Donald Trump Jr.: The unapologetic son who courts controversy

Donald Trump Jr.: The unapologetic son who courts controversy

Donald Trump Jr. has never shied away from controversy.

When photographs surfaced of him in 2012 holding up the severed tail of an elephant alongside his brother Eric and a dead cheetah â€" the animals their kill from an African safari â€" he shot back at outraged critics.

“I’m a hunter,” he said. “For that I make no apologies.”

During his father’s presidential campaign, he compared Syrian refugees to Skittles candy and made allusions to gas chambers when complaining about the media. He infuriated many Londoners after he seemed to blame the mayor for the March terrorist attack on Westminster Bridge.

Now Trump Jr., the president’s 39-year-old son, has landed himself in the middle the investigation of Russian interference in last year’s presidential campaign.

To his critics, his willingness to meet with a Russian fixer to get dirt on Hillary Clinton could be characterized as “criminally stupid,” as the New York Post put it in an editorial on Wednesday.

Trump Jr.’s defenders say that his public release of emails about the meeting was perfectly in keeping with his personality â€" direct, transparent and brave.

“He is not afraid,’’ said Charlie Kirk, a conservative activist from Illinois who worked with Trump Jr. during the presidential campaign. The media, he said, “had the emails and were releasing them piece by piece. Strategically, it made sense to get it out all at once instead of undergoing a death by a thousand cuts.”

Donald Jr. is the first-born of Trump’s three children by Ivana Trump. By his own account, he was not always the adoring son.

He was 12 years old when his father dumped his mother for Marla Maples. The bitter divorce soured his relationship with his father for years.

“You don’t love us! You don’t even love yourself. You just love your money!” he yelled at his father after the divorce, according to a 1990 article in Vanity Fair magazine.

He didn't speak to his father for a year and would hang up the phone when he called, he said in other interviews.

Soon afterward, Trump Jr. and the other children were sent off to boarding school. Donald then attended the University of Pennsylvania’s Wharton College, his father’s alma mater, and earned a reputation as a party boy.

A former classmate, Scott Melker, wrote in a Facebook message last year of an incident during their freshman year in which the elder Trump came to pick him up for a baseball game. Trump Jr. was sloppily dressed in sports jersey. His father slapped him in the face and said, “Put on a suit and meet me downstairs,” Melker wrote. (The Trumps later denied it.)

The classmate also wrote that Trump Jr. was frequently drunk.

“Every memory I have of him is of him stumbling around campus falling over or passing out in public, with his arm in a sling from injuring himself while drinking. He absolutely despised his father, and hated the attention that his last name afforded him,” he wrote.

Melker declined to comment Wednesday.

After college, Trump Jr. went to live in Aspen, Colo., where he hunted and fished â€" hobbies he learne d from his Czech grandfather â€" and lived out of the back of a truck, occasionally working as a bartender. He was arrested in 2001 for public drunkenness during a Mardi Gras celebration in New Orleans.

“I used to drink a lot and party pretty hard, and it wasn’t something that I was particularly good at,” Trump Jr. said in a 2004 interview with New York magazine.

He decided to quit drinking entirely, realizing, he told the magazine, “I have too much of an opportunity to make something of myself, be successful in my own right. Why blow it?”

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