Key Points
- Officials said the man did not appear to be targeting Trump or others involved in the trial.
- The man burned for several minutes in full view of television cameras.
- Witnesses on the scene said they were disturbed by the incident.
A man set himself on fire outside the New York courthouse where Donald Trump’s historic hush-money trial was taking place, but he did not appear to have been targeting Trump, officials said.
The man burned for several minutes in full view of television cameras that were set up outside the courthouse, where the first-ever criminal trial of a former US president is being held.
“I see a totally charred human being,” a CNN reporter said on the air.
Officials said the man survived.
“The victim is in critical condition but is alive and intubated,” said New York Fire Department Commissioner Laura Kavanagh.
Witnesses said the man pulled pamphlets out of a backpack and threw them in the air before he doused himself with a liquid and set himself on fire.
One of those pamphlets, titled The True History of the World (Haunted Carnival Edition), included references to “evil billionaires” but portions that were visible to a Reuters witness did not mention Trump.
The New York Police Department said the man, who they identified as Max Azzarello of St. Augustine, Florida, did not appear to be targeting Trump or others involved in the trial.
“Right now we are labelling him as sort of a conspiracy theorist and we are going from there,” Tarrik Sheppard, a deputy commissioner with the New York Police Department, said at a news conference.
Witnesses on the scene said they were disturbed by the incident.
“It’s hard to even process in your brain,” one witness, who declined to give his name, told Reuters.
The shocking development came shortly after jury selection for the trial was completed, clearing the way for prosecutors and defence attorneys to make opening statements next week in a case stemming from hush money paid to a porn star.
The 12 jurors, along with six alternates, will consider evidence in a first-ever trial to determine whether a former US president is guilty of breaking the law.
Most are not native New Yorkers, hailing from across the United States and countries like Ireland and Lebanon.
Trump is accused of covering up a $202,365 payment his former lawyer Michael Cohen made to porn star she says they had a decade earlier.
Trump has pleaded not guilty to 34 counts of falsifying business records brought by Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg and denies any such encounter with Daniels, whose real name is Stephanie Clifford.
Trump has pleaded not guilty in three other criminal cases as well, but this is the only one certain to go to trial ahead of the 5 November election, when the Republican politician aims to again take on Democratic President Joe Biden.
A conviction would not bar him from office.
Source Agencies