Santa Fe New Mexican

‘Obviously, it’s uncharted territory’

In unpreceden­ted scenario of former president going to prison, would Secret Service go, too?

- By William K. Rashbaum

The U.S. Secret Service is in the business of protecting the president, whether he’s inside the Oval Office or visiting a foreign war zone.

But protecting a former president in prison? The prospect is unpreceden­ted. That would be the challenge if Donald Trump — whom the agency is required by law to protect around the clock — is convicted at his criminal trial in Manhattan and sentenced to serve time.

Even before the trial’s opening statements, the Secret Service was in some measure planning for the extraordin­ary possibilit­y of a former president behind bars. Prosecutor­s had asked the judge in the case to remind Trump that attacks on witnesses and jurors could land him in jail even before a verdict is rendered.

(The judge, who held a hearing Tuesday to determine whether Trump should be held in contempt for violating a gag order, is far more likely to issue a warning or impose a fine before taking the extreme step of jailing the 77-year-old former president. It was not immediatel­y clear when he would issue his ruling.)

Last week, as a result of the prosecutio­n’s request, officials with federal, state and city agencies had an impromptu meeting about how to handle the situation, according to two people with knowledge of the matter.

That behind-the-scenes conversati­on — involving officials from the Secret Service and other relevant law enforcemen­t agencies — focused only on how to move and protect Trump if the judge were to order him briefly jailed for contempt in a courthouse holding cell, the people said.

The far more substantia­l challenge — how to safely incarcerat­e a former president if the jury convicts him and the judge sentences him to prison rather than home confinemen­t or probation — has yet to be addressed directly, according to some of a dozen current and former city, state and federal officials interviewe­d for this article.

That’s at least in part because if Trump is ultimately convicted, a drawn-out and hard-fought series of appeals, possibly all the way up to the U.S. Supreme Court, is almost a certainty. That would most likely delay any sentence for months if not longer, said several of the people, who noted that a prison sentence was unlikely.

But the daunting challenge remains. And not just for Secret Service and prison officials, who would face the logistical nightmare of safely incarcerat­ing Trump, who is also the presumptiv­e Republican nominee for president.

“Obviously, it’s uncharted territory,” said Martin F. Horn, who has worked at the highest levels of New York’s and Pennsylvan­ia’s state prison agencies and served as commission­er of New York City’s correction and probation department­s. “Certainly no state prison system has had to deal with this before, and no federal prison has had to either.”

Steven Cheung, the communicat­ions director for Trump’s campaign, said the case against the former president was “so spurious and so weak” that other prosecutor­s had refused to bring it, and called it “an unpreceden­ted partisan witch hunt.”

“That the Democrat fever dream of incarcerat­ing the nominee of the Republican Party has reached this level exposes their Stalinist roots and displays their utter contempt for American democracy,” he said.

Protecting Trump in a prison environmen­t would involve keeping him separate from other inmates, as well as screening his food and other personal items, officials said. If he were to be imprisoned, a detail of agents would work 24 hours a day, seven days a week, rotating in and out of the facility, several officials said. While firearms are obviously strictly prohibited in prisons, the agents would nonetheles­s be armed.

Former correction­s officials said there were several New York state prisons and city jails that have been closed or partly closed, leaving wings or large sections of their facilities empty and available. One of those buildings could serve to incarcerat­e the former president and accommodat­e his Secret Service protective detail.

Anthony Guglielmi, the spokesman for the Secret Service in Washington, declined in a statement to discuss specific “protective operations.” But he said federal law requires Secret Service agents to protect former presidents, adding that they use state-of-the-art technology, intelligen­ce and tactics to do so.

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