Details on Trump-rally arrestee emerge

Police detain Michael Steven Sandford on Saturday during a speech by Donald Trump in Las Vegas.
Police detain Michael Steven Sandford on Saturday during a speech by Donald Trump in Las Vegas.

LAS VEGAS -- A British man accused of telling authorities that he wanted to kill Donald Trump at a rally was unemployed, living out of his car and had been treated in the past for obsessive-compulsive disorder and anorexia, authorities and others say.


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Court statements and accounts Tuesday from a family friend in England offered a picture of 20-year-old suspect Michael Steven Sandford, who was arrested Saturday in a Las Vegas casino where the Republican candidate was speaking.

People who have known Sandford said he was intelligent.

"I just didn't imagine that he would do what he was doing," said Julie Debnam, 59, whose son attended primary school with Sandford. "I still think he has a lot of low esteem. He needs help rather than going to prison, basically."

The British newspaper Portsmouth News said Sandford's father, Paul Davey, described his son as polite and peaceful and called the arrest an "absolute shock."

"Whether he's been blackmailed or put up to it, that's the only thing me and his mum can think of," Davey said, according to the newspaper. "It's so against his nature ... we think somebody has got hold of him and done something."

U.S. Secret Service agents say Sandford approached an officer at the Trump campaign stop last weekend to say he wanted Trump's autograph, then tried to take the officer's gun.

In an interview, Sandford told agents that he wanted to shoot Trump and was prepared to die at the hands of police, according to the criminal complaint.

Sandford was charged with an act of violence on restricted grounds and was assigned a court-appointed attorney. He has not yet entered a plea and was denied bail after a judge said he was a flight risk and posed a threat to the community.

"There may be some issues regarding the mental health of the defendant," U.S. Magistrate Judge George Foley Jr. said during a court hearing Monday while Sandford appeared to tremble in his seat nearby.

Sandford has not recently been diagnosed with mental illness but had been treated for anorexia and obsessive-compulsive disorder when he was younger, according to background information discussed in court.

Public Defender Heather Fraley said Sandford previously attempted suicide and once ran away from a hospital in England. Still, she said she believes he's competent to stand trial.

Court research shows Sandford didn't have a job and received financial support from his mother after coming to the U.S. last year.

Davey told the Portsmouth News that his son had moved to New Jersey a year and a half ago to be with a girlfriend. He overstayed his visa and was in the country illegally, Foley noted.

Sandford told Secret Service agents that he drove his 2007 BMW from the San Bernardino, Calif., area to Las Vegas on Thursday. The next day, he went to a shooting range and fired 20 rounds from a 9mm Glock pistol to learn how to use it, according to the complaint.

Sandford said he had been planning to kill Trump for about a year but finally felt confident about trying it, the complaint states.

Information for this article was contributed by Frank Jordans and David Keyton of The Associated Press.

A Section on 06/22/2016

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