Dayton Daily News

Judge denies bail for woman who entered Mar-a-Lago

- By Terry Spencer

— WEST PALM BEACH, FLA.

A federal judge denied bail Monday for a Chinese woman charged with lying to illegally enter President Donald Trump’s Mar-a-Lago club, saying there was an “extreme risk of flight” if she were released.

Federal Magistrate Judge William Matthewman issued the ruling for 33-yearold Yujing Zhang, who was indicted Friday on charges of lying to federal agents and illegal entering of a restricted area. She faces up to five years if convicted.

When arrested March 30, Zhang was carrying two passports, four cellphones, a laptop, an external hard drive and a thumb drive possibly containing malware. In her hotel room, Secret Service agents found a device for detecting hidden cameras and $8,000 cash. She is not charged with espionage, but the FBI is still investigat­ing, and prosecutor Rolando Garcia said Monday that future charges are possible. He did not elaborate.

Matthewman remarked that “it appears to the court that Ms. Zhang was up to something nefarious” — a reference to the various electronic­s she was found to be carrying and that she left in her hotel room.

The U.S. doesn’t have an extraditio­n treaty with China.

Even if Matthewman had decided to grant bail, immigratio­n officials would most likely have detained Zhang because her U.S. visa has been revoked.

The Secret Service arrested Zhang after they say she gained access to the president’s exclusive club by telling an agent outside that she was a member arriving for a swim. Agents say she wasn’t on the membership list, but a club manager thought Zhang might be a member’s daughter. About 7% of Chinese nationals are named Zhang, that country’s third-most common surname. Agents then asked Zhang if the member was her father, but they say she did not answer definitive­ly. They still admitted her.

Zhang’s story changed when she got inside, agents say, telling a front desk receptioni­st she was there to attend the United Nations Chinese American Associatio­n event scheduled for that evening. No such event was scheduled and agents were summoned. They say she became confrontat­ional, so she was taken off the property and then to the local Secret Service office, where she underwent about nine hours of questionin­g. She had arrived in the U.S. two days earlier on a flight from Shanghai to Newark, New Jersey.

Her public defender, Robert Adler, suggested at a hearing last week that Zhang might not have been lying but confused by the language barrier. But a Secret Service agent wrote in court documents that Zhang spoke and read English well during questionin­g.

An agent told Matthewman last week that when an analyst uploaded the possible malware found on Zhang’s thumb drive, it immediatel­y began installing and corrupting his computer’s files.

 ??  ?? Yujing Zhang’s passport photo
Yujing Zhang’s passport photo

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States