Trump, who is embroiled in row over his criticism of the family of a slain soldier, said that a man approached him before his event in Ashburn, Va., and handed him his medal, which is awarded to soldiers wounded in combat. He told the crowd at his rally that he has "always wanted to get the Purple Heart."
"I said to him, 'Is that, like, the real one or is that a copy?'" Trump recounted. "And he said, 'That's my real Purple Heart. I have such confidence in you.' And I said, 'Man! That's like, that's like big stuff.'"
The veteran, Lt. Col. Louis Dorfman, declined Trump's invitation to speak at today's town hall.
Yesterday, The Veterans of Foreign Wars, a non-profile service organization with 1.7 million members, released a statement calling Trump out of bounds for tangling with Khizr and Ghazala Khan, a Muslim family whose son, Capt. Humayun Khan, was killed in Iraq in 2004.
The fallen soldier was posthumously awarded the Purple Heart and the Bronze Star.
In response, Trump said he was "viciously attacked" by Khizr Khan and implied that Ghazala Khan, the soldier's mother, stood silently alongside her husband during the speech because, as a Muslim, she was restricted her from speaking.
Trump, who has made helping veterans a centerpiece of his campaign, also drew criticism from some former servicemen recently when he was slow to produce millions of dollars he raised for veterans groups.
And The New York Times reported yesterday that Trump received multiple student deferments and a medical deferment for a bone spur during the Vietnam War.
