Trump Indictment - Assembly - Salesforce Research
Trump, aide booked in Miami federal court | Live updates
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MIAMI (AP) -- Follow along for live updates on former President Donald Trump, who is making his first court appearance Tuesday after being indicted on 37 charges related to the mishandling classified documents. The indictment marks the first time in U.S. history that a former president faces criminal charges by the federal government he once oversaw.
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newslooks.com being careless with some of the country's most sensitive secrets and obstructing authorities as they tried to recover critical documents
republicworld.com endangering the nation's national security
Trump rode to court with his son Eric, who accompanied the motorcade from the former president's Doral resort to the federal courthouse in Miami.
CNN aired footage of Trump walking to a line of SUVs with his son by his side while someone yelled, "Let's go Trump!"
The former president could be seen stopping and waving at supporters, as well as chatting with staff members. Eric Trump appeared to clap his father on the back just before he climbed in a vehicle.
As he rode to court, Trump posted on his social media site that the case against him was a "witch hunt."
Later, outside the courthouse Trump lawyer Alina Habba said, "Today is not about President Donald J. Trump, who is defiant."
"It is not about the Republican Party, it is not about the 2024 election," Habba added. "It is about the destruction of longstanding principles that have set this country apart."
-- What to expect when Trump appears in federal court to face charges
-- Journalists so far outnumber protesters outside courthouse where Trump will appear
-- A timeline of events leading to Trump's indictment in the classified documents case
-- Trump's GOP defenders in Congress leap into action after months of preparation
-- Who is Walt Nauta, the latest Trump loyalist to face potential jail time?
Trump and an aide charged as a co-conspirator have been booked in Miami federal court.
That's according to the U.S. Marshals Service, which said Trump and Walt Nauta had been booked shortly after they arrived Tuesday afternoon.
Both men are expected to appear at the defense table shortly on charges that they wrongly held onto classified documents.
Trump has arrived at the federal courthouse in Miami to formally surrender to authorities ahead of his court appearance on charges accusing him of illegally hoarding classified documents at his Mar-a-Lago estate in Florida.
Trump's motorcade arrived Tuesday afternoon at the courthouse shortly before he's scheduled to appear before a magistrate judge, a stunning moment in American history days after he became the first former president charged with federal crimes.
It's the second criminal case Trump is facing as he seeks to reclaim the White House in 2024. He's also accused in New York state court of falsifying business records related to hush-money payments made during the 2016 campaign.
Trump has denied any wrongdoing, saying he's being unfairly targeted by political opponents who want to hurt his campaign. After his court appearance, Trump will return to New Jersey, where he's expected to hold a press event to publicly respond to the charges.
Trump is on his way to the federal courthouse in Miami to face dozens of charges that he illegally hoarded classified documents.
The former president is not expected to have his mugshot taken but will have his digital fingerprints taken.
Trump was indicted last week on 37 felony charges accusing him of willfully retaining classified documents and obstructing justice.
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A small group of pro-Trump supporters and anti-Trump protesters were squabbling in front of Miami's federal courthouse as they awaited the former president's appearance Tuesday.
A man with "Trump sucks" spray-painted on his jacket and pants shouted at supporters of the former president as they passed by while a man held a homemade "Free Trump" banner behind others who shouted at him. Dozens of supporters wrapped themselves in Trump flags or campaign merchandise as they milled about near the courthouse.
The crowd included far-right internet personality Anthime Gionet, who served a two-month prison sentence for streaming live video while he stormed the U.S. Capitol with a mob of Trump supporters on Jan. 6, 2021.
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Gionet, better known as "Baked Alaska," was livestreaming video of his interactions with people around the courthouse -- something the terms of Gionet's probation don't appear to prohibit.
Meanwhile, Miami Mayor Francis Suarez, wearing a T-shirt with a police logo, toured the nearby media encampment and said he didn't expect any disturbances.
