Sun Sentinel Broward Edition

Trump, back home at Mar-a-Lago, condemns ‘fake case’

- By Anthony Man and Angie DiMichele Sun Sentinel staff photograph­er Mike Stocker contribute­d to this report. Anthony Man can be reached at aman@sunsentine­l.com, on Twitter @ browardpol­itics and on Post.news/@ browardpol­itics.

Hours after pleading not guilty to 34 felony charges in a Manhattan courtroom, former President Donald Trump was back home at his Mar-a-Lago resort Tuesday night, where he unleashed a tirade against the prosecutor and judge.

“I never thought anything like this could happen in America,” he said. “The only crime I have committed is to fearlessly defend our nation from those who seek to destroy it.”

“This fake case was brought only to interfere with the upcoming 2024 election, and it should be dropped immediatel­y.”

Trump repeatedly asserted that he’s being persecuted.

He described Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg, who brought the “ridiculous” case against him, as a “local, failed district attorney.” He said Bragg is a “criminal” who should be prosecuted or resign.

“Every single pundit and legal analyst said there is no case,” he said, adding, “virtually every one. It’s worse than that because he knew there was no case.”

He then attacked the New York judge presiding over his case as “a Trump-hating judge with a Trump-hating wife and family.”

He brought up, and denounced, all the investigat­ions of him asserting that each — in Manhattan, by the New York state attorney general, by the Atlanta district attorney, and by a federal special counsel spearheadi­ng two probes — are all motivated by politics and run by people who are out to get him.

He called the federal special counsel a “lunatic” and asserted that the New York attorney general, who is Black, is “racist in reverse.”

His speech veered from claims that the United States is in decline, complaints about the investigat­ions and ways the country would be better off if he were president. And he frequently shifted among those different arguments.

In one two-minute passage, he discussed border security, the withdrawal from Afghanista­n, killed and wounded soldiers, energy policy, crime in the U.S., threats by other nations, the possibilit­y of nuclear war, inflation, and a U.S. military he said is preoccupie­d with woke indoctrina­tion.

“We are now a failing nation. We are a nation in decline,” he said.

He said he’s been plagued by an “onslaught of fraudulent investigat­ions,” including when he was president. And he repeated his false claims about “millions of votes illegally stuffed into ballot boxes and all caught on government cameras.” Multiple investigat­ions found no such evidence of any kind of large-scale voter fraud.

The speech lasted about 25 minutes, unusually short for Trump who often talks for 90 minutes or more.

Trump appeared before hundreds of supporters ranging from people in business attire to bikers with leather vests — and many wearing MAGA hats — in the Donald J. Trump Grand Ballroom at Mar-a-Lago, and to a larger television audience.

People who gathered hours before Trump spoke were in a jovial mood: smiling, chatty and excited, similar to the gathering in the same place as he announced his 2024 candidacy for the Republican presidenti­al nomination.

Shortly after the speech started, some people started leaving.

Roger Stone of Fort Lauderdale, a longtime political adviser to the former president, was among those at Mar-a-Lago for Trump’s speech as was Mike Lindell — the CEO of My Pillow familiar to many for his cable TV ads pitching his company’s products and a prominent proponent of conspiracy theories falsely claiming Trump won the 2020 election.

Kari Lake, the 2020 election denier who lost her candidacy for Arizona governor last year, and U.S. Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene, the MAGA Republican from Georgia, both attended. Lake and Greene are both thought to be potential vice presidenti­al candidates with Trump if he wins the Republican nomination next year.

Two of the former president’s sons, Don Jr. and Eric, were present. Melania Trump, his wife, did not appear to be present in the ballroom.

The case against Trump stems from payments including those that went to including porn star Stormy Daniels and former Playboy model Karen McDougal, who alleged extramarit­al sexual encounters with Trump, relationsh­ips he’s denied.

Before the speech, some attendees streamed themselves on Instagram or recorded themselves on Snapchat, showing where they were. “The fake news is out tonight!” one man said as he recorded the TV camera crews behind the press barricade.

Supporters

As Trump traveled to his Mar-a-Lago home and resort in Palm Beach along his usual route from the airport on Southern Boulevard, the former president’s motorcade slowed when he got to spots where supporters had gathered.

About an hour before Trump arrived, about 100 people, mostly dressed in red, white and blue gathered at the shopping plaza between Parker Avenue and Lake Avenue in West Palm Beach that over the years has been a frequent gathering point for Trump’s supporters.

Lindell stopped his Audi underneath the shopping center’s Publix sign to pose for photos before heading east to Mar-a-Lago.

The gathering was loud, with many motorists honking their horns and participan­ts expressing dissatisfa­ction with President Joe Biden.

Opposition

Trump didn’t receive a completely warm welcome to the place he’s called home since 2019 when he got mad at his lifelong New York home and declared Mar-a-Lago his permanent home.

The progressiv­e political organizati­on MoveOn.org had a message timed for Trump’s return: A billboard proclaimin­g in large capital letters proclaimin­g that “Trump Is Not Above the Law” just outside PBIA along his route to Mar-a-Lago.

State Democratic Chairperso­n Nikki Fried lamented Republican­s’ coming to Trump’s defense.

“Donald Trump’s indictment and the reaction of Republican politician­s makes it clearer than ever that the Republican Party is the party of MAGA extremism and Donald Trump. Regardless of how this case progresses, Florida Democrats will fight tirelessly to hold all MAGA Republican­s, including Ron DeSantis, accountabl­e for the extreme positions they are taking including banning abortion, pushing cuts to Social Security and Medicare, and aligning themselves with Vladimir Putin over democracy,” Fried said via email.

 ?? REBECCA BLACKWELL/AP ?? Former President Donald Trump speaks at his Mar-a-Lago estate in Palm Beach Tuesday, hours after being arraigned in New York City.
REBECCA BLACKWELL/AP Former President Donald Trump speaks at his Mar-a-Lago estate in Palm Beach Tuesday, hours after being arraigned in New York City.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States