March 20, 2023 | Sundance | 235 Comments
This is what news and information is supposed to be all about. Excellent segment on Tucker Carlson {Direct Rumble Link Here}.
In this interview, former Michael Cohen lawyer, Robert Costello, deconstructs the entire premise of the key witness Alvin Bragg is using to target President Trump. Costello states in the interview that he just delivered two hours of grand jury testimony in Manhattan specifically against the interests of the prosecution Alvin Bragg is attempting to construct.
Michael Cohen previously waived attorney-client privilege with Robert Costello, during his effort to get out of legal trouble during his federal case. This waiver permits Robert Costello to discuss the entire background of his former representation with Michael Cohen. This is epic television. WATCH:
Robert Costello - former Cohen attorney: Michael Cohen has a “lie, cheat, steal” mindset (more…)
and...
President Trump Responds to Robert Costello Grand Jury Testimony in Manhattan March 21, 2023 | Sundance | 313 Comments
During his interview earlier on Monday evening, immediately after he delivered two hours of grand jury testimony, former Michael Cohen legal counsel Robert Costello, said he gave over 300 pages of documents to both the team of District Attorney Alvin Bragg, and the lawyers representing President Donald Trump.
President Trump responds to the statements from Robert Costello Esq on Truth Social
President Trump appears to be appealing to an intellectual reasonableness that DA Alvin Bragg may not possess.
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I love that this happened and came out to the public. I do not think it was happenstance. I would imagine it's simple move-counter-move.
At the same time, I am curious how it's legal. Is it legal for a witness before a grand jury to go on TV and talk about his testimony. Remember - his testimony was harmful to the false narrative, so the rules would actually apply to him.
Unless there is a gag order, everyone including the witness has the right of free speech.
got it - To guarantee the secrecy of grand jury hearings, Federal Rule of Criminal Procedure 6(e) prohibits most persons present during the proceedings from disclosing what transpired inside the grand jury room; however, the proscription does NOT apply to witnesses.