logo
Barack Obama's female Secret Service agents caught having shameful catfight outside his DC mansion

Barack Obama's female Secret Service agents caught having shameful catfight outside his DC mansion

Daily Mail​28-05-2025

Shocking footage has captured the moment two female Secret Service agents fought with each other outside former president Barack Obama's $8million DC mansion.
The row unfolded on May 21 at around 2.30am as two members of the security detail grappled next to a police vehicle.
In audio before the fight shared by RealClearPolitics reporter Susan Crabtree, one of the Secret Service agents was reportedly heard calling for a supervisor as she threatened to attack her colleague.
Shocking footage: The moment two female Secret Service agents fought with each other outside former President Barack Obama's DC home
🚨🚨 #BREAKING AND EXCLUSIVE: @RCPolitics has obtained video of the fight between two women Secret Service Uniformed Division Officers outside former President Obama's residence last week after one officer called a supervisor to come before "I whoop this girl's ass."
The… https://t.co/6BQyQdEcBs pic.twitter.com/9ouSfHh4sN
— Susan Crabtree (@susancrabtree) May 27, 2025
'Can I get a supervisor down to Delta two immediately before I whoop this girl's ass,' the agent in the audio said.
In a statement to DailyMail.com, a Secret Service spokesperson said the fight happened when the agents were on duty. It has not been revealed if the Obamas were in the home at the time.
'The individuals involved were suspended from duty and this matter is the subject of an internal investigation,' the statement read.
'The Secret Service has a very strict code of conduct for all employees and any behavior that violates that code is unacceptable. Given this is a personnel matter, we are not in a position to comment further.'
It comes a year after a Secret Service agent assigned to then-Vice-President Kamala Harris was removed from duty after she got into a physical fight with her fellow agents.
The Secret Service has come under scrutiny in recent years amid allegations of unprofessionalism and security lapses.
These allegations came under the spotlight after the near-assassination of President Donald Trump at a rally in Butler, Pennsylvania last July, which led the agency's director Kimberly Cheatle to resign.
Cheatle was replaced by Sean Curran, one of the agents who surrounded Trump after he was shot in the ear on stage at the rally.
The altercation in Harris' security detail last April also brought humiliation to the agency, as reports said a female agent identified as Michelle Herczeg flew into a frenzy at her fellow agents.
According to Secret Service sources, Herczeg arrived for duty acting erratically, grabbing a fellow agent's personal phone and started deleting applications from it.
She also was mumbling to herself, hiding behind curtains and throwing items at fellow agents including menstrual pads, according to a report at the time from RealClearPolitics.
Herczeg told her fellow agents they would 'burn in hell and needed to listen to God.'
Sources at the time said the special agent in charge and a detail shift supervisor tried to calm Herczeg after she began exhibiting aggressive behavior, but she tackled the Senior Agent in Charge of security detail and began punching him.
Although Herczeg was armed, her weapon remained in the holster until the she was disarmed by her colleagues. She was handcuffed and removed from the terminal.
The Secret Service was overhauled under Trump as his own agent Curran was installed as the new chief soon after the Butler shooting.
In recent weeks, another incident involving the Secret Service went viral as footage showed a mysterious man creeping close to Trump's daughter Ivanka.
The moment came on May 3 when the First Daughter and her husband Jared Kushner were having dinner at Carbone Beach in South Beach, Florida.
Footage showed an unidentified man holding a Manila envelope, and wearing khaki shorts and a black T-shirt trying to walk alongside them.
At that point, an agent in a blue button down shirt and black jeans could be seen gently shoving the man out of the way.
When the man then put his hand on the agent, the guard responds by forcefully pushing the bystander out of the way with both hands.
The scene sent bystanders screaming in shock - prompting Ivanka to turn around to see what the commotion was.
But within seconds, the guard could be seen rushing her and Jared into an awaiting SUV.
Amid the footage going viral online, the Secret Service told DailyMail.com: 'During a protective movement on Saturday, May 4, 2025, an adult male encroached, coming too close to Secret Service personnel.
'A special agent immediately intervened, physically redirecting the individual to reestablish a safe perimeter. The public is reminded that during protective operations, maintaining a safe distance from law enforcement and protective personnel is essential.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Lawmakers seek to limit Trump's war powers after Iran strikes
Lawmakers seek to limit Trump's war powers after Iran strikes

