SwigAg11 said:
aggiehawg said:
"The judge will charge this jury that if a witness has a bias or skin in the game, you take that testimony with caution," Brennan added. "A witness is supposed to say, 'they robbed the bank, they drove the car, it was blue and it was raining out.' Not 'I want him in jail.'"
You had this in a previous post. Do judges typically state that to jurors or required to?
Yes. There are pattern jury instructions on how juries may assess credibility. A good deal affecting their incarceration or favorable treatment in a criminal case is one, convicted perjurer another, bias and a financial interest in the outcome another, animus towards the defendant is another. Jury can consider those in assessing the credibility and the weight to give to that testimony from such a witness.
Notice I said "weight" too. I thought Keith Davidson, Stormy's and McDougal's lawyer, was a pretty scummy shakedown lawyer, was once suspended from practicing but the jury could easily find him more believable than Cohen. That's important because Davidson's and Cohen's testimony clashed often.
To be clear, a fact witness having animus towards another witness is not nearly as big of a deal as the avowed hatred towards a defendant. And it comes down to corroboration at the end of the day. All of the witnesses and even the prosecutors saying Cohen was not the savoriest of characters before Cohen stepped foot on the stand could either be corroborated or refuted by Cohen's demeanor OR his testimony.
Cohen could maintain his demeanor but what he was saying he did, lying to everyone including his wife over a HELOC, he could still be repugnant to the jury which corroborated the testimony of the earlier witnesses who did not like him because he was an A-hole jerk.
Were I on that jury, between Davidson and Cohen Davidson all of the way