BourbonAg said:
I am definitely not a criminal attorney. Is it possible the defense calls Stormy to get into some of that stuff?
They would have to subpoena her but it would likely be quashed by Merchan. And that would be a justifiable decsion since they had ample opportunity to cross her. Not worth the bang for the buck in my view.
Here is where the case stands. Prosecution has told the court Cohen is their final witness. He is currently on cross to continue on Thursday. Blanche has informed the court his cross might be finished by the close of business on Thursday but he might not be.
Court is dark on Friday. So that means Cohen will be back on the stand on Monday, either to continue cross or for the state's redirect. There may be a recross. May be a reredirect and a rerecross.
Once Cohen is done and excused, state will rest their case in chief. Defense will move for a directed verdict or a JOA (judgment of acquittal). By all rights, Merchan should grant that but he likely won't. (Would be bad for his daughter's business if he granted it.)
So then the defense needs to be ready to immediately begin their defense case in chief. They are under no legal obligation to present a defense and can rest, if they choose to do so. Pundits are of mixed views on what the defense will do. Present a defense or not?
In my opinion, I think they have to present some defense, even if extremely limited by Merchan's earlier rulings against them. The prosecution has been allowed (incorrectly) for the jury to hear about campaign finance violations to hang around out there. Defense has an expert witness, former head of the FEC Bradley Smith, which Merchan has allowed to testify but only on limited topics. But after the prosecution put Cohen's attorney's letter to the FEC from February 2018 into evidence, was the door opened for Smith to go into some of those prohibited matters? Merchan gave the jury a limiting instruction at the time but all trial lawyers know you can't put the s*** back into the horse.
That is, that the jury now knows there was an FEC investigation into this matter. So that is hanging out there unanswered by the state. The jury has alo heard Weisselberg's name throughout this trial yet have to wonder why he has not been called by the state? Weisselberg could close that loop back to Trump, which so far no one else can do besides the questionable testimony of Cohen.
Even Merchan asked the state why they haven't called him? The prosecution was quite disingenuously moved to be able to admit Weisselberg's separation agreement from the Trump Org as it contains a no disparagement clause and NDA. But that would leave the impression with the jury that Trump is preventing him from testifying, which is a load of hooey. NDAs are always breachable under compulsory process (subpoena.)