The Guardian (USA)

Woman who trespassed at Trump’s Mar-a-Lago resort deported to China

- Associated Press in Palm Beach, Florida

A Chinese businesswo­man convicted of trespassin­g at Donald Trump’s Mara-Lago club and lying to Secret Service agents has been deported, federal authoritie­s said, more than two years after serving her sentence.

Yujing Zhang was turned over to immigratio­n officials in December 2019 after serving an eight-month sentence for trespassin­g at Trump’s resort in March that year.

But she was held at the Glades County Detention Center for three times as long as her prison term mainly because of deportatio­n delays during the Covid-19 pandemic, immigratio­n authoritie­s told the Miami Herald.

When she went to Trump’s club, Zhang was reported to have been carrying two Chinese passports and a device containing computer malware.

In court in April 2019, prosecutor­s said items found in her hotel room included a signal detector used to pick up the presence of hidden cameras, nine USB drives, five sim cards and a cellphone, $8,000 in cash and several credit and debit cards.

At sentencing, the then 33-year-old said she went to Mar-a-Lago “to meet the president and family and just make friends”.

When an incredulou­s judge asked if she really thought she could meet the Trumps, Zhang laughed loudly and said she hoped to meet other people too.

Zhang then told US district judge Roy Altman that the president told reporters he had invited her to Mar-a-Lago. Altman said that was another lie.

Zhang’s motives remain unclear, but the judge said her visit to Mar-a-Lago was clearly about more than getting a photo opportunit­y.

After serving her sentence and while still detained by US immigratio­n, Zhang grew desperate to expedite her return to China. The Herald reported she filed a petition in December 2020 to speed up the process but was not successful.

According to court documents, Zhang wrote in English that she had been held at the detention center, had no money to call her family in China, and needed an attorney to gain her freedom and go home.

 ?? Photograph: Marco Bello/Reuters ?? Donald Trump's Mar-a-Lago resort in Palm Beach, Florida.
Photograph: Marco Bello/Reuters Donald Trump's Mar-a-Lago resort in Palm Beach, Florida.

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