Trump BEGS Judge to REMOVE Jack Smith’s “MEAN WORDS” in Courtroom Drama

In a courtroom moment that will surely go down in legal history, former President Donald Trump has made an unusual request: he’s asking a judge to scrub the record of Special Counsel Jack Smith’s so-called “mean words.” The former Commander-in-Chief, known for his tough-talking persona, seemed uncharacteristically sensitive as he took offense to what he described as “nasty and unfair language” from the prosecutor during his latest legal battle.
According to sources inside the courtroom, the tension between Trump and Smith had been building for weeks, but things took a dramatic turn when Smith reportedly referred to the former president as “a serial exaggerator with a loose relationship with the truth.” Trump, visibly flustered, immediately asked his legal team to file an emergency motion to have Smith’s comments stricken from the record, calling them “too mean for a court of law.”
“I’ve been treated very unfairly,” Trump said in a statement. “This is a witch hunt, and Jack Smith is using terrible, mean words. Nobody has ever been treated like this before.”
Legal experts were left scratching their heads, as this kind of request is highly unusual. “It’s not exactly common to file motions based on hurt feelings,” one seasoned lawyer commented. But Trump’s team insists that Smith’s language crossed a line, claiming it caused their client “emotional distress” and undermined the dignity of the proceedings.
In response, Smith’s camp shrugged off the request. “The facts don’t care about feelings,” said an anonymous source close to the Special Counsel. Meanwhile, the judge has yet to rule on Trump’s motion, leaving the courtroom—and the world—waiting to see if “mean words” can, in fact, be legally erased. Stay tuned, because in the Trump legal saga, even the insults are up for litigation!