❓WHAT HAPPENED: Ryan Routh was found guilty of all charges related to his attempted assassination of Donald J. Trump in Florida last year.
👤WHO WAS INVOLVED: Ryan Routh, President Trump, Assistant U.S. Attorney Christopher Browne, and Judge Aileen Cannon.
📍WHEN & WHERE: September 23, 2025, in federal court.
💬KEY QUOTE: “The evidence has shown one thing and one thing only—the defendant wanted Donald Trump dead.” – Assistant U.S. Attorney Christopher Browne
🎯IMPACT: Routh faces life in prison.
UPDATE: 02:50 PM EST — Routh attempted to kill himself by stabbing a pen into his neck as the verdicts were being announced. However, as with his attempt on President Trump’s life, he appears to have been unsuccessful, with four U.S. Marshals restraining him, dragging him from the courtroom, and returning him in shackles.
Original report continues below…
Ryan Routh, 59, has been found guilty of all charges related to the attempted assassination of Donald J. Trump. The Ukrainian recruiter was charged last year after federal prosecutors accused him of attempting to assassinate the then-presidential candidate at his West Palm Beach golf course in Florida.
Routh had pleaded not guilty to the charges, which included five federal offenses. He had set up a sniper’s nest in a bush, and President Trump came within firing range before Routh was spotted by a Secret Service agent.
Agents later found a GoPro, two backpacks, a loaded SKS-style rifle with a scope, and other equipment in the nest.
During the trial, Assistant U.S. Attorney Christopher Browne emphasized to the jury that the evidence clearly indicated Routh’s intent to kill Trump. “This was not a publicity stunt,” Browne stated, adding that Routh “almost got away” with his plan.
Routh, representing himself, attempted to argue that he committed no crime as he never fired a shot. However, his rambling, 42-minute closing argument, which featured references to Ukraine, was shut down by Judge Aileen Cannon for being off-topic.
Previously, Routh faced charges for possession of a firearm by a convicted felon and possession of a firearm with an obliterated serial number, carrying potential penalties of up to 20 years in prison and substantial fines.
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