Yet for weeks, the famously combative presumptive Republican nominee has sat silently — to the point of sometimes seeming asleep — in a sterile Manhattan courtroom amid a barrage of accusations and insults. There were the times his former fixer-turned-chief prosecution witness was quoted calling him a "boorish cartoon misogynist" and a "Cheeto-dusted" villain who belonged in a "cage, like an animal." There were the graphic details relayed by a porn actor about the night she claims they had sex.
There were lengthy descriptions of what the prosecution argues was an illegal scheme to conceal hush money payments to salvage his then-flailing 2016 campaign. Through it all, even as he and his allies attacked the case outside the courtroom, Trump spent the majority of his time as a criminal defendant sitting nearly motionless for hours, leaning back in his burgundy leather chair with his eyes closed. The first former president in the nation's history to stand trial on criminal charges, he ultimately chose not to testify in the case.
Closing arguments are scheduled for Tuesday, after which a jury will decide whether to make him the first former president and major party nominee convicted of felony charges. Trump's demeanor in the courtroom was a notable departure from the fight-at-all-costs persona that defined him through decades of public life, fueling his transformation from a New York tabloid fixture to a onetime — and possible future — president. It has been at least part.
