The Columbus Dispatch

Woman insane in Mar-a-lago breach

- Terry Spencer

FORT LAUDERDALE, Fla. – The Connecticu­t opera singer who drew fire from law enforcemen­t when she sped through a checkpoint outside thenpresid­ent Donald Trump’s Mar-a-lago home in Florida two years ago was found not guilty by reason of insanity Tuesday.

Florida prosecutor­s and Circuit Judge Scott Suskauer accepted Hannah Roemhild’s plea during a three-minute hearing with the 32-year-old singer appearing by Zoom.

Federal prosecutor­s accepted a similar plea deal in August. Roemhild’s attorneys said she has a history of mental illness and had stopped taking her medication before her wild ride through Palm Beach on Jan. 31, 2020.

Roemhild had been charged with aggravated assault on a law enforcemen­t officer, fleeing arrest and resisting an officer without violence.

Roemhild only spoke to acknowledg­e her presence during the West Palm

Beach hearing Tuesday.

Under terms of the agreement, mirroring those in the federal case, she must undergo psychiatri­c treatment and counseling and take medication­s, with monthly blood tests to confirm compliance.

Under Florida law, a person can only be found not guilty by reason of insanity if, because of mental illness, they did not know what they were doing or its consequenc­es, or did not know it was wrong.

Roemhild came to the attention of law enforcemen­t after she pulled a rented Jeep into the parking lot of The Breakers, a luxury hotel about 3 miles north of Mar-a-lago on Ocean Boulevard, according to court records. She climbed on top of the Jeep and began waving at guests and making obscene gestures. Hotel employees summoned Florida Highway Patrol Sgt. Tony Kingery.

When he drove up in his patrol car with his emergency lights turned on, Roemhild was sitting in her Jeep and tried to drive away over his commands to stop. Kingery broke the driver’s window with his baton, but Roemhild sped away, driving dangerousl­y through Palm Beach’s downtown shopping district with the sergeant unable to keep up with her, court documents said.

Roemhild soon reached the checkpoint­s that had been setup around Mar-a-lago in anticipati­on of Trump’s arrival later that day. She zigzagged around barriers and narrowly missed hitting two Palm Beach County sheriff’s deputies and a Secret Service agent as she sped through the restricted area.

She then drove to nearby Palm Beach Internatio­nal Airport to pick up her mother, who had just arrived. They then drove to a nearby motel, where Roemhild was arrested.

Mar-a-lago was the scene of several intrusions during Trump’s four-year term.

In August 2020, three teenagers fleeing police while carrying a semiautoma­tic gun in a backpack jumped a wall at Mar-a-lago but police did not believe they knew where they were.

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