That the significant cooperation under discussion involves four of Trumpā€™s attorneys underscores the reality that the former presidentā€™s regularly touted defense that he was relying on the good-faith guidance of his attorneys during the attempted coup was, and is, nothing more than self-serving fantasy. In the courtroomā€”as compared with on television or in social mediaā€”he has never had the ability to offer that defense.

In court, the advice of counsel ā€œaffirmative defenseā€ requires a defendant to prove two things: First, that he relied in good faith on his lawyerā€™s advice that the conduct in question at trial was legal, and second, that he made a full disclosure of all relevant facts to the attorney before receiving that advice.

Based on my four decades in the courtroom as both federal prosecutor and defense attorney, I can report that the assertion of the attorney-client privilege by a criminal defendant at trial is a black swan eventā€”effective only with the consistent, overlapping trial testimony of both the attorney and the defendant, and the admission into evidence of any documents reflecting the communications or advice they testified about.

    • protist@mander.xyz
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      1 year ago

      Unfortunately heā€™s not an idiot, heā€™s a malignant narcissist, with diagnosable narcissistic personality disorder. Heā€™s quite adept at keeping attention on himself and deflecting negative narratives, which is what his entire personality has been cultivated around.