Former Blubber Boy Lawyer Describes Conflict Inside Legal Team

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Former Trump Lawyer Describes Conflict Inside Legal Team :popcorn: :popcorn: :popcorn: :highfive: :highfive: :highfive: :lock::lock::lock::rofl2::rofl2::rofl2:

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Timothy Parlatore quit the legal team of former President Donald Trump last week, saying his decision had "nothing to do with the case itself or the client." (Reuters)
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Alan Feuer and Maggie Haberman
Sun, May 21, 2023 at 7:27 AM PDT·4 min read


A conflict inside former President Donald Trump’s legal team erupted into public view Saturday as one of his former lawyers went on television to attack one of his current lawyers, who has been the focus of ire from others on the team.
The former lawyer, Timothy Parlatore, withdrew this past week from representing Trump in the special counsel’s investigations into his handling of classified documents and his efforts to overturn the 2020 election. But Parlatore did not explain the reasons behind his departure at the time, saying only that it was not related to the merits of the inquiries.
Appearing on CNN on Saturday, Parlatore disclosed that his departure had been spurred by irreconcilable differences with Boris Epshteyn, another lawyer who has been working as something akin to an in-house counsel for the former president, hiring lawyers and coordinating their efforts to defend Trump.

Parlatore described how Epshteyn had hindered him and other lawyers from getting information to Trump, leaving the former president’s legal team at a disadvantage in dealing with the Justice Department, which is scrutinizing Trump’s handling of classified documents after leaving office and his efforts to remain in office after losing the 2020 election.
“As I said at the time, it had nothing to do with the case itself or the client,” Parlatore said. “There are certain individuals that made defending the president much harder than it needed to be.”
He named Epshteyn in particular.
“He did everything he could do to try to block us,” Parlatore said, adding that it’s “difficult enough fighting against DOJ” but that when colleagues are “trying to undermine you, to block you,” that it made it “so I can’t do what I need to do as a lawyer.”
It was “ultimately not in the client’s best interest,” he said, adding that Epshteyn was “not very honest with us or the client” on certain things.
Most notably, Parlatore singled out Epshteyn as trying to keep the team from conducting additional searches of Trump’s properties after the FBI executed a search warrant at Mar-a-Lago, Trump’s private club and residence in Florida, and discovered more than 100 additional classified documents.
Parlatore also mocked Epshteyn’s limited legal experience, saying he spent 18 months as a corporate lawyer and that based on that experience, he “knows better than all of us.”
Still, Parlatore left open the possibility of returning to Trump’s legal team if certain changes were made.
“If the lawyers are allowed to be lawyers without obstruction from people like Boris Epshteyn,” he said, “I would be happy to go back.”
A spokesperson for Trump said, “Mr. Parlatore is no longer a member of the legal team. His statements regarding current members of the legal team are unfounded and categorically false.”
Before making his appearance on TV, Parlatore spoke with Trump, telling him that Epshteyn’s handling of the defense team increased the risk that federal prosecutors would file charges, according to two people familiar with the matter.
That warning came after an earlier attempted intervention by several of Trump’s lawyers with their client over Epshteyn’s involvement. The lawyers cited what they described as Epshteyn’s penchant for delivering good news despite grim circumstances, as well as a bottleneck he had created in talking with Trump about cases.
News of the dissension among lawyers representing Trump emerged at an especially delicate moment — just as the Justice Department’s special counsel, Jack Smith, appears to be wrapping up his sprawling grand jury investigations and approaching a decision about whether to file indictments against Trump in the documents and election interference cases.
With Parlatore gone, two other lawyers — James Trusty and John Rowley — have taken the lead in representing Trump in Smith’s inquiries.
Rowley declined Saturday to comment on Parlatore’s remarks. Trusty did not respond to efforts to reach him seeking comment.
Trump also faces an array of other legal problems, including his indictment in a hush money case in New York and a pending investigation in Georgia into election interference.
The former president appeared on CNN as well on May 10, refusing to give a clear answer at a town hall event when asked if he had ever showed classified documents to anyone after leaving office.
Parlatore sought to clarify that issue Saturday, saying that Trump’s legal team had “no evidence to suggest that he showed classified documents to anyone.”
He added that he did not believe charges would ultimately be filed in the documents inquiry.
c.2023 The New York Times Company
 

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