Judge sides with Democrat historian to temporarily block Trump presidential library deal in Florida
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A Florida judge has recently halted the planned handover of a prime location intended for the future presidential library of former President Donald Trump. This decision comes after a lawsuit was initiated by a local historian and activist, known for a past congressional bid as a Democrat.

On Tuesday, Circuit Judge Mavel Ruiz placed a temporary injunction to prevent the transfer of the coveted downtown Miami site to the Trump Presidential Library Foundation. She determined that the Miami Dade College board did not provide adequate public notice before voting on the property’s transfer.

Judge Ruiz emphasized that her ruling was guided by procedural concerns rather than political ones.

“This decision was not made lightly,” Ruiz remarked while delivering her ruling, noting the college’s failure to adequately inform the public prior to last month’s vote.

Composite of Donald Trump and downtown Miami lot chosen for Trump Presidential Library site

Pictured: Former President Donald Trump next to the 2.63-acre plot in downtown Miami designated for his presidential library. (AP Photo/Marta Lavandier; Jim WATSON / AFP)

“This is not a case, at least for this court, rooted in politics,” she added, per The Associated Press. Ruiz was last re-elected in 2020 and is not nominated the same way federal judges are. 

Republican Gov. Ron DeSantis and the Florida Cabinet voted last month to gift the Trump Presidential Library the 2.63-acre parcel on Biscayne Boulevard. 

The Miami site is currently used as an employee parking lot for Miami Dade College’s Wolfson Campus and is adjacent to the historic Freedom Tower, which served as a resource center for hundreds of thousands of Cubans who fled communism in the 1960s and 1970s and sought asylum in the United States.

Marvin Dunn, a retired Florida International University professor known for chronicling Black history in South Florida, is trying to stop the transfer and filed the lawsuit arguing it would violate Florida law and the public trust by using public educational property for a private, political purpose.

Marvin Dunn speaking into a microphone while seated at an event.

Marvin Dunn, a Miami historian and activist who filed a lawsuit to block the transfer of the site to Trump’s foundation, speaks during an event in Florida. (Jason Koerner/Getty Images)

“Miami Dade College is a public educational institution, not a political enterprise, and must not become the custodian of any former president’s personal monument,” the lawsuit reads. “The proposed conveyance would divert land held in trust for educational purposes to serve private and partisan interests.”

Dunn, a former naval officer, filed to run for a Florida House seat in 2018 but withdrew before the Democratic primary. He initially said he was inspired to run because Trump was slow to address the deaths of four American soldiers killed in an ambush in Niger that year and that the U.S. had become an uncivilized society under Trump, per the Miami Herald.

He led a protest against the transfer of the site last month in Miami and public records list Dunn a registered Democrat in Miami-Dade County.

The lawsuit further claims the process was conducted without sufficient public notice or input, possibly violating Florida’s Sunshine Law, which requires open meetings for public boards. 

Aerial view of Miami Dade College area and Freedom Tower, site proposed for Trump library.

An aerial view shows the downtown Miami property on Biscayne Boulevard next to the Freedom Tower that has been earmarked for former President Donald Trump’s future presidential library. A Florida judge temporarily blocked the transfer of the land following a lawsuit by Miami historian Marvin Dunn. (Joe Raedle/Getty Images)

Jesus Suarez, an attorney for the college, argued that Miami Dade College did what was required under the law and questioned Dunn’s political motivations for filing the case.

“There is no requirement under Florida law that there be specificity on notice, because those trustees can come into that room and talk to each other about whatever they wish,” Suarez told The Associated Press.

The agenda for the board’s Sept. 23 meeting listed only a brief note that trustees would discuss transferring property to a state trust fund managed by DeSantis and the Florida Cabinet. It offered no explanation about which parcel was under review or the reason for the move. Unlike all other board meetings this year, the early-morning session at 8 a.m. was not streamed online.

Roughly a week later, DeSantis and other Republican officials in the Cabinet voted to move the property again — a step that ultimately placed control of the downtown Miami site in the hands of the Donald J. Trump Presidential Library Foundation, the nonprofit tied to Trump’s family.

Miami skyline view of site for Trump Presidential Library next to Freedom Tower

Aerial view shows Miami’s Freedom Tower and adjacent parking lot set aside for the Trump Presidential Library following a vote by Gov. Ron DeSantis and the Florida Cabinet. (AP Photo/Marta Lavandier)

Trump’s son Eric, who is the president and one of three trustees at the foundation, previously said that the library will be “one of the most beautiful buildings ever built” and will preserve his father’s legacy. He also said it would not look like former President Barack Obama’s presidential center, which is slowly rising in Chicago.

The Miami site is surrounded by luxury high-rise apartment buildings and has waterfront views, facing directly at the Kaseya Center, home to the NBA’s Miami Heat, as well as Dodge Island, where many of the world’s largest cruise liners dock.

The parcel was appraised at more than $66 million, according to media reports, but it could sell for at least $360 million, The New York Times reported, citing a real estate consultant.

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