JUST IN: In an unexpected development, Donald Trump, a 2024 Republican presidential contender currently under indictment, suffered an unanticipated embarrassment when his lead attorney gave a dismal courtroom performance. In an appeal to the judge, the attorney inadvertently exposed Trump's history of recurrent criminal engagements. Due to the substantial volume of ongoing criminal proceedings against Trump, his attorney sought approval for Trump to partake in the upcoming court session remotely, recognizing the impracticality of personally attending them all.
Christopher Kise, the counsel for President Trump, apprised the judge that he would be unavailable for the November 1st hearing due to an active trial in the New York State Supreme Court. Given this clash, Kise courteously sought approval to engage in the November 1, 2023, hearing telephonically.
Proceeding with his case, Trump's attorney voiced his irritation, noting that the opposition's determination to conduct back-to-back extensive trials in disparate jurisdictions with entirely distinct facts, against the defendant's protests, disclosed a core reality about these cases.
The blunder by Trump's attorney is comical. Rather than depicting Trump as a casualty of a scheme to thwart his 2024 return, it unwittingly paints Trump as a busy offender with numerous ongoing cases. These endless criminal trials merely unveil the reality that Trump is a perpetual criminal now facing the repercussions of his actions.