Michael Cohen is finally off the stand.
The former fixer and attorney for Donald Trump spent several days on the witness stand in the former president’s New York criminal trial, finally ceding the chair on Monday.
The prosecution’s direct examination of Cohen ranged from serviceable to successful. The cross-examination of Cohen by defense attorney Todd Blanche drew more scrutiny.
Some of the criticism of Blanche was warranted. Some was not.
It’s true that the defense’s cross-examination was too long. But, in defense of the defense, I very much understand why.
It’s true that the defense’s cross-examination was too long. But, in defense of the defense, I very much understand why. Blanche is trying the biggest case of his career. He was taking on a witness with a long history of dishonesty and criminal activity. He had millions of Cohen’s own words at his fingertips, from books to podcasts to recorded live appearances. There was just so much material to work with. Marshaling the facts into an outline on a yellow legal pad must have been a daunting task. Worse than that, though, is the fear of leaving something out.
As much as lawyers claim to understand juries, we don’t understand them much at all. When lawyers stick around after a trial to talk to jurors, they are always surprised at how the jurors saw the case and the evidence. There’s always some unexpected fact that the jury focused on — and in my experience, it’s often a fact that the lawyers considered unimportant. So, all lawyers fear leaving anything out of a cross-examination. It might be just the one thing that would have resonated with that last holdout juror.
And it only takes one person to avoid a guilty verdict.
That’s why Blanche’s cross erred on the side of epic. And it’s easy for lawyers like me to just say a cross should be tighter, shorter and more surgical. But I’m not trying the case. Do you want to be remembered as the lawyer who didn’t ask enough questions? Or the lawyer who maybe asked a few extra questions, and got lucky with the last one?








