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Appeals court throws out massive civil fraud penalty against President Donald Trump

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www.abccolumbia.com – Associated Press – 2025-08-22 10:19:00

SUMMARY: A New York appeals court dismissed President Donald Trump’s $527 million financial penalty for fraud but upheld the finding he exaggerated his wealth for decades. The ruling bans Trump and his two eldest sons from corporate leadership for a few years. The court deemed the fine “excessive” under the Eighth Amendment but agreed Trump committed fraud by inflating asset values. Trump called it a “total victory,” while Attorney General Letitia James emphasized the affirmed fraud liability. The complex 323-page decision allows for further appeal. Trump continues to face multiple legal challenges, including criminal convictions and defamation cases.

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Sen. Lindsey Graham says Trump ready to ‘crush’ Russian economy if Putin avoids talks with Zelenskyy

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www.abccolumbia.com – Associated Press – 2025-08-21 10:13:00

SUMMARY: Republican Senator Lindsey Graham said President Trump is ready to impose harsh new sanctions to “crush” Russia’s economy if Vladimir Putin refuses to meet with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy soon. Graham, who has urged Trump to back a bipartisan sanctions bill targeting countries aiding Russia’s war effort, spoke with Trump after high-level White House talks with Zelenskyy and European leaders. While Trump and allies remain optimistic about a Putin-Zelenskyy meeting, pressure is mounting on Trump to act decisively. The sanctions bill, supported by 85 senators, faces delays without Trump’s endorsement. European leaders remain cautiously hopeful but note little progress on peace.

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Hickory police face lawsuit over fatal shooting

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carolinapublicpress.org – Lucas Thomae – 2025-08-21 08:27:00


A Hickory woman is suing the city and three police officers over the 2023 shooting death of her son, Timothy Setzer Jr., who was shot 15 times after fleeing on foot. The lawsuit, filed by Charlotte law firms, alleges excessive, unreasonable use of deadly force violating Setzer’s Fourth Amendment rights. Despite officers’ claims that Setzer brandished a firearm, body camera footage and investigations show he was unarmed, fleeing with his back turned and never threatened police. No gun was found on him, only nearby. The complaint also accuses officers of failing to give a verbal warning, violating city policy. The lawsuit includes wrongful death and assault claims.

A Hickory woman is suing the city and several current and former police officers for the 2023 death of her son, who was shot and killed after officers fired dozens of times as he fled from them on foot.

Two Charlotte-based law firms that specialize in police misconduct filed the lawsuit in Catawba County Superior Court last week.

Attorney Anthony Burts told Carolina Public Press that U.S. Supreme Court precedent dictates that police cannot use lethal force simply to prevent a non-threatening suspect from getting away.

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The U.S. Supreme Court decision Tennessee v. Garner established that under the Fourth Amendment — which protects people from unreasonable searches and seizures — law enforcement officers “may not seize an unarmed, nondangerous suspect by shooting him dead.”

“We need there to be appropriate law enforcement tactics being used in our communities,” Burts said.

“When deadly force is used and someone dies, that person is never coming back.”

The man at the center of the lawsuit is Timothy Setzer Jr., who was 27 and working in construction before his death. Police were responding to reports of gunfire near a park in downtown Hickory shortly after midnight when they spotted Setzer walking and talking to himself, the lawsuit said.

Setzer matched the description of a suspicious individual who dispatchers reported being seen in the area, according to the lawsuit. Hickory Police Officer Austin Steele ordered him to stop and show his hands. Setzer raised his hands in the air but continued to walk away from the officers. After being ordered to stop again, Setzer fled.

Steele and Officer Isam Shamseldin gave chase, following Setzer into a nearby empty parking lot. According to the lawsuit, that’s when the officers opened fire with Setzer’s back still turned to them.

A third officer, Aaron Travis, who had just arrived on the scene in a patrol car driven by his trainee also fired at Setzer out of the passenger-side window of his vehicle, the lawsuit said, calling the maneuver “more suited for an action movie or first-person shooter video game.”

Altogether the three Hickory officers fired 28 shots at Setzer and hit him 15 times, killing him on the spot, according to the complaint.

