Miami residents sue over land for Trump presidential library
Miami residents, represented by the Constitutional Accountability Center, have filed a lawsuit against Donald Trump and Florida Governor Ron DeSantis. The suit challenges the legality of gifting nearly three acres of prime waterfront land, formerly owned by Miami Dade College, for Trump's proposed presidential library.

Briefing Summary
AI-generatedMiami residents, represented by the Constitutional Accountability Center, have filed a lawsuit against Donald Trump and Florida Governor Ron DeSantis. The suit challenges the legality of gifting nearly three acres of prime waterfront land, formerly owned by Miami Dade College, for Trump's proposed presidential library. Plaintiffs argue this land transfer violates the U.S. Constitution's domestic emoluments clause, which prohibits a sitting president from profiting from their office. They contend the land, valued at hundreds of millions, will be used for a hotel benefiting Trump, rather than serving the college and downtown Miami community. This is the second lawsuit concerning the land transfer, with previous challenges focusing on the initial handling of the land by MDC trustees.
Article analysis
Model · rule-basedKey claims
5 extractedThe lawsuit cites the domestic emoluments clause of the US constitution.
Miami residents filed a lawsuit against Donald Trump and Florida over land for his presidential library.
The land on which it will sit is worth hundreds of millions of dollars.
The land will house a Trump hotel that brings riches to the President.
A giant golden statue of the president will stand before a 50-story tower block.