This week, a New York federal judge gave lawyers for Michael Cohen, President Trump's longtime personal fixer, a tight timeline. They're reviewing materials federal agencies from his homes and office to determine what's protected by attorney client privilege. Now. Cohen's lawyer told the court that his team is seventeens working around the clock. They've already examined over a million documents, but there are more than two million documents. How many people?
Who has that many documents? Anyway? None of that impressed the judge, Kimba would. She gave Cohen's team two weeks. It sparked a memory two years ago, different lawyers were arguing about different documents. The Republican National Committee had filed a freedom of information request to see four hundred and fifty thousand emails from Hillary Clinton's top aids Geryld Mills,
Jacob Sullivan, and Patrick Kennedy. Obama State Department lawyers argued in court that going through that many emails would take him seventy five years, and nobody blinked. That's amazing how the eels of justice can suddenly grind to a halt. When Hillary Clinton's involved. When Trump's lawyers have two million documents, you got two weeks. Who has two million documents? I won't have that many in a whole lifetime.
