This works if the jury is inclined to believe Avenatti. But we're back to "fool for a client." Trial lawyers are not the client. They raise defenses for the client. If the jury doesn't accept those defenses, the client takes the hit. Avenatti is both client and lawyer here. If they don't believe Avenatti as the client, they aren't going to be impressed with Avenatti as a trial lawyer. Juries can be impressed with the lawyer (see, e.g., the OJ case), but they can also be impressed with the lawyer and not with the client. Avenatti has no such split, but he's imaging he does. He's imaging he's the lawyer talking about his client; but he's the lawyer talking about himself.Again, for the people who think Michael Avenatti’s a bad attorney — he’s an attorney and he’s a bad person, but he knows how to cross-examine. Will it work? He only needs to sway one juror to hang it. But tougher evidence is coming. https://t.co/vN7ZvXPT3n
— HatInProSe (@Popehat) July 23, 2021
One thing Avenatti’s doing an effective job at is pointing out the extent to which the government is rhetorically overselling evidence, which is a common AUSA mistake. If he can focus the jury on how the evidence doesn’t match promises, he wins.
— HatInProSe (@Popehat) July 23, 2021
No comments:
Post a Comment