use of entrusted property, and the illegal use of funds and bribery.
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