A man charged with attempting to assassinate US President Donald Trump has been convicted by a federal jury on all counts.
Ryan Routh, 59, of Hawaii, was arrested in September of last year and accused of plotting to shoot Mr Trump at his Florida golf course.
A jury found that Routh intended to kill Mr Trump, then a former US President and Republican presidential candidate, when he pointed a rifle through a fence while Mr Trump was golfing at the Trump International Golf Club in West Palm Beach.
He faces a maximum sentence of life in prison.
Routh fled without firing a shot after a US Secret Service agent patrolling the course ahead of Mr Trump spotted Routh and the rifle and opened fire, according to witness testimony in the case.
"This plot was carefully crafted and deadly serious," prosecutor John Shipley said at the start of the trial, adding that without the intervention of the Secret Service agent, "Donald Trump would not be alive."

The trial in federal court in Fort Pierce, Florida, unfolded in the aftermath of the assassination of conservative activist Charlie Kirk, which again thrust the growth of political violence in the US to the centre of the national conversation.
Mr Trump was targeted in two assassination attempts, including one that wounded him in the ear, during his 2024 presidential campaign that returned him to the White House.
Democrats have also been recent targets of political violence. In April, an arsonist broke into Pennsylvania Governor Josh Shapiro's residence and set it on fire while the family was inside.
In June, a gunman posing as a police officer in Minnesota murdered state lawmaker Melissa Hortman and her husband and shot state Senator John Hoffman and his wife.
Routh defended himself at trial
Routh, who had pleaded not guilty to all charges, opted to fire his lawyers and defend himself at trial.
His defence was based on what he described as his gentle and non-violent nature, but his meandering opening statement was cut off by a federal judge and he offered little pushback as a parade of law enforcement witnesses detailed the evidence in the case.
Routh, who most recently lived in Hawaii, had an erratic life as a roofing contractor and involved himself in pro-democracy movements in Taiwan and Ukraine, where he travelled twice following Russia's invasion.
His daughter Sara said that he stayed initially in Ukraine for 10 months, sleeping in a tent in Kyiv and helping recruit volunteers and source supplies.
Routh’s trips to Ukraine were part of a pattern of grand gestures to aid people he considered vulnerable or defenceless, plans that often ran into practical stumbling blocks.
"They were about to fight a war. They had nothing to fight with," Ms Routh said. "He felt like he could make a difference."

Prosecutors alleged that Routh arrived in South Florida about a month before the 15 September 2024 incident, staying at a truck stop and tracking Mr Trump’s movements and schedule.
Routh allegedly carried six cell phones and used fake names to conceal his identity.
He lay in wait for nearly ten hours on the day of the incident, concealing himself in thick bushes overlooking the sixth hole green, prosecutors alleged.
Investigators at the scene found an SKS-style rifle, two bags containing metal plates like those used in body armour, and a small video camera pointed toward the course.
Mr Trump was on the fifth hole a few hundred yards away when Routh was discovered. Routh was arrested later that afternoon after being stopped by police along a Florida highway.