● Judge orders Routh to be detained awaiting trial
●Suspect was arrested on Sept. 15, faces two gun charges
●Planned new charge carries life sentence if convicted
The U.S. Justice Department plans to charge the man accused of hiding with a gun at former President Donald Trump’s Florida golf course with attempting to assassinate a major political candidate, carrying a life sentence if convicted, a prosecutor said on Monday.
Ryan Routh, 58, was ordered by U.S. Magistrate Judge Ryon McCabe to remain in jail without bond pending trial on the two gun-related charges brought against him after his Sept. 15 arrest.
McCabe said prosecutors had documented Routh’s effort to “stalk” Trump during a roughly month-long period in south Florida “in an apparent attempt to assassinate him.”
Prosecutor Mark Dispoto said the Justice Department will ask a grand jury to bring the more serious attempted assassination charge against Routh, who was handcuffed and shackled at the waist during a hearing before McCabe in which prosecutors detailed some of the evidence collected against him.
Routh wrote a letter, prosecutors said, months earlier referencing an “assassination attempt” on the Republican presidential candidate and a $150,000 bounty on his life.
He also assembled a “sniper’s nest” near the sixth hole of Trump’s West Palm Beach golf club in an attempt to kill him, Dispoto said, but was stopped when a U.S. Secret Service agent opened fire after spotting a rifle poking through the fence.
“This was an easy shot,” Dispoto said of Routh’s position, adding that Trump would have arrived in that area roughly 15 minutes later.
Lawyers representing Routh unsuccessfully sought his release on a $250,000 bond, questioning the prosecution’s evidence and arguing that Routh has attempted to aid democracies including Ukraine and Taiwan.
Routh wore a navy blue jumpsuit during the hearing. He did not speak.
Prosecutors said that several months prior to the incident, Routh dropped off at the home of an unidentified civilian witness a box including ammunition, a metal pipe, four phones and a handwritten letter addressed to “the world” that offered a bounty on Trump.
“This was an assassination attempt on Donald Trump but I failed you,” the suspect wrote, according to a court filing by prosecutors. “I will offer $150,000 to whomever can complete the job.” [Reuters]