Trump fears being poisoned and uses individual mini ketchup bottles

Trump fears being poisoned and uses individual mini ketchup bottles

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Former President Donald Trump is so afraid of being poisoned that he prefers to serve individual Heinz ketchup bottles alongside his meals, ex-aide Cassidy Hutchinson has revealed. Hutchinson appeared on Jimmy Kimmel Live on Wednesday and was asked by the comedian how often Trump threw ketchup at the wall.

The former aide to Chief of Staff Mark Meadows revealed in her Jan. 6 testimony before a House committee last year that the president threw his lunch against the wall after Attorney General Bill Barr told the Associated Press that was no evidence of widespread voting. fraud in the 2020 election, as Trump had alleged. Hutchinson (pictured), who has released the memoir Enough, volunteered to Kimmel before answering his question that Trump has a “very powerful fear of being poisoned.”

“He uses and prefers the small Heinz glass ketchup bottles because he likes to hear his servant, or the person serving him his meal, he likes to hear the ‘pop,'” she said.

Kimmel joked that he thought Trump preferred small bottles “because his hands were so small” and wondered if the ex-president’s fear of being poisoned stemmed from “all the ex-wives.” ‘Or was it Russia? I don’t know,” Hutchinson joked back.

Hutchinson then revealed that Trump threw away his food quite often. ‘Sometimes it happened once or twice a week, sometimes more often, it was quiet for a week, but then there was bad news. But it wasn’t just launching the food, plates and china on the wall, it was sometimes just turning the table,” Hutchinson said.

Hutchinson was one of the star witnesses at last year’s House committee hearings, testifying before the panel in June. She told lawmakers she remembered “noise” shortly after Barr’s interview with the AP came out and recalled her boss, Meadows, being summoned to Trump’s office.

When Meadows returned, she walked to the White House dining room. “And I noticed that the door was open and the servant was in the dining room changing the tablecloth on the dining room table,” she said. “He gestured for me to come in and then pointed to the front of the room, near the mantel and the TV.”

“Where I first noticed ketchup dripping down the wall,” she continued. “And there’s a broken china plate on the floor. The clerk had expressed that the president was extremely angry about the AP interview with the attorney general and had thrown his lunch against the wall,” she said, explaining that she then helped clean up.

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