FORT PIERCE, Fla.—The trial of Ryan Wesley Routh, who is charged with the Sept. 15, 2024, attempted assassination of then-presidential candidate Donald Trump, has begun in Florida amid growing concerns about politically motivated violence in the United States.
Routh, who is representing himself, and Assistant U.S. Attorney John Shipley offered opening arguments on Sept. 11 before hearing from a Secret Service agent, who testified that he confronted Routh at Trump’s golf course in West Palm Beach, Florida, in September 2024, just weeks before the presidential election.
Shipley’s opening argument laid out his findings regarding Routh’s preparations for the alleged assassination attempt, including allegedly traveling to Florida, using various aliases, using encrypted communications, and purchasing a firearm. The case, he said, is not about whether the jury likes Trump or not but whether an attempt was made on Trump’s life.
“[Routh] wanted to make sure the people of this country could not reelect [Trump],” he said.
At the end of Shipley’s arguments, Routh smiled and winked in the direction of the area where reporters were seated. For his opening arguments, he stood at a podium in the middle of the courtroom and offered an unusual statement about the value of intent. Modern courts, he suggested, lack perspective about individuals’ humanity.
“Intent is the whole of who we are,” he told the jury. He went on to make other remarks ranging from comments on the history of the human species to comments about various modern political leaders.
District Judge Aileen Cannon of the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of Florida interjected, dismissed the jury, and admonished Routh, telling him to focus on evidence surrounding the trial.
“What I’ve heard thus far is nothing of the sort,” she said.
She also said that she would not let him make a “mockery” of the dignity of the courtroom.
Routh said his whole argument is about “gentleness and nonviolence.”
Evidence and Testimony
After Routh’s opening argument, he and Shipley took turns questioning Secret Service agent Robert Fercano, who identified Routh in court as the person he saw in the bushes at Trump International Golf Club in West Palm Beach in September 2024.Fercano, whom Shipley described as a hero, described how he did a visual scan of the golf course and noticed abnormalities along the fence, including a rifle barrel and bulletproof shielding on either side of the barrel. The site, Fercano said, was reminiscent of a military turret surrounded by shielding. Fercano described confronting Routh and shooting in his direction with his service weapon. The prosecution also played audio of Fercano saying shots were fired.
At one point during testimony, Fercano held the firearm he said Routh had with him and said it was the same one he saw in the tree line near the fence. The ammunition involved could have pierced the human body, and Secret Service armor would not have offered sufficient protection, he said.
Routh began his relatively brief cross-examination by asking Fercano whether it was good to be alive and proceeded with questions about Fercano’s actions and view of the scene that day. After Routh asked whether Fercano was scratched that day, Fercano said he was not physically hurt but that ever since he has had to live with knowing that a gun was pointed at him.
One of the pieces of evidence is a “Dear World” letter that Routh allegedly dropped off at a residence before the alleged assassination attempt.








