New York Post

NYPD, FBI, Sec. Serv. prep for arrest unrest

- By LARRY CELONA, TINA MOORE and JORGE FITZ-GIBBON Additional reporting by Elizabeth Rosner and Joe Marino

The NYPD and the Secret Service are huddling to prep for Donald Trump’s possible indictment in Manhattan after the former president said he expected to be arrested this week and told supporters to protest, sources told The Post.

The FBI, state court officers and Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg’s office have also been kept in the loop on security discussion­s, with the Big Apple bracing for the worst after Trump, 76, urged his followers to “take our nation back” in light of his looming indictment, police sources said.

“We will use all of our available resources,” one NYPD source said Sunday, noting that the department’s Strategic Response Group — which responds to civil unrest and major events — “has a role in this agency and when needed they will be called in.”

Officials from several agencies met on Sunday and were expected to confer again on Monday, according to sources.

Trump took to his Truth Social site over the weekend and said he expects to be arrested Tuesday on an indictment stemming from Bragg’s probe into alleged hush money paid to porn star Stormy Daniels in the run-up to the 2016 presidenti­al election. Daniels claims she had an affair with Trump in 2006, which he has denied.

Authoritie­s on notice

The former president’s online call to supporters has federal, state and local authoritie­s on alert, according to sources.

The sources said several agencies will meet again on Monday to discuss security measures that include restrictin­g vehicle access to the lower Manhattan courthouse and deploying inside and outside the building.

Bragg’s office has neither confirmed nor denied that an indictment is imminent.

The NYPD said it will be ready in the event Trump is charged and unrest breaks out.

“We’ll handle it like we do anything else,” NYPD Deputy Commission­er of Public Informatio­n Kevin Maloney told The Post. “It’s lower Manhattan, there’s always plenty of police presence down there anyway. So we’ll monitor the situation. We’ll have ample resources. We’ll see what Tuesday brings.”

Maloney said he “would assume there will be conversati­ons with our intel bureau and stakeholde­rs in the federal courthouse and the DA’s office.

“We’ll have an advanced heads-up, I’m sure, on the timing of this whole thing,” he said. “We’ll make sure that the entrance and exits to the courthouse are secure, and if the protesters are there we’ll support their rights to peacefully protest. If they’re not there, even better.”

Bragg’s office referred a request for comment Sunday to the NYPD and other law-enforcemen­t agencies.

The FBI didn’t return a request for comment. A Secret Service spokesman said: “To maintain the highest levels of integrity for our operations, we are not able to comment on specific protection plans or movements for any Secret Service protectee.”

WH is ‘monitoring’

National Security Council spokesman John Kirby told Fox News Sunday that there was no immediate indication that there were violent protests planned by Trump supporters, but said the White House was keeping an eye on the situation.

“We’re always monitoring the situation here as best we can,” Kirby said. “And we obviously don’t want to see any activity grow violent, certainly nothing to the extent that we saw on Jan. 6, but we’re watching this closely.

“We want to see if there are protests of any kind about any issue or quite frankly, let alone this, that they’re peaceful,” he said.

Trump, in announcing his alleged pending arrest Saturday morning, posted: “THEY’RE KILLING OUR NATION AS WE SIT BACK & WATCH. WE MUST SAVE AMERICA! PROTEST, PROTEST, PROTEST!!!.”

Daniels allegedly received more than $130,000 in hush money through Michael Cohen, Trump’s former attorney and fixer, prior to the 2016 election. In 2018, Cohen pleaded guilty to violating federal campaign finance laws in connection to the payments and was sentenced to three years in prison.

Both Cohen and Daniels in recent weeks have testified before the grand jury convened by the DA’s office.

Bragg, meanwhile, in an email to his staff on Saturday, said his office will not be intimidate­d by Trump’s call for protests.

“Our law-enforcemen­t partners will ensure that any specific or credible threats against the office will be fully investigat­ed and that the proper safeguards are in place so all 1,600 of us have a secure work environmen­t,” Bragg told his office, according to a leaked email obtained by journalist Breanna Morello.

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 ?? ?? BLUE WALL: In the wake of former President Donald Trump’s call to “take our nation back” ahead of his potential arrest, the NYPD (officers here outside Trump Tower in 2016) says of the security situation, “We’ll handle it like we do anything else.”
BLUE WALL: In the wake of former President Donald Trump’s call to “take our nation back” ahead of his potential arrest, the NYPD (officers here outside Trump Tower in 2016) says of the security situation, “We’ll handle it like we do anything else.”

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