LAS
VEGAS (AP) — A British man arrested at a weekend Donald Trump rally in
Las Vegas tried to grab a police officer’s gun so he could kill the
presidential candidate after planning an assassination for about a year,
according to authorities.
U.S.
Secret Service agents said Michael Steven Sandford approached a Las
Vegas police officer at the campaign stop to say he wanted Trump’s
autograph, but that he then tried to take the weapon.
A
complaint filed Monday in U.S. District Court in Nevada charges
Sandford, 20, with an act of violence on restricted grounds. He was
denied bail during a court appearance later in the day. His
court-appointed attorney said he was living out of his car and in the
country illegally after overstaying a visa.
Sandford has not entered a plea.
The
arrest happened relatively quietly at a campaign stop seen as peaceful
compared to the mayhem at the presumptive Republican nominee’s recent
events in San Jose, California, and Albuquerque, New Mexico.
Gregg
Donovan was among about 1,500 gathered Saturday to see Trump at the
Treasure Island casino on the Las Vegas Strip. For the event, he donned
the top hat and red jacket that made him recognizable in his former job
as swanky Beverly Hills’ official greeter for more than a decade.
Donovan
said he didn’t know about the charge against Sandford until he saw news
reports. But he recognized him because the two had stood in line
together for nine hours waiting to get into the Trump event. Sandford
even held Donovan’s spot in line for a bathroom break.
“I was No. 5, and he was No. 4,” Donovan said.
They
spoke, Donovan said, though Sandford didn’t say much and seemed
“strange.” Donovan didn’t elaborate on what made Sandford seem odd.
After waiting, they passed through metal detectors manned by Secret Service, police and casino security officials.
Federal
Magistrate Judge George Foley said in court Monday that Sandford was a
potential danger to the community and a flight risk. Sandford wore leg
irons and appeared to tremble during the hearing.
Heather
Fraley, his assigned public defender, said Sandford appeared to be
competent. She said he hadn’t been diagnosed with a mental illness but
that he has autism and previously attempted suicide. He doesn’t have a
job.
Sandford’s
mother told court researchers that he was treated for obsessive
compulsive disorder and anorexia when he was younger, and that he once
ran away from a hospital in England, according to the public defender.
Fraley
argued that Sandford should go to a halfway house because he didn’t
have a criminal history, but the judge said he should stay in detention
ahead of a July 5 court date.
Agents
said Sandford told them he had been in the U.S. for about a year and a
half, lived in Hoboken, New Jersey, and drove to the San Bernardino,
California, area before coming to Las Vegas on June 16.
Sandford
told officers he was convinced he would die in the assassination
attempt. He said he also reserved a ticket for a Trump rally in Phoenix,
scheduled for later Saturday, as a backup plan.
The
criminal complaint said Sandford was arrested after grabbing the handle
of an officer’s gun while trying to remove it from a holster.
Sandford
told authorities that he went to the Battlefield Vegas shooting range
the day before the rally and fired 20 rounds from a 9mm Glock pistol to
learn how to use it. Police detectives who visited the range spoke with
an employee who confirmed that he provided Sandford shooting lessons,
according to the complaint signed by Secret Service Special Agent Joseph
Hall.
Maybe the NRA sent him there to kill Trump since Trump wants a waiting and vetting period for people who try to buy guns. They got their way in the House this year with a Dem in the White House, but know that Trump will give them trouble. We need Trump!
ReplyDeleteIs it no ironic that the Trump people are NOT trying to kill anyone yet they get the rap from the press about being violent? Clinton supporters went into malls and the workplace gunning people down.
ReplyDeleteInconvenient facts here.