'Get Donald Ttump in trouble!' Trump spells his own name wrong in early morning rant

Photos of Mar-a-Lago storage revealed in Florida federal court filings on June 24, 2024. (Courtesy of the Justice department.)

The presumptive Republican presidential nominee spent the early hours of Wednesday morning spreading a conspiracy theory about the clutter of secret documents FBI agents found in his Florida social club.

He also spelled his own name wrong.

Former President Donald Trump took to Truth Social to share a railing rant attributed to Newsmax pundit Greg Kelly about shocking photographs of classified documents storage taken in Mar-a-Lago, which special counsel Jack Smith revealed Tuesday.

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“How dare the FBI," the statement reads. "THIS IS CRIMINAL BEHAVIOR.”

The comment goes on to accuse the federal prosecutors of lying to Judge Aileen Cannon, who is overseeing Trump's Espionage Act violations case in Florida, and FBI agents of sneaking "scandalous looking material" into Mar-a-Lago to photograph.

"This is out and out corruption," reads the comment. "It’s the worst thing the FBI can do."

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The posited object of this vast conspiracy from the "corrupt organization" includes a problematic typo — a T that should likely be an R.

"They BROUGHT IN scandalous looking material TO TRY TO GET DONALD TTUMP IN TROUBLE," the comment reads. "FALSELY."

Trump delivered this message to his followers two days after he was ridiculed by Smith in a new court filing opposing a dismissal motion he called "profoundly flawed," court records show.

Smith issued Monday a withering response to Trump's motion to dismiss his federal classified documents case on the grounds that prosecutors' admitted misclassification mistake constituted evidence tampering.

The prosecutor argued Trump's storage of classified documents was too messy for FBI agents to maintain the pristine order the former president claims is crucial to his defense.

"Against this backdrop of the haphazard manner in which Trump chose to maintain his boxes, he now claims that the precise order of the items within the boxes when they left the White House was critical to his defense," Smith wrote.

"The FBI agents who conducted the search did so professionally, thoroughly, and carefully under challenging circumstances, particularly given the cluttered state of the boxes and the substantial volume of highly classified documents Trump had retained."