Donald Trump is set to make history as the first former US president to submit to a mug shot when he appears at an Atlanta jail to face criminal charges of trying to overturn his 2020 election defeat in Georgia.
Hours before his expected evening jail appearance, Fulton County District Attorney Fani Willis, who brought the charges, proposed in a court filing to start the trial on October 23, an accelerated timeline for a sprawling case that includes 18 defendants alongside Trump.
Trump’s lawyer quickly opposed that date.
Trump, 77, already has entered uncharted territory as the first former US president to face criminal charges although the four cases filed against him have not slowed his momentum as the front-runner in the race for the Republican nomination to run against Democratic President Joe Biden in next year’s election.
The jailhouse photograph is certain to be circulated widely by Trump’s foes and supporters alike.
“We want to put it on a T-shirt. It will go worldwide. It will be a more popular image than the Mona Lisa,” said Laura Loomer, 30, a Republican former congressional candidate who mingled with other Trump supporters outside the jail on Thursday morning.
One of the most recognisable people in the world, Trump has not had to submit to a photo in the other three cases.
But fake mug shots have circulated online since shortly after he was first indicted in Manhattan in March on charges involving hush money paid to a porn star ahead of the 2016 election.
Some of his co-defendants already have been booked.
Rudolph Giuliani, the former New York mayor, was stone-faced in his mug shot while lawyer Jenna Ellis smiled.
All 19 defendants face a Friday deadline to surrender.
Court records showed that Mark Meadows, who served as Trump’s White House chief of staff, was booked on Thursday.
“I have to start getting ready to head down to Atlanta, Georgia, where Murder and other Violent Crimes have reached levels never seen before, to get ARRESTED by a Radical Left, Lowlife District Attorney, Fani Willis,” Trump wrote on social media on Thursday afternoon.
Trump in the Georgia case faces 13 felony counts including racketeering, which is typically used to target organised crime, for pressuring state officials to reverse his election loss and setting up an illegitimate slate of electors to undermine the formal congressional certification of Biden’s victory.
Willis originally proposed a trial date of March 4 but moved it up after one of the defendants, lawyer Kenneth Chesebro, asked that his trial start by October.
Trump’s legal team has not yet proposed a date but is expected to push for a much later start.
On Thursday, his newly named lawyer Steven Sadow asked for Trump to be tried separately from Chesebro.
Trump is due to enter a plea on September 5 and has pleaded not guilty in the other three other cases.
He has denied wrongdoing and has called all the cases politically motivated.
In addition to the New York state charges brought by Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg, Trump faces two sets of federal charges brought by Special Counsel Jack Smith – one case in Washington DC involving election interference and one in Miami involving classified documents he retained after leaving office in 2021.
He faces 91 criminal counts in total.
Trump has agreed to post $US200,000 ($A311,800) bond and accepted bail conditions that would bar him from threatening witnesses or his 18 co-defendants in the Georgia case.
The Federal Aviation Administration ordered that the airspace over the jail be closed beginning about 6.45pm on Thursday (8.45am on Friday AEST), citing “VIP movement”.
About a dozen Trump supporters, some holding flags, gathered outside the jail awaiting his arrival.