Legal expert hands Trump lawyers a way to 'salvage their inept case'

Donald Trump and Lawyer Susan Necheles Necheles (JUSTIN LANE/AFP)

Legal experts have widely agreed that Donald Trump’s defense in his hush money case has not gone well — but one argued Monday that it’s not too late for his lawyers to claw the case back.

Former federal prosecutor Shan Wu wrote Monday that Trump’s lawyers could stillconvince jurors that he’s innocent of business fraud charges — but only by following a specific strategy.

“The best defense closings are not scattergun approaches that rely upon lofty rhetoric or anecdotes about the meaning of reasonable doubt,” he wrote inthe Daily Beast.

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“ … The reality is defendants tend to face a ‘presumed guilty”’ attitude that the defense must overcome. To do so, defense counsel needs to present a coherent theory or theories.

“For example, the defendant wasn’t present at the crime scene and the eyewitnesses are suspect because they either have bad eyesight or are biased against the defendant.”

So, he wrote, Trump’s defense lawyers need to change what they’ve been doing so far in the five week trial.

“Thus far, Trump’s defense team seems to use a throw-everything-at-the-kitchen-wall strategy with a particular emphasis on Trump’s favorite foods: insult and shame.”

Using those tactics to attack witnesses adult movie star Stormy Daniels and former Trump lawyer Michael Cohen, he wrote, did not go down well.

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“To salvage their inept case, the defense needs to give a closing which is tightly focused on facts and not their client’s penchant for insult,” he wrote.

“The best way for them to treat the Stormy Daniels testimony is to argue it is not really relevant to whether Trump engaged in falsification of business records since she has no knowledge of accounting details. If, on the other hand, they try to satisfy Trump by arguing that the sexual encounter never took place, then they not only put the jury’s focus on a legally irrelevant factor but also risk setting up a credibility contest between Trump and Daniels. That’s not a contest Trump is likely to win.

“With Michael Cohen, they need to play up the slim amount of testimony that Trump gave specific instructions given to falsify the reimbursements to Cohen as legal invoices.

“That leads to the defense’s strongest argument, which is that there is insufficient evidence of Trump directing or knowing how the reimbursements were recorded.”

“It’s their best argument because it attacks the foundation of the case.”

Trump is facing 34 charges of business fraud involving alleged payments to Daniels to keep quiet about a sexual relationship the pair had.

Closing arguments are scheduled to begin Tuesday, before the case is handed to the jury for deliberations.

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