Los Angeles Times

Mar-a-Lago trespassin­g case takes more odd turns

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FORT LAUDERDALE, Fla. — The upcoming trial of a Chinese national on federal charges that she trespassed at President Trump’s Mar-a-Lago resort and lied to the Secret Service is potentiall­y a circus wrapped in mystery.

Rejecting the strong recommenda­tion of U.S. District Judge Roy Altman, Yujing Zhang fired her public defenders in June to act as her own attorney — a longshot move the 33-year-old Shanghai business consultant has struggled with during pretrial hearings setting up Monday’s scheduled jury selection.

Zhang often frustrates Altman by ignoring his questions or answering with non sequiturs. At times she replies in near-fluent English and insists she understand­s complex legal concepts, but will then say she doesn’t understand a simple question and turns to her Mandarin translator.

“I know full well that you understand what I am saying to you both in English and in Mandarin,” Altman told her during an August hearing. “You are trying to play games.”

If that weren’t enough, prosecutor­s have filed under seal secret evidence that they say has national security implicatio­ns, even though Zhang is not charged with espionage. The Secret Service said when agents detained Zhang at Mar-a-Lago she was carrying a computer, a hard drive, four cellphones and a thumb drive containing malware, although agents later recanted that accusation.

Agents said Zhang told them she brought the electronic­s to Mar-a-Lago because she feared they would be stolen if left at her nearby hotel, but in her room they allegedly found a device to detect hidden cameras, computers, $8,000 in cash plus credit and debit cards, all in the open.

Attempts to contact Zhang in jail, where she is being held without bail, were unsuccessf­ul, and the Chinese Embassy in Washington did not respond to emails and phone calls seeking comment. The U.S. attorney’s office in Miami declined to comment. Zhang could get six years in prison if convicted.

Her former public defenders are on standby in case she changes her mind about representi­ng herself. They have said she appears mentally competent, but she wouldn’t speak to a psychologi­st. They said Zhang’s Chinese relatives told them she has no mental health problems.

Zhang was arrested March 30 after she allegedly lied to get past a Secret Service agent guarding Mar-aLago, saying she was there to use the pool. She made it to the lobby, where she told a receptioni­st she was there for a United Nations friendship event that night and had come early to take pictures. That event had been canceled, and prosecutor­s say Zhang had been informed. The president was staying at Mar-a-Lago that weekend, but was at his nearby golf club when Zhang arrived.

Though there are no statistics, it is rare for defendants charged with serious felonies to represent themselves — pro se, in legal parlance — and that’s particular­ly true in federal court. Even with an experience­d defense attorney, federal acquittals are rare. According to the Pew Research Center, 90% of federal defendants pleaded guilty in 2018, and 8% had their cases dismissed. Of the 2% who went to trial, 8 out of 10 were convicted.

University of Florida law professor Michelle Jacobs, a former criminal defense lawyer, and Miami attorney David Weinstein, a former federal prosecutor, said Altman’s job would be more difficult because Zhang doesn’t know trial procedure or rules. If she makes a major error that slips by, that could lead to a guilty verdict being thrown out on appeal. Altman will probably slow the trial so Zhang can keep up.

Weinstein said prosecutor­s will find the case more difficult because not only do they also have to watch out for reversible errors Zhang might make, but their “vanity” is at stake.

“It is one thing to lose to a defense attorney; it is quite another to lose a case to a pro se defendant,” he said.

Jacobs wondered whether Zhang fired her public defenders because she comes from an authoritar­ian country and thought their job was to help ensure her conviction, even though Altman explained their role numerous times.

“The expectatio­n might be that the state will do what the state does, and whether you participat­e or not,” Jacobs said, “the end of the trial is a foregone conclusion.”

 ?? Daniel Pontet Associated Press ?? CHINESE NATIONAL Yujing Zhang, at left in this courtroom sketch, is acting as her own attorney.
Daniel Pontet Associated Press CHINESE NATIONAL Yujing Zhang, at left in this courtroom sketch, is acting as her own attorney.

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