Trump’s lawyers send subpoena to the WRONG person in hunt for evidence in former President’s hush money case prompting Brooklyn man to toy with dumbfounded attorneys
A Brooklyn man appears to be having fun with former President Donald Trump’s lawyers wrongly subpoenaing him in his lawsuit in the Stormy Daniels “hush money case.”
Trump, 77, has denied a 34-count indictment in connection with falsifying company records about a $130,000 payment to porn star Stormy Daniels over their alleged affair.
Attorney Todd Blanche, who represented the ex-president in the case, sent a subpoena in March to a man they believed was Manhattan investigator Jeremy Rosenberg to obtain files related to the former Trump confidant and fixer Michael Cohen.
Rosenberg investigated financial crimes for Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg.
However, Trump’s defense team appears to have sent the subpoena to Brooklyn man Jeremy Rosenberg, who emphasized that he is a different person by emailing them back: “I have no files for you.”
A Brooklyn man appears to be having fun with former President Donald Trump’s lawyers wrongly subpoenaing him in his lawsuit in the Stormy Daniels “hush money case.” Pictured: Manhattan investigator Jeremy Rosenberg, who says he has not yet received a subpoena
Attorney Todd Blanche, who represented the ex-president in the case, sent a subpoena in March to a man they believed was Manhattan investigator Jeremy Rosenberg to obtain files related to former Trump confidante and fixer Michael Cohen.
However, Trump’s defense team appears to have sent the subpoena to Jeremy Rosenberg, a Brooklyn man, who emphasized that he is a different person by emailing them back: ‘I have no files for you’
According to a file released by the lawyers on Monday, he appears to have taken his brutality one step further.
He wrote: ‘PS – The phone number you provided has been disconnected’ before adding ‘PPS – I’m keeping the fifteen dollars’, referring to the amount the lawyers sent him so he could send them the documents.
Blanche has complained that the Rosenberg they tried to reach has shown a “light-hearted” attitude to the proceedings.
However, prosecutor Matthew Colangelo says his team thinks they got the wrong man.
“The People spoke with Mr. Rosenberg’s counsel, who informed the People that the subpoena had not in fact been served on Mr. Rosenberg, that Mr. Rosenberg had not corresponded with counsel, and that Mr. Rosenberg has no connection whatsoever to the address in Brooklyn where the subpoena was allegedly served,” Colangelo said in the filing.
The Rosenberg team Trump wants to speak to wants to ask him about his 2023 suspension for sharing his communications about Cohen with Bragg’s office, the newspaper said. New York Post.
He has cooperated in the past in the prosecution of Trump ally Steve Bannon’s office.
Before joining the district attorney’s office, he was a detective with the NYPD for 20 years and left at the end of 2023, according to his LinkedIn page.
Blanche (pictured right) has complained that the Rosenberg they tried to reach has shown a ‘flippant’ attitude to the proceedings
On Monday, parts of Donald Trump’s real estate empire will be at stake. Jury selection will also begin in Stormy Daniels’ hush money case
The payment to Daniels was made just days before the 2016 election and prosecutors allege it amounted to an illegal campaign contribution.
The trial was scheduled to begin on March 25 but was postponed until at least mid-April after the U.S. Attorney’s Office in Manhattan released more than 200,000 pages of evidence from its investigation into Michael Cohen, Trump’s former personal attorney.
Trump and his lawyers have also attacked Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg, who brought the case, for trying to bury information that would damage Cohen’s credibility.
If the trial goes ahead, it will be the first of four criminal cases Trump faces.
He is accused by a Washington court of election interference for his role in the Jan. 6 insurrection, but the case has been stayed pending a Supreme Court ruling on whether he has immunity.
Trump is facing a trial in Florida for mishandling classified documents, but the trial is mired in delays and a tentative trial date this summer appears unlikely.
He is also accused of election interference in Georgia, but no date has been set and prosecutors have been mired in allegations of improper conduct.
Trump has said he doesn’t have the money to pay, despite claiming to be worth billions of dollars.
Former President Donald Trump appears in Manhattan Supreme Court for a hearing in his upcoming hush money lawsuit, brought by District Attorney Alvin Bragg
The former president’s lawyers called for a delay after the US Attorney’s Office released more than 100,000 pages of new evidence, saying they needed more time to review the material
New York State Attorney General Letitia James has already moved to seize Seven Springs, Trump’s golf course and private estate just north of Manhattan.
Trump could get a huge boost if his social media company Truth Social goes public, which could net him $3.5 billion.
But the windfall would only be on paper for at least six months because of laws prohibiting him from selling too quickly.