Trump's legal team enmeshed in tangle of possible conflicts
M. Evan Corcoran, a lawyer who accompanied former President Donald Trump to court last week for his arraignment on charges of trying to overturn the 2020 election, has given crucial evidence in Trump's other federal case — the one accusing him of illegally hoarding classified documents.
Another lawyer close to Trump, Boris Epshteyn, sat for an interview with prosecutors this past spring and could be one of the former president's co-conspirators in the election-tampering case.
And Epshteyn's lawyer, Todd Blanche, is defending Trump against both the documents and election case indictments.
The legal team that Trump has assembled to represent him in the twin prosecutions by the special counsel, Jack Smith, is marked by a tangled web of potential conflicts and overlapping interests — so much so that Smith's office has started asking questions.
Although it is not uncommon for lawyers in complex matters — such as large mob cases or financial inquiries — to wear many hats or to play competing roles, the Gordian knot of intertwined imperatives in the Trump investigations is particularly intricate and insular.
Some of the lawyers involved in the cases are representing both charged defendants and uncharged witnesses. At least one eventually could become a defendant, and another could end up as a witness in one case and Trump's defender in a different one.
All of that sits atop another thorny fact: Many of the lawyers are being paid by Save America PAC, Trump's political action committee, which has been under government scrutiny for months. Some of the witnesses those lawyers represent work for the Trump Organization, Trump's company, but their legal defense has not been arranged by the company but rather by Trump's own legal team, a person with knowledge of the matter said.
Although clients might choose to stick with their lawyers despite a conflict, just last week, prosecutors under Smith sent up a warning flare about these issues. They asked Judge Aileen Cannon, who is overseeing the documents case, to conduct a hearing “regarding potential conflicts” arising from the complex client list of one lawyer, Stanley Woodward Jr.
Woodward represents Walt Nauta, Trump's personal aide and one of his codefendants in the documents case. Woodward also has worked for at least three witnesses in the broader inquiry who could be called to testify at trial.
One of those witnesses, Yuscil Taveras, an information technology worker at Mar-a-Lago, Trump's private club and residence in Florida, recently provided prosecutors with potentially incriminating information about Nauta after parting ways with Woodward and getting a new lawyer.
In a motion to Cannon filed Wednesday, prosecutors said given all of this, Woodward could have “divided loyalties” and asked Cannon to inform Woodward's clients about the “potential risks” they face. Prosecutors appear to have similar qualms about another lawyer in the documents case, John Irving, who represents Carlos De Oliveira, Trump's other co-defendant, according to people familiar with the matter. Irving's client list also includes three witnesses who were interviewed by investigators and could, in theory, end up on the stand.
The complexities surrounding the case are extensive and have raised concerns for prosecutors.
“This is boundary breaking,” Bruce Green, who teaches legal ethics at Fordham Law School in New York, said about the totality of the issues involved. “What I'm most curious about is why these lawyers want to play so many roles. Usually, lawyers just want to be lawyers.”
The potential conflicts confronting the lawyers in Trump's prosecutions come from a variety of sources.
Some involve situations in which the lawyers could be put in the untenable position of cross-examining a former client in the service of defending a current one. Others stem from bumping up against the guardrails put in place to keep lawyers from advocating for their clients with one hand while possibly incriminating them with the other.
Then there is the issue of the lawyers' bills largely being paid by Trump's PAC. That situation, said Stephen Gillers, a legal ethics professor at New York University, was theoretically not all that unusual. Organizations often foot the bill for employees who need legal representation resulting from “the scope of their employment,” he said.
One of the most awkward situations in a Trump-related case came Thursday when the former president was accompanied to his arraignment on election interference charges by Corcoran, a lawyer who had worked with him before on both that matter and the documents case.
Corcoran's presence in the courtroom was somewhat unexpected because five months ago, a federal judge had ordered him to provide Smith with the extensive audio notes he made about his work for Trump. The recorded notes were handed over after the judge determined that Trump had probably misled Corcoran and tried to use his legal services to commit a crime — an exception to the attorney-client privilege that normally would protect such recordings.
The audio notes, in which Corcoran described assisting Trump to comply with a subpoena that demanded all of the classified materials in his possession, played a central role in the indictment that was filed in June accusing Trump of illegally retaining more 30 sensitive documents after leaving office.
The notes laid out in detail how Trump pressured Corcoran to prevent investigators from reclaiming classified material, according to the indictment, suggesting that he “hide or destroy documents called for by the grand jury subpoena.”
Prosecutors are likely to call Corcoran as a witness at Trump's documents trial in Florida.