"So far, so good," Suarez said. "It's still early, but the crowd seems to be under control and everyone respectful and peaceful. Let's hope it remains that way."
Suarez is considering a presidential run and has suggested he could make his intentions known during a speech Thursday at the Ronald Reagan Presidential Library in California.
In an Orlando Walmart parking lot, about four dozen Trump supporters dressed in red, white and blue clothing boarded two buses for the four-hour trip to Miami to show their support outside the federal courthouse where the former president would be appearing.
Some wore T-shirts that read "Donald Trump Did Nothing Wrong" and hats stenciled with "Because America Can Never Be Too Great."
"He has done so much for us. This what we can do for him. This is what we must do for him," said Laurie Pettengill, who drove halfway across the state from Homosassa Springs on Florida's Gulf Coast to go on the trip.
Miriam Ramirez carried a sign adorned with small American flags that said, "Puerto Republican Assembly Present for Trump!" She said the federal charges were a continuation of prosecutorial harassment that Trump has faced for years.
"This has been going on ever since he became president," Ramirez said.
The trip was organized a grassroots group called the Florida Republican Assembly, which had originally envisioned four buses making the journey but settled for just two.
As the Trump supporters boarded the buses, a lone woman, Danette Chialtas, shouted at them, calling them traitors for supporting Trump.
"He's being tried on espionage charges, and they are enabling it," Chialtas said, pointing to the buses.
Trump will be digitally fingerprinted and have his birthdate and Social Security number taken as part of the booking process Tuesday at the federal courthouse in Miami, a spokesman for the U.S. Marshals Service says.
The spokesman said the former president will forgo a mugshot because enough photos of him already exist in the system -- confirming what a person familiar with negotiations around the proceedings said earlier.
The spokesman said that booking could take place before Trump appears in court or afterward, depending on when he arrives. He said authorities did not plan to immediately alert the media once Trump had arrived.
Outside the courthouse, meanwhile, police cleared an area where media covering the event had set up tents. They brought in sniffer dogs to search for anything suspicious but planned to allow journalists back into the area once the search was complete.
2024 CAMPAIGN TRAIL MOSTLY QUIET AS ATTENTION SHIFTS (BACK) TO TRUMP
Trump's 2024 Republican presidential rivals were largely refraining from public campaign events as the political world's attention shifted to the former president's appearance in federal court in Miami.
Speaking Tuesday morning outside the courthouse where Trump will be arraigned, Republican presidential candidate Vivek Ramaswamy reiterated his commitment to pardoning Trump if elected to the White House. The wealthy biotech entrepreneur also announced that he'd given every 2024 presidential challenger signed commitment letters asking them to join him in the pledge.
Other Republican presidential hopefuls, including Trump's former ambassador to the United Nations, Nikki Haley, planned fundraisers and media appearances while forgoing campaign events. South Carolina Sen. Tim Scott was heading to Iowa for a town hall event later in the week but had no public events scheduled for Tuesday.
Trump is the Republican White House primary's early front-runner. When he appeared in court in April on a separate criminal case involving alleged hush money payments, the attention was intense, dominating media coverage for days.
Trump is not expected to have a mugshot taken when he surrenders to authorities in federal court in Miami to face charges related to mishandling classified documents.
That's according to a person familiar with negotiations surrounding the case who spoke on condition of anonymity in order to discuss the details of the proceedings.
Having no picture taken is similar to Trump's recent appearance in court in New York on a separate case involving hush money payments, when the former president also avoided having his mug shot taken.
Security was tight outside the Wilkie D. Ferguson federal courthouse Tuesday ahead of the former president's court appearance.
But Trump supporters were noticeably few hours before the appearance -- far outnumbered by the hundreds of journalists from the U.S. and around the world who have converged on downtown Miami for the historic occasion.
That recalled the scene in New York, where Trump was arraigned in April on a separate criminal case involving hush money he's accused of paying during the 2016 presidential campaign. Then, there were far more reporters than demonstrators for and against the former president.