Federal prosecutors have told a federal judge that if Donald Trump had bought a gun earlier this week during a campaign stop, he would be violating his release conditions as a criminal defendant and breaking the law, according to a Friday court filing.

A campaign spokesman for Trump had posted on social media that Trump bought a Glock in South Carolina on Monday, then removed the post and clarified to CNN the former president hadn’t purchased the firearm.

Prosecutors pointed to the moment, as well as the former president’s recent attacks on departing Joint Chiefs Chairman Gen. Mark Milley, in asking a federal judge to place more restrictions on Trump, particularly on what he can say, as he awaits trial in Washington, DC, on federal charges of 2020 election interference.

  • @Son_of_dad@lemmy.world
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    fedilink
    71 year ago

    Tbf you’re missing context. The gun had a portrait of Trump on them. It was clear to me he wanted them as a memento. I can’t imagine Trump ever using a gun, or even buying one unless his face is on it and he wants to display it. Still illegal for him to buy it, but I doubt anyone saw the post as anything like calling for violence

    • @some_guy
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      141 year ago

      but I doubt anyone saw the post as anything like calling for violence

      He’s made many calls for violence, though.

      Fight like hell. I’ll be there with you."

      “This is an act so egregious that, in times gone by, the punishment would have been DEATH,” the former president had written about Milley speaking with a Chinese general near the end of Trump’s term, the prosecutors noted.

      These are the two that I had top-of-mind. They aren’t the only two.