Chinese Woman Arrested At Trump Resort "Up To Something", Denied Bail

INSUBCONTINENT EXCLUSIVE:
President Donald Trump's Florida resort last month was denied bail on Monday by a federal judge who said he believed she was "up to
something nefarious."Yujing Zhang, who was carrying multiple electronic devices when arrested, pleaded not guilty at her arraignment and
detention hearing on Monday in West Palm Beach, Florida.Zhang, 33, was indicted on Friday on charges of making false statements to a federal
officer and entering or remaining in a restricted area at Trump's Mar-a-Lago resort, an incident that raised concerns about security at the
Palm Beach club.During the hearing, a federal prosecutor said Zhang could face more charges and U.S
Magistrate Judge William Matthewman ordered her continued detention.Matthewman said he was concerned Zhang told U.S
Secret Service agents she was at Mar-a-Lago to attend a charity event that prosecutors allege she knew was cancelled.He also was troubled
she was carrying four cellphones, a laptop computer, an external hard drive and a thumb drive when arrested."It does appear to the court
that Ms
Zhang was up to something nefarious when she unlawfully attempted to gain access to Mar-a-Lago," Matthewman said.Zhang has not been indicted
on espionage charges
The FBI is examining whether she has links to Chinese intelligence agencies or political influence operations, U.S
government sources said.Prosecutors previously said Zhang's thumb drive contained malware
But Assistant U.S
Attorney Rolando Garcia told the court a second analysis found no such software and the first could have been a "false positive."Zhang, a
Shanghai-based financial investor and consultant, was arrested on March 30 after giving conflicting reasons for being at the club during one
of Trump's weekend visits
Trump was not on the premises at the time.Zhang's lawyers said she paid $20,000 to attend a charity gala at Mar-a-Lago advertised on Chinese
social media
Garcia said an analysis of Zhang's social media communications found she was told on March 26 the event was cancelled.Zhang's public
defender, Kristy Militello, blamed the incident on a series of "genuine misunderstandings.""The sad fact of this case is that if a Mandarin
interpreter was provided at that first checkpoint, we very well might not be here today," Militello said of Zhang's initial entry into the
resort.(Except for the headline, this story has not been edited by TheIndianSubcontinent staff and is published from a syndicated feed.)Get
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