
Inside Ghislaine Maxwell's secret meeting with Trump's DOJ: Cuffed so tight her wrists were BLEEDING, the truth bombs started
I can disclose, for example, that the interview with Maxwell, one of the most high profile felons in the American penal system, was originally scheduled to take place inside the tough Florida jail where she is serving her 20-year sentence for child sex offences.

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Daily Mail
7 minutes ago
- Daily Mail
Italy's Giorgia Meloni's side-eye goes viral as she's seated next to Trump during crunch talks
Italian Prime Minister Giorgio Meloni appeared to give side-eye to German Chancellor Friedrich Merz on Monday as they attended a high-stakes meeting in the East Room with President Donald Trump. Meloni and Merz were among the European leaders who flew to Washington to back up Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky, who was receiving a debrief from Trump after the president's meeting Friday with Russian President Vladimir Putin. Trump is attempting to end the war in Ukraine. During his Oval Office meeting with Zelensky, Trump stated that a ceasefire deal wasn't necessary ahead of a broader peace agreement. Afterward, Zelensky and the other European leaders gathered around a table in the East Room for a meeting. Merz - and later French President Emmanuel Macron - pressed Trump on the ceasefire issue. 'Let's try and put pressure on Russia, because the credibility of this effort, these efforts we are undertaking today, are depending on at least a ceasefire from the beginning of the serious negotiations, from next stop on,' Merz told Trump. Between Merz and the American president sat Meloni - who was captured on camera making several odd expressions with her eyes as the German chancellor went on. 'So I would like to emphasize this aspect and would like to see a ceasefire from the next meeting, which should be a trilateral meeting, wherever it takes place,' Merz said. Last month Meloni got called out for dramatically rolling her eyes amid a conversation with Macron at the G7 in Canada. A year before, at the G7, she got caught rolling her eyes after then President Joe Biden was late for the third day in a row. The 48-year-old has served as the prime minister of Italy since October 2022 - a particularly lengthy time for an Italian leader. She came into office as a far-right conservative and thus is more politically aligned with Republican Trump than some of her European counterparts. Going around the table, Trump called Meloni 'a really great leader and an inspiration over there.' 'She's served now, even though she's a very young person, she's served there for a long period of time relative to others,' the president marveled. 'They don't last very long,' he laughed. 'You've lasted a long time. You're going to be there a long time,' Trump said. Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky (left) speaks to the press at the top of a meeting in the East Room Monday hosted by President Donald Trump (right) and attended by European leaders including British Prime Minister Keir Starmer (left) and French President Emmanuel Macron (center) The friendly banter continued as the press exited. Finnish President Alexander Stubb watched as reporters shouted questions toward Trump, Zelensky and the leaders as they were ushered out by White House wranglers. 'You do this every day?' Stubb asked Trump. 'All the time,' the U.S. president answered. Meloni then interjected. 'But he loves it, he loves it,' she said dramatically, then adding how she doesn't like engaging with the Italian press. Trump then told Meloni that Stubbs was a 'very good golfer, you know.'


The Independent
8 minutes ago
- The Independent
New pics of Trump holding court in Oval Office branded ‘embarrassing' as world leaders sit around his desk: ‘Like schoolchildren'
New pictures showing Donald Trump sitting in the Oval Office in front of major world leaders has been criticized as an "embarrassing" power play by the president, in what should have been a display of global unity. Some on social media noted that the set up, with Trump behind the Resolute Desk and his European counterparts on chairs opposite him, presented the president as hosting a bunch of 'unruly schoolchildren.' The president was joined for the photo-op by leaders including British prime minister Sir Keir Starmer, French president Emmanual Macron, German Chancellor Freidrich Merz, Italian prime minister Giorgia Meloni and Finnish president Alexander Stubb. Also in attendance were European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen, NATO Secretary-General Mark Rutte, and Ukrainian president Volodymyr Zelensky. Another photo showed a smiling Trump posing with a new golf club, gifted to him by Zelensky. However, the meeting of the circled leaders drew the ire of social media users, with some commenting that the staging and White House mantra of of 'peace through strength' was 'deeply disrespectful to U.S. history itself.' 'Permenant peace is never truly obtained through strength. It may hold for a while under pressure, but it won't last,' wrote one user. 'What a breathtakingly rude, narcissistic asshole,' another said. 'Instead of a conference table where everyone can meet equally, Chump lined them up like unruly school children in a row with himself as the authority figure. Chump can just f*** all the way off.' Others questioned how the leaders, who came to Washington D.C. as 'equals' had allowed such a belittling set up. 'Embarrassing,' wrote one user, with another going further, writing 'I cannot believe they let Trump seat them like a bunch of schoolchildren. 'Do none of these 'leaders' have any testosterone whatsoever or PR teams that can approve/reject seating arrangements. Most embarrassing thing I've ever seen for the EU.'


Daily Mail
9 minutes ago
- Daily Mail
Heiress who sold CBS News says she was secretly pleased by Trump attacks on its slanted broadcasts
An heiress who used to own CBS's parent company Paramount says she welcomed Donald Trump suing the broadcaster over alleged biased coverage on its flagship news show. Shari Redstone, 71, conceded to The New York Times that 'We needed more balance' - although she and the president had been offended by different broadcasts. Trump sued CBS after claiming the network's flagship current affairs show 60 Minutes had deceptively edited a Kamala Harris interview to make her look better. Meanwhile, Redstone said she'd been offended by a separate 60 Minutes episode on the Israel-Hamas war she felt was too slanted in favor of the Palestinian cause. She said: 'Part of me thought, maybe Trump could accomplish what I never got done.' Redstone, the daughter of the late entertainment magnate Sumner Redstone, says she realized she wanted to sell Paramount in the wake of Hamas ' October 7 2023 massacre in Israel, that saw 1,200 Israelis murdered. She explained: 'Once that happened, I wanted out. I wanted to support Israel, and address issues around antisemitism and racism.' Shortly after that, another heir called David Ellison contacted her asking if she'd sell to Skydance, the production company he'd set up. Redstone closed the sale for $8 billion last month and took home an estimated $2.8 billion of that payout. That deal was struck around the same time CBS settled with Trump for $16 million over the Kamala Harris interview he said was deceptive. Lawyers said the network had strong grounds to contest Trump's claims. But Redstone's sale of Paramount had to be rubber-stamped by Trump's Federal Communications Commission - with the settlement seen by critics as a dirty deal to grease the wheels. Redstone told The Times that she found 60 Minutes veteran journalist Lesley Stahl's criticism of the settlement 'particularly hurtful.' The heiress insisted she'd just wanted to get the deal done to help give CBS News a secure future. 'We needed more balance,' Redstone went on to tell the Times, suggesting such segments - including others that were no specified were slanted. 'Part of me thought, maybe Trump could accomplish what I never got done' Simultaneously, Redstone was secretly thyroid battling cancer. The billionairess, who trained as a social worker, underwent surgery in May after the disease spread to her coal cords. Asked how she came the decision, Redstone said: 'My legacy was to create security for my family and to put the company in good hands.' She added how despite 'many challenges... we did what we set out to do.'