When he was finished, Donald Jr., the first of four family
members slated to testify, paused to banter with courtroom
sketch artist Jane Rosenberg, who was on assignment for Reuters.
According to Rosenberg, Donald Trump's namesake son asked her to
produce a portrait that could boost his romantic appeal.
The veteran sketch artist said Donald Jr. also offered an
example he thought might be helpful: a flattering courtroom
portrait of former cryptocurrency mogul Sam Bankman-Fried not by
Rosenberg that has been circulating on the internet.
Donald Jr. said it made Bankman-Fried look like a "superstar,"
Rosenberg told Reuters.
The firm-jawed, spiky-haired subject in that picture bears
little resemblance to the notoriously disheveled Bankman-Fried,
who is now a defendant in a criminal fraud trial that could send
him to prison for decades.
"I said, 'That's fake,'" Rosenberg said. "It doesn't look
anything like him, doesn't look anything like Sam Bankman-Fried
... and there's no one in the courtroom drawing that."
The stakes are not quite as high for Donald Trump Jr., his
brother Eric or his father as they are for Bankman-Fried. The
civil trial will not lead to prison time for the three
defendants, but it could result in hundreds of millions of
dollars in fines and could see Trump stripped of control of many
New York trophy properties that built his reputation before he
entered politics.
Donald Jr. has forged a hard-edged, partisan persona in person
and online, but struck a more genial, self-deprecating attitude
over several hours of testimony on Wednesday and Thursday,
occasionally joking about his lack of familiarity with the
details of accounting practices.
Rosenberg has taken heat in the past for sketches of former New
England Patriots star Tom Brady that some of the boyish-looking
quarterback's fans said bore a closer resemblance to the
Incredible Hulk.
(Reporting by Jack Queen; Writing by Andy Sullivan; Editing by
Scott Malone, Jonathan Oatis and Daniel Wallis)
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