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The Man arrested for jumping in front of Trump's motorcade will not face federal charges.

The arrest report for the person who jumped in front of Donald Trump's motorcade as the former president was leaving federal court on Tuesday was issued by the Miami Police Department.

By abela billionerPublished 11 months ago 3 min read
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The Man arrested for jumping in front of Trump's motorcade will not face federal charges.
Photo by Library of Congress on Unsplash

The Man arrested for jumping in front of Trump's motorcade will not face federal charges.

The arrest report for the person who jumped in front of Donald Trump's motorcade as the former president was leaving federal court on Tuesday was issued by the Miami Police Department.

Domenic Santana, according to the report, "put the former President's life in danger" when he "ran into the middle of the street" and stopped the motorcade, prompting one car to swerve to avoid hitting Santana.

Three state offenses were listed on the arrest form: disorderly behavior, resisting an officer, and blocking traffic. Santana's local charges may alter before his first court appearance.

According to Secret Service spokesperson Anthony Guglielmi, no federal charges are planned. After his detention, Santana was interviewed by federal investigators, who stated he stepped into the traffic to avoid a swarm of Trump fans and was unaware the motorcade was approaching.

According to the police report, Santana was dressed as a white prisoner and carried a sign that said "lock him up" in reference to Trump. Santana had already had altercations with Trump supporters that day, and he was told to avoid the area where the supporters were, but he "kept enticing the crowd," according to the report.

According to the investigation, Santana's "actions of interrupting the motorcade put the former President's life in danger." "The defendant's actions prompted the public and media to rush to him, storming the street while the defendant yelled at Trump supporters in an attempt to entice them."

"Officers ran towards the defendant, and while attempting to take him into custody, he tensed up his arms and pulled away, resisting officers," the report reads.

before being arrested."

While Trump fumes against prosecutors, his Republican opponents in 2024 struggle to find their own message.

On Tuesday night, former President Donald Trump gave a harsh message to Americans, addressing outside his New Jersey club only hours after pleading not guilty in a Miami courtroom to a massive and damning federal charge.

"Today we witnessed the most evil and heinous abuse of power in the history of our country," Trump declared, referring to his second arraignment in three months, adding that the "day will go down in infamy."

The former president and GOP primary frontrunner in 2024 may be in severe legal problems, but his campaign strategy is clear: incite rage at those prosecuting him and play the victim to his supporters.

But the equation - and the route forward - is much less apparent for his presidential competitors.

No one in the large primary field has delivered a message as politically coherent as Trump’s – who, for all his rambling and chaotic asides, has proven himself a uniquely effective communicator. None have yet been able to compete for attention with their party’s leader, even as some are beginning to quietly test out less sympathetic takes.

Former New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie has been Trump’s most ardent primary critic, but even his harshest lines have lacked his famous edge. Even then, they’ve been the exception. The most popular responses so far have included, first and most often, a professed ignorance about the case coupled with venom for the Justice Department; half-hearted criticism of the alleged act, though rarely the actor; and, especially among the lowest polling candidates, chest-pounding promises to ally themselves with Trump in his fight with prosecutors.

4 political questions after Trump's second arraignment on criminal charges

Former President Donald Trump appeared somber and quiet in a Miami courtroom, hands clasped and leaning back in his chair at times, speaking aloud only to utter the words "not guilty" to 37 federal counts stemming from his handling of classified documents.

Astoundingly, it was the second time in three months that Trump has been indicted. And that's not counting the $5 million civil judgment against him for sexual abuse at the end of April.

There are still two more criminal investigations looming, trials are coming, and Trump continues to be the front-runner for the Republican nomination.

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