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A courtroom sketch depicts Zhang Yujing, charged with bluffing her way into US President Donald Trump's Florida resort, waiting for the start of her hearing in West Palm Beach in April. Image: Daniel Pontet via Reuters

Chinese Mar-a-Lago intruder Zhang Yujing ‘playing games with the court’, US judge says, as she refuses to answer questions out loud

  • Defendant accused of being intentionally difficult after judge is forced to describe her nods or smiles for the record
  • Trial pushed back to September after Zhang, who is representing herself, misses deadline to file documents

The Chinese woman arrested in March trying to enter Mar-a-Lago with a trove of electronics appeared in federal court in Fort Lauderdale briefly on Tuesday, where a judge accused her of being intentionally difficult when she refused to answer his questions out loud.

“The defendant has decided that she wants to play games with the court,” said US District Judge Roy Altman. On several occasions Altman was forced to describe Zhang Yujing’s nods or smiles into the record when she refused to answer.

Zhang, 33, was indicted on charges of trespassing and lying to a federal agent, charges that carry maximum sentences of one and five years respectively. She pleaded not guilty.

On Tuesday, US Attorney Rolando Garcia told the court that federal prosecutors were prepared to go to trial against Zhang next week.

However, Zhang, who has been representing herself since firing her public defenders on June 11, did not realise she had to file documents such as jury instructions and an evidence list by Tuesday’s deadline.

As a result, Altman pushed back the date to give her time to file.

The trial is now scheduled for September 3. Garcia predicted the trial could last up to four days.

There will be another hearing next week to consider whether Zhang wants to waive her right to a jury trial, a move suggested by the federal prosecutors.

While non-jury trials are common in civil cases, it would be highly unusual in a criminal case.

“Maybe I don’t need that many people to make that decision. I don’t know,” Zhang said, but suggested she was dizzy and not in the correct state of mind to make the decision until a future date.

If Zhang chooses to waive her right to a jury trial, her case would be decided by Altman.

Zhang, 33, was arrested by federal agents on March 30 at a security checkpoint at the entrance of Mar-a-Lago, US President Donald Trump’s private South Florida club.

Teen sneaked past Secret Service into Mar-a-Lago – while Trump was there

Although Zhang has not been charged under the Espionage Act, federal prosecutors have filed secret evidence – evidence considered “classified” under the Classified Information Procedures Act – indicating authorities have information pertaining to Zhang’s case that has significant national security implications.

Sources told The Miami Herald that Zhang is a new focus in a broader FBI counter-intelligence probe that has been looking into possible Chinese espionage at Mar-a-Lago since late last year.

At the time of her arrest, Zhang was carrying an external hard drive, a laptop computer, several cellphones and one thumb drive that federal agents initially said was infected with malware. They later walked back the malware claim.

A photo from Zhang Yujing's passport. Photo: Miami Herald via TNS

A search of Zhang’s hotel room revealed nearly US$8,000 in US and Chinese currency, and more electronics, including a secret-camera detector.

Zhang has been held without bond since a federal judge in Palm Beach County ruled Zhang to be an “extreme” flight risk.

“It does appear to the court that Ms Zhang was up to something nefarious,” Magistrate Judge William Matthewman said in a decision on April 15.

Is this Chinese tycoon and member of Trump’s Mar-a-Lago also a spy?

According to federal agents who have testified in the case, Zhang had initially told agents that she was there to use the pool but later switched her story when talking with the receptionist, telling her that she was at the club to attend a “United Nations Friendship” event, and flashing what she said was an invitation written in Chinese.

No event by that name existed.

However, a charity fundraiser had been planned for that evening and promoted on Chinese social media platforms by South Florida massage entrepreneur Cindy Yang, who was bundling Mar-a-Lago event tickets for political and business tourism companies in China.

One of those businesses, run by Yang’s associate, Charles Lee, used the name “United Nations Friendship Association”. The United Nations has no record of affiliation with the group.

One of Zhang’s former public defenders, Kristy Militello, told the court in May that the defence had procured a receipt proving that Zhang had bought a ticket to the Mar-a-Lago event through Lee as part of a US$20,000 travel package, and suggested that she was not lying to the receptionist.

However, federal investigators say they have evidence that Zhang knew the event was cancelled before leaving Shanghai, and had even asked for her money back.

What was the Chinese woman arrested at Mar-a-Lago up to? An ex-spy’s take

The event was cancelled after a Miami Herald article from March 8 revealed that Yang, the former owner of the Asian spa where New England Patriots owner Robert Kraft was accused of paying for a sex act, had been promoting the event as a chance for Chinese businesspeople to gain access to the family of the US president.

Yang is now a focus of the federal counter-intelligence investigation, according to sources familiar with the probe.

The US Department of Justice is investigating the possibility that Yang was funnelling money into Trump’s re-election campaign via fundraiser events, which would be illegal under campaign finance laws preventing foreign money in elections.

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