Statue of Liberty climber unrepentant says she went as 'high as she could,' Trump calls her clown

An unrepentant protester who climbed the base of the Statue of Liberty on a busy Fourth of July in what prosecutors called a "dangerous stunt" pleaded not guilty on Thursday to misdemeanor trespassing and disorderly conduct.

Activists packed into a Manhattan courtroom cheered when a federal magistrate judge released Therese Okoumou without bail after she had spent the night behind bars. Okoumou responded by raising her fist and blowing kisses to her supporters.

Outside court, the naturalized U.S. citizen from Congo said she climbed the landmark as a spur-of-the-moment protest over the Trump administration's zero-tolerance immigration policies that resulted in the separation of immigrant children from parents accused of crossing the U.S.-Mexico border illegally.

"When they go low, we go high, and I went as high as I could," Okoumou said, paraphrasing former first lady Michelle Obama. "No children belong in a cage."

Okoumou, who goes by her middle name, Patricia, sported a T-shirt reading "White Supremacy is Terrorism," which she had worn inside-out in court.

President Donald Trump, during a campaign rally in Montana, called her a "clown."

"You saw that clown yesterday on the Statue of Liberty. You see that guys that went up there. I wouldn't have done it," the Republican president said Thursday night, praising the bravery of police officers who ascended the statue's base and persuaded her to climb down.

He added: "I would have said, 'Let's gets some nets, and let's wait till she comes down. Just get some nets.'"

Okoumou, of Staten Island, "staged a dangerous stunt that alarmed the public and endangered her own life and the lives of the (New York Police Department) officers who responded to the scene," U.S. Attorney Geoffrey S. Berman said in a statement.

Court papers also charged Okoumou with resisting arrest by refusing to leave her perch by the bottom of the statue's robes, about 100 feet (30 meters) aboveground. Police were forced to scale the statue to pull her down.

If convicted, Okoumou, 44, would face up to six months behind bars on each count.

The National Park Service decided to evacuate more than 4,000 visitors from Liberty Island on Wednesday out of an abundance of caution, spokesman Jerry Willis said. Average attendance for the Fourth of July is 20,000 to 25,000 people, he added.

The park service also was taking a closer look at the statue to see if there was any damage, though that's unlikely, Willis said. The copper-pounded skin is only the thickness of two pennies but "it's strong," he said.

"That statue has been out in the middle of New York Harbor for 130 years - with hurricanes and lightning and everything that nature has thrown at her," he said. "She's survived quite well."

The park service was reviewing security videotape to try to determine how the woman was able to make the climb, Willis said.

Asked about it herself, Okoumou smiled and responded: "I did a pull-up."

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Associated Press writer Kiley Armstrong contributed to this report.