Ryan Wesley Routh charges revealed: Trump assassination attempt suspect faces multiple felony counts after first court appearance
The would-be assassin accused of trying to kill Donald Trump smiled and laughed as he made his first federal court appearance where he was hit with gun charges on Monday.
Cops released a new photo of suspected gunman Ryan Wesley Routh grinning with his stomach exposed after he was arrested in West Palm Beach, Florida when fleeing the scene where he made an attempt on the former president’s life.
The 58-year-old is accused of pointing an AK-47 at the Republican presidential nominee through a fence while he was playing a round of golf at the Trump International Golf Club on Sunday.
Trump, 78, was unharmed and rushed to safety by Secret Service in another close call less than two months after he was shot in the ear during a rally in Butler, Pennsylvania.
Routh wore black prison scrubs and had his hand and feet shackled as he walked into the Paul G Rogers Federal Courthouse on Monday morning.
The hearing was eight minutes and Routh was charged on two counts: possession of a firearm while a convicted felon; and possession of a firearm with an obliterated serial number.
Ryan Wesley Routh, the gunman accused of trying to kill Donald Trump on Sunday, appeared in federal court appearance with his hands and feet in shackles on Monday. Pictured: Police released on Monday an image of Routh’s arrest after he was able to flee 50 miles from Trump International Golf Club
He will face arraignment in two weeks.
Secret Service opened fire on Routh in West Palm Beach after they spotted the muzzle of his AK-47 poking through a fence at Trump International Golf Club while the Republican nominee was playing a round.
Routh could face up to 20 years in prison total for both charges –a maximum of 15 if convicted of possession of a firearm while a convicted felon and five-years for the second charge.
The suspect provided routine information to court officials during the hearing.
Those in the room report that Routh spoke in a soft voice and said he makes around $3,000 per month. He says he has no savings, real estate or assets beside his two trucks, which are located in Hawaii and he claims are worth about $1,000.
Routh says he sometimes helps support his 25-year-old son.
He did not enter a plea for Monday’s charges in part because he does not yet have permanent legal representation.
His bond hearing is set for September 23 and a probable cause hearing – or arraignment – is scheduled for September 30.
Routh will likely not be able to enter a plea for Monday’s charges in part because he does not yet have permanent legal representation.
The charges are the most preliminary and more can be added throughout the trial and investigation.
The suspect was not charged Monday with making threats against a former president or candidate for president, which itself carries a five year maximum sentence that could be lengthened since he was also allegedly wielding an AR-15 rifle and made an attempt on the former president’s life.
Routh was smiling and laughing as he arrived at the court house on Monday
Routh was charged with two counts – possession of a firearm while a convicted felon; and possession of a firearm with an obliterated serial number – and is set for arraignment in two weeks
Part of Routh’s rap sheet in North Carolina includes 2002 ‘weapon law violations’ and ‘terrorist threats,’ according to public records. As well as a three-hour standoff with law enforcement in North Carolina.
When Routh was 36-years-old in 2002, he was convicted for possessing a weapon of mass destruction.
He was arrested after a standoff with police where he barricaded himself inside a local roofing business in Greensboro after speeding away from a traffic stop with a firearm.