WASHINGTON - Former president Donald Trump said he feared protesters would hit him with tomatoes, pineapples and other "very dangerous" fruit at his campaign rallies, declaring in a sworn deposition that "you can be killed if that happens."
Trump's comments about the potentially lethal effects of projectile produce were made public Tuesday with the release of excerpts of four and a half hours of videotaped testimony in a lawsuit filed by a group of protesters who allege that Trump's security guards assaulted them in 2015.
"I wanted to have people be ready because we were put on alert that they were going to do fruit," Trump said in the October 2021 deposition, according to a transcript of the proceedings.
He added that "tomatoes are bad" and that "some fruit is a lot worse."
"But it's very dangerous. . . . I remember that specific event because everybody was on alert. They were going to hit - they were going to hit hard," he said.
News of the exchange was first reported Tuesday by the Daily Beast.
Trump was being questioned about his remarks at a February 2016 campaign rally in Cedar Rapids, Iowa, where he encouraged members of the audience to "knock the crap" out of any protesters who might try to pelt him with tomatoes.
The incident was one of several in which Trump encouraged violence against his detractors, often framing such actions as justifiable in the name of "self-defense."