Skip to content
Search AI Powered

Latest Stories

Trump Just Held A Shady Meeting On His Golf Course Where No One Was Golfing–And Twitter Has Theories

Trump Just Held A Shady Meeting On His Golf Course Where No One Was Golfing–And Twitter Has Theories
Tom Williams/CQ-Roll Call, Inc via Getty Images

Twitter users suggested former President Donald Trump and his associates looked like they'd stepped off the set of HBO's The Sopranos or one of director Martin Scorsese's gangster movies after they were photographed having a meeting on one of his golf courses even though no one was golfing.

Trump's plane touched ground September 11 at Dulles Airport in Virginia. The trip was unannounced and was never announced on social media or otherwise. Trump arrived dressed in golf clothes.


Photos showed several individuals crowded around Trump on the green of one hole, no golf clubs in sight.


Kelly O'Donnell, the senior White House correspondent for NBC News, also posted video footage of the meeting taken from a "considerable distance."

The meeting came just after the Department of Justice (DOJ) ordered its agents to seize the phones of two top Trump aides and "blanketed his aides with about 40 subpoenas in a substantial escalation of the investigation into his efforts to subvert the 2020 election," according to people familiar with the inquiry who spoke to The New York Times.

The two men were identified as Boris Epshteyn, an in-house counsel, and Mike Roman, a campaign strategist who directed Election Day operations in 2020.

Emails reviewed by The New York Times and authenticated by people who worked on the Trump campaign at the time showed that both men, along with multiple members of Trump's inner circle, conspired to help Trump overturn the results of an election that Democrat Joe Biden won decisively, one of the many developments in a larger story largely focused on Trump's actions on January 6, 2021, the day a mob of his supporters attacked the United States Capitol on the false premise the election had been stolen.

Emails were regularly sent to Epshteyn, who coordinated with people inside and outside the Trump campaign and the White House. Epshteyn was in regular contact with John Eastman, who openly planned to derail the certification of the Electoral College on January 6.

Epshteyn also passed along messages to Trump attorney Rudy Giuliani, even sending him the detailed plan Eastman had mapped out, but also handled "questions about how to pay Mr. Eastman and made the arrangements for him to visit the White House on Jan. 4, 2021," per the report.

Given these facts, Twitter users were remarkably curious.




Investigations into Trump's criminality appear to have intensified in the weeks since the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) raided Trump's Mar-a-Lago estate on the hunt for classified documents that Trump took from the Oval Office.

The DOJ sought a search warrant for Trump's estate after "obtaining evidence that highly classified documents were likely concealed and that Mr. Trump’s representatives had falsely claimed all sensitive material had been returned," according to The New York Times, which broke the news about a recent court filing outlining what authorities uncovered during their search.

Agents found three classified documents in desks in Trump's office as well as more than 100 documents in 13 boxes or containers with classification markings, some with the highest restrictions. They are looking for still more documents after recovering empty folders with classified markings.

More from People/donald-trump

Sir Michael Caine
Mike Marsland/WireImage

Michael Caine Cryptically Tweeted The Word 'Jet'—And The Jokes Came Flying In

Legendary Oscar winner Sir Michael Caine may be 92 years old, but he's no less a social media maven than the young people among us. In fact, he might even be better at it than the youths!

What makes him so good at the social media game is the way he gets right to the point with as few words as possible.

Keep Reading Show less
Mike Malott and Charles Radtke during UFC match
Chris Unger/Zuffa LLC

U.S. UFC Star Threatens Canada For Booing Anthem—Then Gets His A** Handed To Him

UFC fighter Charles Radtke was widely mocked online after talking trash about Canada before his bout with Canadian fighter Mike Malott—only to be soundly defeated by Malott in the second round.

Radtke leaned into the role of the villain leading up to the fight, invoking President Donald Trump’s talk of annexing Canada as the “51st state” and saying he was seeking revenge for Canadian hockey fans recently booing the U.S. national anthem.

Keep Reading Show less
Screenshot of Brian Jack talking to high school students
@patriottakes/X

High School Group Asks MAGA Rep. Why Trump Looks 'So Orange'—And His Answer Is Awkward AF

Things sure got awkward for Georgia Republican Representative Brian Jack after a group of students asked him during a Q&A session why President Donald Trump is "so orange."

People can only speculate what brand of makeup or bronzer Trump uses on a daily basis but there's a reason why he's been nicknamed "the orange man," "Agent Orange," and even "Mango Mussolini"—the color of his face is really, really hard to miss given he's photographed all the time.

Keep Reading Show less
Sean Duffy
Anna Moneymaker/Getty Images

Transportation Secretary Slammed After Admitting He Made A Telling Switch To Wife's Recent Flight

Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy was criticized after admitting in a recent audio clip that he'd just switched his wife's Newark Liberty International Airport flight to one out of LaGuardia Airport—despite previously claiming his family flies out of Newark Airport "all the time."

Duffy’s remarks came as staffing shortages caused major flight disruptions at Newark on Monday, with the F.A.A. forced to delay incoming flights from across the continental U.S. and parts of Canada. According to an online advisory, delays averaged over 1 hour and 40 minutes and in some cases stretched to nearly seven hours.

Keep Reading Show less
tourists on stairs leading to cathedral
Ilnur Kalimullin on Unsplash

People Share The Things They Consider 'Normal' In Their Country That Would Shock Tourists

What's normal but a setting on the clothes dryer?

What we label "normal" would often be best described as "common." Normal is defined as "conforming to a standard" or "the usual, average, or typical state or condition."

Keep Reading Show less