AST Digital Magazine July 2017 Digital-July | Page 8

Volume 14 After the Beverly Hills meeting, Mr. Shaw re- ceived a gift basket containing Mr. Trump’s “Art of the Deal,” chocolates, and Trump-branded ties and cuff links, according to an account in The Wall Street Journal. At one point, Mr. Shaw flew on Mr. Trump’s pri- vate plane. At another, while staying at the Trump International Hotel in Las Vegas, he cut a cam- paign commercial. July 2017 Edition ing him he was no longer director of the Federal Bureau of Investigation. To find some of the families, Mr. Trump’s team had help from the Remembrance Project, a non- profit founded in 2009 to draw attention to the victims of crimes committed by unauthorized im- migrants. It caught the Trump wave early, bringing several families to the Beverly Hills meeting and other campaign events and hosting a fund-raiser for Mr. Trump in Houston last fall. As the campaign offered a national audience to more of the parents, however, many of the Remembrance Project’s members abandoned the group, chafing at what several said were its founder’s attempts to dictate what they said and even what they wore. Mr. Trump, they said, had allowed them their own voice. White House Adviser Stephen Miller The other families received regular care from the campaign, too. A Trump adviser, Stephen Miller, would call or text at least once a month, inviting them to speak at rallies or just checking in. Some spoke regularly to Corey Lewandowski, Mr. Trump’s campaign manager at the time, or to Hope Hicks, the campaign’s spokeswoman. Mr. Miller, an advocate of restricting immigration and now a senior White House adviser, helped draft Mr. Trump’s Jan. 25 executive order direct- ing the government to intensify immigration en- forcement. A few of the parents also regularly texted with Keith Schiller, Mr. Trump’s longtime bodyguard and current Oval Office aide. It was Mr. Schiller whom the president sent to hand-deliver a letter to James B. Comey inform- Before going onstage at some events, Mr. Trump would shoo aides away for a private moment with the families. “To me, I find it much more personal when the president comes up to you and says, ‘Steve, how are you doing?’” Mr. Ronnebeck said. “He knows my name. He doesn’t just, you know, speak the whole time. He listens.” For the Trump campaign, the private cultivation paid off. In public, the families became some of the campaign’s most compelling witnesses. They could be picked out by what they carried, the talismans of absence: the T-shirts printed with photographs of the smiling dead. The com- memorative buttons. The ashes held close in a locket. At one rally in Phoenix in August, a hush muted the crowd when Mr. Ronnebeck and other fam- 8