aggiehawg said:No idea. I do know that as part of the grand jury hearings prior to this indictment that Costello testified because Cohen had waived his attorney client privilege.Quote:
So is Robert Costello going to testify in the Trump case? Or was this one of the witnesses that the judge denied being subpoenaed? (My brain can't keep up and I haven't able to find it).
Costello's testimony would likely fall under a collateral attack on Cohen's truthfulness and that has restrictions, meaning Merchan could disallow his testimony under that.
But if Blanche asks Cohen questions about the time period wherein Costello was his attorney and Cohen lies about what he told Costello? Then it is less of a collateral attack. Merchan could still disallow it but that makes it harder.
Further, Blanche should ask Cohen about how Lanny Davis became his counsel, when who suggested it, etc. Cohen's story flipped when Lanny (a Clinton crony) became his lawyer.
ETA: Rule 608
So a judge could disallow a witness testifying in the trial even though that witness testified before the grand jury?
Also, where's the line between a rebuttal witness who is being called to rebut the testimony of the prosecution's star witness and a "collateral attack" witness? I thought the defense (and prosecution) had the right to call a witness for the sole purpose of rebutting the testimony of another witness?
If the judge doesn't allow Costello to testify, would that not be another major justification for the appeals court to overturn (not that there hasn't been an extraordinary number already)?
Forgive this lay person for asking all of these questions. I've just never heard the term collateral attack before when it comes to legal proceedings, and I'm just confused on the rules governing rebuttal testimonies.