Divided US embraces Trump mug-shot merchandise
T-shirts with an image depicting the mugshots of former President Donald Trump and Rudy Giuliani are pictured at the Y-Que printing store in Los Angeles, California, U.S., August 25, 2023. REUTERS/Mario Anzuon
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Former
U.S. President Donald Trump's historic mug shot, posted by a Georgia courthouse
on Thursday evening, is being turned into T-shirts, shot glasses, mugs, posters
and even bobblehead dolls by friends and foes alike.
The
shot of Trump with a red tie, glistening hair, and an icy scowl was taken as
the Republican presidential front-runner was arrested on more than a dozen
felony charges, part of a criminal case stemming from his attempts to overturn
the 2020 election.
Supporters
and campaign managers have embraced the image of his arrest, as they rally
around Trump's claims that the charges against him are politically motivated.
To
critics, the photo is a symbol that his long list of legal woes has finally
caught up to him.
Trump's
Save America fundraising committee is selling "NEVER SURRENDER!" mug
shot t-shirts (Ksh.4,855), beverage holders (Ksh.2,142 for two) and coffee mugs
(Ksh.3,570).
His
son Don Jr. is marketing "FREE TRUMP" mug shot t-shirts (Ksh.4,282) and
posters (Ksh.2,854).
On
the other side of the political divide, the Lincoln Project, a prominent
anti-Trump group founded by Republicans, is selling shot glasses (Ksh.7,854 for
six) with the mug shot and "FAFO," an acronym for "Fuck Around
and Find Out," a rallying cry among Trump critics.
Etsy,
the crafts website, has dozens of mocking products, including a Taylor Swift
concert t-shirt parody ($26.00).
In
Los Angeles, a t-shirt store unaffiliated with any campaign had already started
selling tops emblazoned with the image on Friday afternoon.
"I
think it's very classic consumerism for this country," said shopper CJ
Butler from Atlanta, Georgia. "Hey, it's Trump. He sells everything so why
not have a T-shirt?"
The
image could be a huge fundraiser for the Republican candidate, some political
strategists predict.
"His
superfans are going to see this and it will be a fist-pumping exercise for them
to send in that $25 (Ksh.3,570) and get that shirt or that mug," said David Kochel, a
veteran Republican presidential campaign operative in Iowa.
"It's
kind of sad at the end of the day that the campaign is going to celebrate his
indictment over 13 criminal charges - but that's where our politics is."
Trump
has for months sought to leverage the criminal probes against him to rally
support from his base, starting with his first indictment in New York.
His
fundraising groups, including his past and current presidential campaigns, have
reported investing more than $98 million (Ksh.13.9 billion) in merchandise operations since 2015,
buying items like bumper stickers, hoodies and coffee mugs to sell.
Speaking
to Reuters after the Republican debate on Wednesday, co-campaign manager Chris
LaCivita said his team had been focused on turning the four indictments into a
positive, "making sure that we were making lemonade at every opportunity,
which I think we did."
Veterans
of other political operations say campaigns can make a 50% profit or more on
their merchandise sales and LaCivita on Thursday warned off those trying to
make money from the image without the campaign's permission.
What
legal rights, if any, Trump's campaign may have over the mug shot's
reproduction are unclear, however. The photo was distributed by the Fulton
County court to media outlets, including Reuters.
Mug
shots taken by US federal courts are generally in the public domain, although
Georgia's state policy may be different.
Many
U.S. states have "right of publicity" laws that prevent the use of a
person's image in commerce without their permission.
Federal
trademark law also bars false advertising and endorsements, and Trump would
also likely be able to sue under other state laws.
But
political parody goods may receive some protection from intellectual-property
claims under the U.S. Constitution, and attorneys say that whether Trump would
actually sue is more of a strategic question than a legal one.
"In
all likelihood, given how polarizing Trump has been, and everything that is
already in the marketplace around his likeness, it would not likely be a legal
priority," trademark attorney Josh Gerben said.
Trump's
pose, glaring into the camera with his face tilted down, echoes his trademark
pose in "The Apprentice," the reality television show he starred in
for several years.
The
former president told Fox News Digital in an interview Thursday night that he
only did the mug shot because Georgia officials insisted. "It is not a
comfortable feeling — especially when you've done nothing wrong," he said.
Rick
Wilson, a co-founder of the Lincoln Project flogging mug shot wares online,
dared Trump's campaign to sue him in a Friday post on X.
"Trump's
people are certainly viewing it as a powerful image, and his opponents are also
viewing it as a powerful image," he said.


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