Most judges will tell you that they don't want to be the story and don't want to make news. Especially federal judges. Yet Judge Lewis Kaplan was front and center in the Trump case...
Here's an ABA article detailing some of his quips. Too much?
“Mr. Trump, I hope I don’t have to consider excluding you from the trial,” Kaplan said.
Trump protested by throwing up his hands and saying, “I would love it! I would love it.”
Kaplan responded by telling Trump: “You just can’t control yourself in these circumstances apparently.”
Jurors are considering damages in the lawsuit by Carroll, who obtained an earlier verdict
and $5 million in damages against Trump for sexually abusing—but not
raping—her in a Bergdorf Goodman dressing room in New York City in the
1990s and then denying the incident in October 2022.
The new trial claims that Carroll was defamed in denials by Trump before October 2022 and after the May 2023 verdict.
Kaplan also chastised lawyers in the case—on more than one occasion. CNN, Salon and the Washington Post have these examples:
• Kaplan reined in Trump lawyers when several lawyers objected all
at once. “Let’s just get this clear for both sides right now,” Kaplan
said. “The first lawyer who says anything when a witness is on the stand
says everything there is to be said for that side. This is not a
tag-team lawyering.” (The Washington Post)
• When Trump lawyer Alina Habba
cross-examined Carroll using a 2022 deposition, Kaplan said he needed a
copy and wanted to know what portion that Habba would be reading. “Now
look, Ms. Habba,” Kaplan said. “We’re going to do it my way in this
courtroom, and that’s all there is to it.” (CNN)
• Kaplan called a recess after Habba read harassing social media
posts about Carroll before entering them into evidence. “You should
refresh your memory about how it is you get a document into evidence,”
Kaplan said. (CNN)
• When Habba asked Kaplan again to postpone the trial to allow
Trump to attend his mother-in-law’s funeral, Kaplan said he would “hear
no further argument on it. None. Do you understand that word? None.
Please sit down.” (CNN)
• Kaplan criticized a lawyer for Carroll for seeking exhibits in
advance to consider potential redactions. “When the document is
authenticated and offered, that’s when you say objection, and that’s
when we deal with it,” Kaplan said. (CNN)
• Habba asked Carroll whether she “makes a good amount of money”
from her Substack posts. Kaplan stopped her, asking, “What’s ‘a good
amount of money?’ Evidence 101.” (Politico reporter Erica Orden on X, formerly known as Twitter, via Salon)