
The President of the United States of America, Donald Trump, once demanded that a comedian be punished after an incident on the golf course.
Trump, 79, is well known as a keen golfer and also owns several courses across the country.
The 45th and 47th US President has previously shared the golf course with big names such as Tiger Woods, Oscar De La Hoya and Samuel L. Jackson.
Hollywood star Jackson, 76, once accused Trump of cheating when they played together and ended up receiving a whopping bill following his accusation.
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Back in 2016, Trump visited his Turnberry Golf Resort in Ayr, Scotland and was on the end of a prank.
Simon Brodkin, a comedian also known as Lee Nelson, decided to interrupt the re-opening of the resort by handing out Nazi-themed golf balls bearing swastikas on them.
According to Brodkin, Trump was far from happy with the prank and demanded that he be punished, before Police Scotland intervened and convinced him not to press charges.
He told The Scottish Sun: "I do have a criminal record, but also a lot to thank the Scottish police for - they were brilliant. Trump wanted to really throw the book at me, and the Scottish police convinced him not to press charges.
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"Who wants to get waterboarded by the CIA when you can have an Irn Bru in the back of a police van?"
Brodkin added: "I was in there for ages with the coppers, and it felt more like I was on a stag do than anything else. They drove me to the airport and put me on a plane back to London and told Trump and his team I was deported"
Last week, it was reported that one of Trump's golf club's former worker was 'mistakenly deported to Mexico' by the United States Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE).
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As reported by The Independent, Alejandro Juarez, 39, who is a former employee of one of Trump's golf clubs, had to walk back across the US/Mexico border after being put on the wrong plane and mistakenly deported by the ICE.
It has been suggested that the father of two pleaded with officials after not being given the chance to contest his deportation in front of an immigration judge – a legal entitlement for such detainees.
According to documents obtained by The NYT, Juarez was supposed to be flown to a detention center in Arizona, but was sent to Texas.
Juarez and his fellow detainees were then handed bags of their belongings and told to walk back into Mexico.
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Juarez's lawyer, Anibal Romero, said: "Right now I'm working with the Department of Homeland Security, and credit to them, this is the first time I've heard that they've acknowledged it's a mistake.
"They're trying to bring him back. It's very rare for them to say, we made a mistake. They normally just say, too bad he's undocumented."
Topics: Donald Trump, Golf