Trump’s Walk of Fame star vandalized
Boulevard has had a rough go of it since he became a leading presidential candidate.
It has been stomped on and people have spraypainted a swastika and “mute” icon on it. Someone else built a miniature border wall around the star.
But Wednesday’s vandalism trumped anything that had come before it.
Los Angeles police received a call at 6 a.m. reporting the sidewalk defacement. They later recovered a sledgehammer, a pick, a construction hat and a construction vest, said LAPD Officer Sal Ramirez. The offense would be considered felony vandalism, Ramirez said.
Damage to the star was estimated at $2,500, Ramirez said. There are no suspects in custody, police said.
Otis, who identified himself as the culprit in a report by Deadline, said he spent weeks planning his “nonviolent action,” even going as far as spending a couple of nights in Hollywood to scope out the area to pick a time when he could do it “safely, carefully and successfully.”
Otis said he originally intended to remove the brass star outline intact, but could not get the actual star because the concrete was too strong.
He ended up taking the TV emblem, some of the letters of Trump’s name and a little piece of the star, which he said he plans to auction off on election day to raise money for the women who have accused Trump of sexual assault, as well as for a college campus organization that is working to stop sexual violence.
“I did the action and I fully will comply with the law once I set a time up with my attorney to [turn] myself in,” Otis said. “I will gladly pay the damages to the site.”
Trump has called the accusations against him that have piled up in recent weeks false, vowing to sue the women who have leveled them.
Trump, who starred in the reality shows “The Apprentice” and “The Celebrity Apprentice,” received his star in 2007. Officials previously have said there were no plans to remove it.
The Hollywood Chamber of Commerce, which operates the Walk of Fame, is working with police and will seek to have the offender prosecuted, the chamber said in a statement.
Repair of the star was already underway Wednesday, said Leron Gubler, the chamber’s president and chief executive, but it will require “several days of seasoning before it is polished.”
There has been at least one similar incident in the past, when someone took a sledgehammer to the star of Carmen Dragon, an American conductor, composer and arranger, several years ago, Gubler said.
That person was caught and required to pay restitution, Gubler said.
“Unfortunately these things happen,” Gubler said. “It is rare. It’s only happened one or two other times.”
Although Trump’s star has endured its fair share of abuse in the past, including having garbage thrown on it, there’s been “nothing this significant” done to it, Gubler said.
“We live in a pluralistic society that requires people to work out issues and discuss issues, not to take out their frustrations in this manner,” Gubler said. “Democracy requires respect for the law. Most people I think would be very dismayed by this type of vandalism, no matter who they support for the election.”
‘I just sort of had enough with Mr. Trump’s aggressive language toward women and his behavior.’ — James Otis, self-identified vandal of Donald Trump’s Walk of Fame star