The state's 6th witness is Charleston attorney Dawes Cooke Jr., who is now defending AM in the boat crash case. He is being questioned by defense attorney Maggie Fox, making her first appearance in this trial.
AM's initial civil defense attorney in the 2019 boat crash case was John Tiller, who died of cancer last summer.
I've never seen Maggie Fox question a witness, but she works in Griffin's firm. I'm told she is a legal scholar who provides a lot of the brainpower behind what Griffin does in court and in legal motions.
Apologies, this is the defense's 6th witness, not the state's. Got into the habit of typing "state" over the first 61 witnesses in this trial.
The defense is using Cooke to try to defuse the state’s notion that AM’s finances were at imminent risk of exposure ahead of a 6/10/21 hearing in the 2019 boat crash wrongful death case.
Cooke testifies the defense wasn’t concerned about plaintiff attorney Mark Tinsley’s motion to compel. Cooke testifies he doesn’t think Tinsley had any legal right to a detailed accounting of AM’s finances, at least until after a potential trial.
“There was not an existential threat to Alex,” Cooke testifies about the 6/10/21 hearing. Again, Cooke is disputing Tinsley's prior testimony that the fuse had been lit. Now we know why Mark Tinsley is here today.
Prosecutor Creighton Waters on cross-examination: Were you present at the trial lawyers’ convention when AM went up to Mark Tinsley and confronted him about the boat crash lawsuit? Cooke: “No, I don’t get invited to that one.”
Waters: When you were first getting onto the defense team in summer 2021, you didn’t know AM’s true financial condition, did you? That he was broke? That he had been stealing money? Cooke: “No.”
Waters: If that 6/10/21 hearing had gone forward, there could have been a ruling compelling AM’s financial condition to be revealed, right? Cooke: “Could have been.” Ultimately, the judge would decide what has to be produced and what doesn’t. Waters has no more questions
Fox keeps trying to ask Cooke if - based on his 40 years of experience - he believes it is likely the judge would have order AM to reveal details of his finances at the 6/10/21 hearing. Waters successfully objects.
Fox then establishes that AM wouldn’t have had to turn over the financial documents immediately. Waters clarifies that the process of turning the docs over would have begun. Cooke notes again that it would be the judge’s decision which docs had to be turned over. Cooke is done.