Former President Donald Trump was planning to leave Florida for New York on April 3 for his expected booking and arraignment the following day on charges stemming from hush money payments during his 2016 campaign — answering for a criminal case unlike any his country has seen.
Mr. Trump, already in the midst of a third presidential campaign to try and reclaim the White House he lost to President Joe Biden in 2020, said he will fly to Manhattan in the afternoon and go to Trump Tower before turning himself in to authorities on Tuesday.
Trump Tower was open but authorities were planning to close nearby streets as Mr. Trump came and went, and additional security was also in the works. They've taken steps to close and secure the courthouse floor where Mr. Trump will appear on Tuesday.
Demonstrators supporting Mr. Trump began gathering as the Florida sun was just rising at a West Palm Beach shopping centre on the way to the airport, hours before he was set to pass along the route.
Boca Raton firefighter Erik Solensten and his retired colleague, John Fischer, got an early start putting up banners. One was 30 by 6 feet (9 by 2 metres), picturing police officers and firefighters saying, “Thanks for having our backs, President Trump.”
“We are fire rescue. We are prepared and don’t like to wait for things to happen,” said Mr. Solensten, who took a vacation day to show support for Mr. Trump. “He needs morale just like everyone else needs morale. He’s done more for this country than any 10 presidents combined.”
Mr. Trump is facing multiple charges of falsifying business records, including at least one felony offence, in the indictment handed down by a Manhattan grand jury last week. The investigation is scrutinising six-figure payments made to porn actor Stormy Daniels and former Playboy model Karen McDougal.
Both say they had sexual encounters with the married Mr. Trump years before he got into politics. Mr. Trump denies having sexual liaisons with either woman and has denied any wrongdoing involving payments, arguing that the case against him is politically motivated.
No former President has ever been indicted and, given Mr. Trump's still active campaign for President, legal and political implications are colliding in unprecedented ways. The Trump campaign says it raised millions of dollars in a matter of hours after word of the indictment broke on Thursday, and the former President is planning to head back to Florida for a rally after he appears before a judge on Tuesday.
Top Republicans, including some of Mr. Trump's potential rivals in next year's GOP presidential primary, have decried the case against him. Mr. Biden and leading Democrats have largely had little to say about it.
Mr. Solensten said it is wrong that Trump is being charged with a crime stemming from an alleged tryst with a porn star long before he was in office. He said investigators should instead be looking at Mr. Biden's son, Hunter, and his business dealings, which committees in the Republican-controlled House have already begun examining.
“To me, those acts are treasonable," Mr. Solensten said of the Bidens. "But it’s a walk.”