Los Angeles Times

Critics call foul on Trump’s tweet

Responding to father of UCLA player, he tweets, ‘I should have left them in jail.’

- By Laura King

Responding to UCLA player’s father, he says, “I should have left them in jail.”

WASHINGTON — President Trump complained Sunday that the father of one of the three UCLA basketball players who were arrested in China on suspicion of shopliftin­g had played down his role in winning their release, and that he therefore should not have interceded with China’s president.

“I should have left them in jail!” the president tweeted.

Trump’s tweet drew a quick backlash on social media. Many expressed incredulit­y that a sitting U.S. president would publicly regret having come to the aid of American citizens being held by an authoritar­ian government.

Among Trump’s sharper critics was Rep. Adam Schiff (D-Burbank), who tweeted back, “How can someone in such a big office be so small?”

The popular sports website Deadspin headlined its account of the presidenti­al tweet: “Donald Trump Wishes He’d Left UCLA Teens in Chinese Prison Because His Feelings Are Hurt.”

The release of the three players by Chinese authoritie­s represente­d one of the most tangible achievemen­ts of Trump’s 12-day visit to five countries in Asia this month.

During his trip, the president was greeted with lavish shows of pomp, especially in China, and he announced an array of potential business deals. But he did not negotiate any clear trade gains or other diplomatic concession­s from the leaders he met.

But the quick resolution of what could have been a drawn-out diplomatic inci-

dent over the arrests took on sour overtones as the president prodded the three UCLA athletes, who returned to Los Angeles last week, to express their gratitude.

After they publicly expressed thanks, Trump appeared to consider the matter closed, tweeting that he hoped they would have a “great life” and be careful in the future.

But Sunday, Trump appeared irate that the father of one of the players, LiAngelo Ball, had played down the president’s involvemen­t in an interview with ESPN.

“Everybody wants to make it seem like he helped me out,” LaVar Ball told the sports channel Friday when asked about Trump claiming credit for bringing up the arrests with Chinese President Xi Jinping when they met last week in Beijing.

Trump said in his tweet that the players had been saved from “years in jail.” He also accused the elder Ball of saying that “shopliftin­g is no big deal.”

In the ESPN interview, the elder Ball seemed to question the seriousnes­s of the incident, saying “they try to make a big deal out of nothing sometimes.”

LiAngelo Ball, along with fellow freshmen Jalen Hill and Cody Riley, is on indefinite suspension from UCLA’s basketball team.

Chinese authoritie­s took the three into custody after their luggage was searched for designer sunglasses and other goods stolen from three stores near their hotel in Hangzhou, where the Bruins were staying before a game in Shanghai against Georgia Tech.

UCLA’s athletic director, Dan Guerrero, later acknowledg­ed the shopliftin­g.

Previously, Trump has called attention to his administra­tion’s efforts to free other Americans imprisoned overseas even as he has largely avoided publicly urging repressive regimes to be more respectful of human rights.

After he met with Egyptian President Abdel Fattah Sisi in April, Egypt released Aya Hijazi, an Egyptian American from Virginia who had been imprisoned on what human rights activists said were spurious accusation­s stemming from her work with a charity that aided Egyptian street children.

The Trump administra­tion also secured the release of Otto Warmbier, a 22-yearold college student who was jailed during a tourist trip to North Korea in 2016 and sentenced to 15 years in prison on suspicion of stealing a propaganda poster from his hotel.

After 18 months, Warmbier was finally freed on medical grounds in June, but he was in a coma from an unspecifie­d injury or illness. He died soon after he was taken to his home in Ohio.

The flap over the UCLA players was not the first time that Trump has leaped into a Twitter-fueled controvers­y involving sports figures.

He engaged in a lengthy feud with profession­al football players who took part in “take a knee” protests during the playing of the national anthem in order to protest racial injustice. Trump railed against the show of dissent and demanded that NFL owners fire players who took part.

 ?? Wally Skalij Los Angeles Times ?? UCLA BASKETBALL players Cody Riley, left, LiAngelo Ball and Jalen Hill talk about their arrests in China at a news conference at the school’s Pauley Pavilion. They are on indefinite suspension from the team.
Wally Skalij Los Angeles Times UCLA BASKETBALL players Cody Riley, left, LiAngelo Ball and Jalen Hill talk about their arrests in China at a news conference at the school’s Pauley Pavilion. They are on indefinite suspension from the team.
 ?? Evan Vucci Associated Press ?? PRESIDENT Trump appeared irate at the father of LiAngelo Ball.
Evan Vucci Associated Press PRESIDENT Trump appeared irate at the father of LiAngelo Ball.

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