Trump’s potential assassin accused trial has a controversial beginning while the judge cuts the defendant

The criminal trial of the man accused of having tried to assassinate American president Donald Trump took a controversial beginning Thursday while a federal judge cut a declaration of winding opening of the accused Ryan Routh, who represents himself.
The American judge of the American district based in Florida, Aileen Cannon, stopped the presentation of Routh to a jury after only a few minutes after Roth plunged into subjects such as the origin of the human species, the colony of the American West and international conflicts.
“This affair means absolutely nothing,” said Roth, encouraging Cannon to send the courtyard of the courtroom. Roth told the judge that he wanted to talk about non-violence.
Cannon had previously warned Roth that she had limited patience for an argument that “would laugh at the dignity of the courtroom”.
Roth, 59, pleaded not guilty to five federal accusations, including an attempted assassination of a large presidential candidate. He risks maximum life sentence.
The trial began the next day after the right-wing activist and influencing Trump Allied Charlie Kirk was shot in an event at the University of Utah Valley, marking the last example of political violence in the United States. Trump faced two assassination attempts during his presidential campaign in 2024 who sent him back to the White House.
American prosecutors allege that Routh was hiding with a rifle near the Green of the sixth holes at the Trump International Golf Club in West Palm Beach with the intention of killing Trump while he golfing on the course on September 15, 2024.
“Last year, accused Ryan Routh wanted to make sure that the people of this country could not elect Donald Trump as president of the United States,” said prosecutor John Shipipley during his opening declaration. “The defendant therefore decided to withdraw the choice of American voters.”
Ryan Routh, the man arrested after what the police said was an apparent assassination attempt against Donald Trump, has a long criminal record and a member of the Ukrainian Legion said that he had tried to fit into efforts to recruit troops for Ukraine.
Shippye allegedly alleged that Roth planned for weeks to kill Trump, traveling from his home to Hawaii to her north North Carolina and finally to West Palm Beach in a family car with six mobile phones and stolen license plates. He stayed at a truck stop for about a month, to follow Trump’s movements and to visit the golf course about 17 times, Shippley told the jury.
Robert Fercano, a special American secret service agent, testified that he was patrolling a golf cart before Trump on the day of the incident and spotted a face and a rifle pointing it with a fence. Fercano said he had shot the weapon, which, according to the prosecutors, prompted Routh to flee.
During the counter-examination, Fercano confronted Routh about the episode.
“Mentally, I have to live with the fact that you pointed out a weapon on my face,” said Fercano.
The incident occurred only two months after a shooter targeted Trump, who suffered damage to the ear, during a presidential campaign rally in Pennsylvania. This shooter, Thomas Crooks, was shot down to the scene.
The judge chaired another criminal case Trump
Roth, who had lived an erratic life as an entrepreneur in roof in difficulty, had pleaded for democracy in Taiwan and Ukraine, and was interviewed in 2023 on a quixotic level to deploy Afghan refugees to help Ukraine repel the invasion of Russia.
In July, he told Cannon that he had not trusted a “random foreigner” to speak for him and defended himself. His two former public defenders are rescue lawyers to help logistical questions.
A jury of seven women and five men hear the case.
The trial begins as Trump puts his stamp on the United States Ministry of Justice, which continues the case, dismissed officials deemed insufficiently faithful.

In a touch of fate, he will be held at the same courthouse and before the same judge where Trump faced criminal charges accusing him of illegally retaining classified documents after his first mandate. Judge Aileen Cannon, whom Trump appointed in 2020, rejected this case before she reached a trial.
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