As former President Donald Trump’s criminal trial in New York begins another week of proceedings, The New York Times reports that Trump has been venting behind the scenes that his lead lawyer, Todd Blanche, “has not been following his instructions closely.” More specifically, Trump believes Blanche is not being aggressive enough with the witnesses, the judge and even the jury pool.
During my time as a federal prosecutor, I occasionally saw defendants try to micromanage their cases and run roughshod over their defense attorneys. This approach is always a recipe for disaster. In other words, it looks like Trump may be not only his own worst enemy, but his own worst advocate.
The more zealous and effective attorneys will tell the client, ‘I know how to try criminal cases; you don’t.’
Although criminal defense attorneys must always consult with their client on trial strategy and tactics, it is the attorney who, at the end of the day, typically controls those strategic and tactical decisions. The defendant only gets to make a handful of decisions him or herself, including decisions that may go directly against the advice of his counsel. For example, it is exclusively up to the defendant whether to plead guilty or not guilty, whether to accept or reject any particular plea offer and whether to testify or not testify in his own trial.
But all tactical trial decisions — whether and to what extent to cross-examine prosecution witnesses, what witnesses (if any) to call for the defense, what evidence to introduce (i.e., business records, phone records, text messages, emails, photographs, etc.) — are the province of the defense attorney, not the client.
I have seen defense attorneys struggle with difficult, obstinate or overbearing clients. I’ve seen some defense attorneys rise to the challenge and refuse to cater to a client’s ill-advised tactical demands. The more zealous and effective attorneys will tell the client, “I make the tactical decisions, and I will make them in your best interest. I know how to try criminal cases; you don’t.” I’ve also seen defense attorneys who were not up to the challenge — who let the defendants call the shots — and the client often went down in flames.
One prime example of Trump hurting his own defense is the fact that he will not let his attorneys concede that he had relationships or encounters with Karen McDougal and Stormy Daniels. This pits Trump against those two women in the eyes of the jurors. By not allowing his attorneys to concede that he may have had relationships with these women, Trump will force the jury to believe him or believe them.