The officers stated in their initial incident reports that Setzer had a firearm and had pulled it out of his waistband before they opened fire, but the lawsuit said a body-worn camera footage acquired from the State Bureau of Investigation tells a different story.

“Body-worn camera footage confirms that (Setzer’s) back remained turned to Defendant Officers, and he never (1) stopped running, (2) brandished a weapon, or (3) made threats,” the complaint stated.

Travis admitted in a SBI interview following the shooting that he never saw Setzer with a weapon and that his back remained turned to Steele and Shamseldin as he was running away, the lawsuit said.

An autopsy showed Setzer was shot several times from behind, indicating he was not facing the officers when they opened fire, the lawsuit said.

Further, the complaint alleged that the Hickory police officers never gave Setzer a verbal warning that they would use deadly force before they started shooting. Burts said violated the city’s use-of-force policy, which states that officers, when determining whether to use deadly force, should give a verbal warning “when feasible.”

No gun was found on Setzer’s person after the incident, but an SBI agent found a firearm in a wooded area near the parking lot using a 3-D scanner. SBI investigators also recovered an empty handgun magazine allegedly belonging to Setzer, although the lawsuit maintains that there is no physical evidence, including fingerprints, DNA or gunshot residue, linking it to Setzer.

“Unequivocally, there was no gun on Mr. Setzer’s person,” Burts told CPP.

Burts said he filed a petition to release the body-worn camera footage of the incident. Under North Carolina law, such footage is not a public record and requires a court order to be released.

“We want the public to be able to weigh in because Mr. Setzer is no longer here and never will be able to say what happened himself,” Burts said.

The lawsuit brings claims against three Hickory police officers — Steele, Shamseldin and Travis — for their use of deadly force, which it claims was unreasonable, excessive and violated Setzer’s Fourth Amendment rights.

The primary argument of the lawsuit is that Setzer was unarmed and nondangerous at the time of his death. Even if the firearm found near the site of the shooting had belonged to Setzer, that he did not have it on his person and that he didn’t threaten the officers should be enough to constitute excessive force, Burts said.

The complaint also brings state-law claims against the officers and the City of Hickory for assault and battery, wrongful death and negligence.

Hickory City Manager Warren Wood, who is cited in the complaint as the official who reviewed the shooting and determined it to be in compliance with the city’s use of force policy, did not respond to CPP’s request for comment before the publication of this article.

Neither Travis nor Shamseldin have active law enforcement certifications in North Carolina, according to the NC Justice Training and Certification Portal. The circumstances or timeline of their departures from the Hickory Police Department is unclear.

Steele still has an active certification associated with Hickory P.D. A public information officer with the department did not respond to a request for comment prior to the publication of this article.

This article first appeared on Carolina Public Press and is republished here under a Creative Commons Attribution-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License.

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Note: The following A.I. based commentary is not part of the original article, reproduced above, but is offered in the hopes that it will promote greater media literacy and critical thinking, by making any potential bias more visible to the reader –Staff Editor.

Political Bias Rating: Center-Left

This content leans center-left as it focuses on police accountability and critiques the use of excessive force by law enforcement, topics often emphasized by progressive and reform-minded perspectives. The article highlights legal challenges to police actions and underscores civil rights concerns without adopting an overtly partisan tone, maintaining a fact-based narrative that aligns with calls for justice and reform commonly associated with center-left viewpoints.

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US troops won’t be sent to help defend Ukraine, Trump says

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www.abccolumbia.com – Associated Press – 2025-08-20 10:14:00

SUMMARY: On August 18, 2025, President Donald Trump met with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy and European leaders at the White House to discuss ending Russia’s war against Ukraine. Trump assured that U.S. troops would not be sent to defend Ukraine, dismissing Kyiv’s aspirations to join NATO or regain Crimea as “impossible.” He revealed efforts to arrange direct talks between Putin and Zelenskyy, aiming for peace negotiations. While Putin has expressed openness to security guarantees and a potential meeting, the Kremlin remains noncommittal. Trump expressed optimism about resolving the conflict but noted the complexity of territorial disputes and security demands.

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