Trump's lawyers are also on trial
We can only hope that trumps lawyers end up in the brig just like his past lawyers have done.
Trumps lawyers are also on trial
The president's impeachment trial has revealed a common Trump theme: The lawyers he brings in to defend his behavior end up in their own legal morass.
Jay Sekulow and Pat Cipollone
President Donald Trump's personal attorney Jay Sekulow (left) and White House Counsel Pat Cipollone. | Julio Cortez/AP Photo
By DARREN SAMUELSOHN
01/23/2020 05:08 AM EST
Theyve been accused of orchestrating a criminal conspiracy. Theyve been dubbed ethically compromised. Theyve been labeled liars. They could even be called to testify in the impeachment case they were hired to combat.
In the opening days of Donald Trumps Senate trial, it has at times felt like the presidents lawyers are his co-defendants.
Nonsense, said Jay Sekulow, the longest-serving personal attorney to Trump, when asked about the litany of allegations flying around Capitol Hill.
Welcome to impeachment in the Trump era, where the president cheers on his attorneys as they blow right past any suggestion that they themselves were direct witnesses if not culpable in a scheme that helped make their client Americas third chief executive to be impeached.
Its a theme that has been replayed throughout Trumps life: The lawyers he brings in to authorize and defend his behavior end up in their own legal morass. Trumps longtime legal fixer, Michael Cohen, is doing three years in federal prison for his election-season role in paying off women who alleged affairs with Trump. Former White House counsel Don McGahn ended up as a star witness for special counsel Robert Mueller after he had a front-row seat to Trumps potential obstruction of justice. Rudy Giuliani has hired a team of criminal defense attorneys as the Justice Department investigates his recent behavior while serving as personal counsel to the president.
For now, Trumps current attorneys appear to be embracing their role as supporting actors in a drama that will play out on the Senate floor for another week if not longer, sparring frequently with their Democratic investigators and leaving Chief Justice John Roberts to decide just how many more times hell need to serve as the chief of the Senates decorum police..............................................
MissMillie
(38,525 posts)Please? It'd be nice to read the whole thing.