A group of Miami residents sued President Donald Trump and the state of Florida over the transfer of nearly 3 acres of waterfront land for his proposed presidential library.
The lawsuit, filed in the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of Florida, said land that once belonged to Miami Dade College was illegally transferred to Trump by Gov. Ron DeSantis. It cited the Constitution’s domestic emoluments clause, which bars a sitting president from receiving personal gain, profit, or advantage from the office.
The case was brought by the Washington, D.C.-based Constitutional Accountability Center on behalf of plaintiffs including a Miami Dade College student, a Miami nonprofit, and residents. The plaintiffs said the land “is no longer available to serve MDC’s student community and downtown Miami.”
Instead, the filing said, “the land will house a Trump hotel that brings riches to the President.”
Plans for the project were unveiled in March. It is to be built next to Miami’s Freedom Tower, a historic landmark and community art museum. The proposal includes a 50-story tower and the $400 million Boeing jet gifted to Trump by Qatar, which is not yet in service, displayed in the lobby.
At the time, Trump said the building was “most likely going to be a hotel.”
The lawsuit said the land is worth hundreds of millions of dollars.
“Rather than prevent President Trump from using the gifted land for personal gain, Florida … required that the conveyed land include only ‘components of a Presidential library, museum, and/or center’, leaving the door open for the President to develop the property in any way he sees fit,” the Constitutional Accountability Center said in a statement.