From Campaign to Court: Trump Reports for Jury Duty in NYC

Donald Trump pulled up in a long black limousine and gave a very presidential wave as he made his way into the building. Then the billionaire promptly found himself seated next to ordinary, wage-earning, subway-riding New Yorkers, forced to wait — and wait some more — for the wheels of justice to turn.

The Republican presidential candidate reported for jury duty in Manhattan on Monday and spent much of the day like everyone else, filling out forms and wondering whether he would get picked.

By late afternoon, he was released without getting selected for a trial, his civic obligation fulfilled.

Trump had high praise for the public servants at the courthouse, saying: "The people in the court system are really professional. It was an honor to see how it worked."

The businessman's limo arrived in the morning at the foot of the courthouse steps familiar to viewers of TV's "Law & Order," and he was met by a throng of camera crews, reporters and onlookers. Some booed, while others greeted him with fist bumps and books for him to sign.

Inside, a lawyer posed for a selfie with him, a sketch artist presented him with a drawing to sign, and a bystander exhorted him to "save this country!"

A murmur went through the 75 or so other prospective jurors when Trump walked in. But they largely kept a respectful distance from the real estate mogul, reality TV star and GOP front-runner.

"He makes it a little more bearable," said Christian Johnson, 21, a University at Albany student doing jury duty for the first time. "He's giving me a lot of material for my Snapchat."

Another juror, retiree Renee Shapiro, said: "I'm looking at him and I'm saying, 'Are my eyes deceiving me?'" She said he looked taller than she expected.

The civic duty was somewhat overdue for Trump, who had been summoned but didn't appear five times before. His campaign explained that Trump never got those summonses because they had been sent to the wrong address.

After filing through security, Trump was escorted to a front-row seat in a juror waiting room to fill out a questionnaire about biographical basics, hobbies, experiences with crime and the courts, and occupation. Trump said he listed real estate, "only because I refuse to say 'politician.'"

Jury assembly supervisor Irene Laracuenta told the prospective jurors that celebrities are entitled to the same privacy — and face the same selection process — as anyone else.

"No one — no one — gets special treatment," she said.

Still, from a security standpoint, Trump wasn't treated entirely like everyone else.

A special team of uniformed and plainclothes officers shadowed him to make sure he could get around the courthouse easily, as is standard when high-profile people come to court, court officers' union leader Dennis Quirk said. Trump also brought his own, unarmed bodyguard.

"It's a system, and we go through it. And it's a great system. It's a system that works," Trump said at midday. "They do a fantastic job, and I met some wonderful people."

After sitting silently through much of the morning, Trump returned from a lunch break with copies of The New York Times, USA Today and The Wall Street Journal. Not bringing reading material earlier "was a mistake," he said.

Trump said he hadn't asked for a postponement, because serving jury duty is "the right thing to do." But asked whether he hoped to get cut loose after only one day, he said: "I hope so."

Over the years, many celebrities, including Madonna, Spike Lee and Woody Allen, have been called for jury duty in New York. Indeed, "Saturday Night Live" cast member Bobby Moynihan was in the jury pool with Trump. Moynihan had no comment.

While it was once de rigueur for doctors, lawyers, various other professionals and elected officials to get out of jury duty, the state eliminated their exemptions in 1996.

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Associated Press writers Lejla Sarcevic and Jennifer Peltz in New York and Jill Colvin in Newark, N.J., contributed to this report.

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