Tuesday Briefing – The New York Times

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Tuesday Briefing – The New York Times

Donald Trump yesterday began his first of many trials — a civil fraud case that imperils his company and threatens his image. The New York State attorney general’s office accused the former president of inflating his riches by more than $2 billion to obtain favorable deals with banks and bragging rights about his wealth.

The trial’s opening day brought Trump face-to-face with one of his longest-running antagonists: the attorney general of New York, Letitia James, who filed the case against him, his adult sons and their family business. If her office proves its case, the judge overseeing the trial could impose an array of punishments on Trump, including a $250 million penalty.

The trial, expected to last more than a month and to include testimony from Trump, coincides with the former president’s latest White House run. After the civil case ends, Trump will face four criminal trials that touch on a range of subjects: hush-money payments to a porn star, the handling of classified documents and his efforts to remain in power after losing the 2020 election.

Context: The fraud case, which will be decided by the judge rather than a jury, has struck a nerve with the former president. The claims portray him as a cheat rather than a captain of industry and undercut an image he constructed while he catapulted from real estate to reality television fame and ultimately the White House.

Nearly all of the E.U.’s highest diplomats met at a surprise summit in Ukraine’s battered wartime capital to reassert the bloc’s commitment to Ukraine against Russia’s invasion and to rebut concerns that some countries’ support might be waning.

Russia’s attack on Ukraine roused the E.U. into a run of unified action that was extraordinary for the often-fractious bloc. Over 18 months, the nations have imposed 11 rounds of economic sanctions on Russia, provided training for the Ukrainian military and given billions of euros in support.

But the West’s sustained backing has not come without strains, as member nations have struggled to reckon with the war’s economic consequences and to maintain political unity at home.

Details: The foreign ministers came from 23 of the European Union’s 27 members, and they were joined by representatives from the four remaining countries, Poland, Hungary, Latvia and Sweden.


After ethnic Serbian gunmen stormed the small village of Banjska in Kosovo last week and fought a deadly battle with Kosovar forces, Serbia deployed thousands of military forces along Kosovo’s border. The White House denounced the move as “destabilizing.”

The violence has raised fears that this troubled Balkan region could be plunged into a wider conflagration. Sinisa Jancovic, a lumberjack from northern Kosovo, said he had heard heavy gunfire as the battle raged. But with the village sealed off by special Kosovar police forces, he was now more worried about getting enough to eat. “I’m very tired of all this,” he said.

Lise Meitner developed the theory of nuclear fission, the process that enabled the atomic bomb. But as a Jewish woman, she was barred from sharing credit for the discovery, newly translated letters show, and Otto Hanh, her longtime collaborator, won the Nobel Prize in 1946.

Related: The Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine was awarded to Katalin Kariko and Drew Weissman for their discoveries that led to the development of Covid vaccines.

British 3 p.m. soccer blackout: The Premier League’s invisible games.

The youngest U.S. pro soccer player: Da’Vian Kimbrough, 13, played for Sacramento in a United Soccer League match on Saturday.

Ryder Cup analysis: What to know about Europe’s victory.

Through partnerships and 3-D printing, NASA is plotting how to build houses on the moon by 2040. Living on Mars isn’t far behind — meaning people might live on the moon and Mars in your lifetime.

A 3-D printer on the moon will build structures, layer by additive layer, out of a specialized lunar concrete created from the rock chips, mineral fragments and dust that sits on the top layer of the moon’s cratered surface and billows in poisonous clouds whenever disturbed — a plan made possible through new technology and partnerships with universities and private companies.

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