Alina Habba, Donald Trump Court Sketches Spark Avalanche of Jokes
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- January 12, 2024
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Court sketches from 's civil fraud trial have sparked ridicule and mockery online at the way he and his attorney, , were depicted. Habba was shown with puffed up features showing overgrown lips, a bulging chin and with a sinking indent in her cheek. The drawings appeared to amuse a number of anti Trump social media users.
"Somebody better buy the court sketch artist a drink for this Habba drawing," one person wrote. Another added: "This artist really picked up the evil." also appeared to feature what one user compared to eagle like talons, the result of a black mark trailing off the edge of her fingers.
with exaggerated features including hawkish eyes and looking ahead with a toothless gape. "Now those are some NFTs I'd be willing to blow my hard earned money on," one person joked, referencing the collectible digital images of himself sold by Trump. Images have shown Trump as different characters and in various poses including as a cowboy, astronaut and with laser eyes.
i think that's supposed to be Alina Habba. hard to tell. Established courtroom artist Christine Cornell drew the sketches that were redistributed on a number of major news networks and seen on social media. She has drawn a number of famous people and court defendants including Boston bomber Dzhokhar Tsarnaev, crime boss Whitey Bulger and quarterback .
The style she deployed to show is similar to that used in her other sketches. On her website, she calls courtrooms "fascinating places" where the "best and the worst of humanity are frequently on display." She wrote: "The stakes are high, and the stories unfold in pieces, through a peculiar and purposely dispassionate process.
I know of no better place to draw, where you can so closely observe and absorb such unusual and compelling characters." Trump and Habba were in the Manhattan on January 11 for the culmination of the civil fraud case brought by New York Attorney General Letitia James. James is asking Judge , who has already ruled Trump and the Trump Organization liable for fraud, for a $370 million sanction.
She is also hoping to ban the former president from doing business in New York ever again after Engoron said in September he was convinced Trump and his business had deceived lenders by exaggerating the value of a number of his assets. Trump has repeatedly called the trial a political witch hunt. Newsweek is committed to challenging conventional wisdom and finding connections in the search for common ground.
Newsweek is committed to challenging conventional wisdom and finding connections in the search for common ground..