The Independent

time3 minutes ago

  • The Independent

Lawmakers seek to limit Trump's war powers after Iran strikes

There are significant concerns in Washington after President Donald Trump launched strikes on three Iranian nuclear facilities. Lawmakers and political factions across the spectrum have expressed apprehension about the potential for a prolonged conflict, or 'forever war' with Iran, drawing parallels to the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan. Opposition to military intervention in Iran has unified diverse groups, including progressives, pro-Trump conservatives, and centrist Democrats. Top administration officials said the US was not seeking to overthrow Iran's government but aimed to counter its nuclear program. Efforts are underway by some members of Congress to limit the president's war powers, with bipartisan calls for congressional authorization for military action.

About-face from White House as Trump suggests ‘regime change' in Iran
About-face from White House as Trump suggests ‘regime change' in Iran

The Independent

time13 minutes ago

  • The Independent

About-face from White House as Trump suggests ‘regime change' in Iran

US President Donald Trump has posted on Truth Social suggesting openness to "regime change" in Iran, which contradicted earlier statements from his administration. 'It's not politically correct to use the term, 'Regime Change,' but if the current Iranian Regime is unable to MAKE IRAN GREAT AGAIN, why wouldn't there be a Regime change??? MIGA!!!' he wrote. Vice President JD Vance and Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth had stated earlier that the administration's goal was to end Iran's nuclear program, not to pursue regime change. The US joined Israel 's air campaign targeting Iran's nuclear sites on Saturday with an audacious strike using bunker-busting bombs.

‘I was one of the few people able to document it': shooting the Black Panthers
‘I was one of the few people able to document it': shooting the Black Panthers

The Guardian

time17 minutes ago

  • The Guardian

‘I was one of the few people able to document it': shooting the Black Panthers

'They understood the media and culture,' says Stephen Shames of the Black Panthers, who he photographed in the 1960s and 70s. 'Black leather jackets and berets like the French Resistance – they commanded attention and projected strength and hope with their 'hip' clothes and discipline.' This image shows Angela Davis speaking in Defermery park at a Free Huey rally. This photo is Angela Davis's portrait in the National Portrait Gallery, Washington DC. Black Panthers and Revolution is at Amar Gallery, London, until 6 July Black Panther chairman Bobby Seale speaks at the first national United Front Against Fascism conference. About 4,000 delegates, most of them white, came from all over the nation. Seale announced that control of police would be the Front's first project. The Black Panther Party was one of the most influential responses to racism and inequality in American history. The Panthers advocated armed self-defence to counter police brutality, and initiated a programme of patrolling the police with guns and law books On 28 October 1967, Oakland police officer John Frey was shot to death in an altercation with Huey P Newton during a traffic stop. In the stop, Newton and backup officer Herbert Heanes also suffered gunshot wounds. Newton was convicted of voluntary manslaughter at trial, but the conviction was later overturned Black Panthers founder Huey P Newton claimed that he had been falsely accused, leading to the 'Free Huey' campaign, which then developed alliances with numerous individuals, students and anti-war activists, 'advancing an anti-imperialist political ideology that linked the oppression of antiwar protesters to the oppression of blacks and Vietnamese'. This incident gained the party even wider recognition by the radical American left. Newton was released after three years, when his conviction was reversed on appeal Bobby Seale was taken off the street as he left his wedding ceremony on 19 August 1969. He was charged with starting the riots at the 1968 Democratic convention. Shames writes: 'James Baldwin came to visit Bobby when he was in the San Francisco county jail before being sent to Chicago for the Chicago Eight trial, where Bobby was bound and gagged by Judge Hoffman. I was honoured to be able to witness these two giants in conversation. They became lifelong friends, meeting together often' Black Panther founders Bobby Seale and Huey P Newton stand in front of their national headquarters. Seale believed that 'no kid should be running around hungry in school', a simple credo that lead FBI director J Edgar Hoover to call the breakfast programme, 'the greatest threat to efforts by authorities to neutralise the BPP and destroy what it stands for' White supporters hold Free Huey signs at a rally in front of the Alameda county courthouse where Black Panther minister of defence, Huey P Newton, was on trial for killing an Oakland policeman Davis smokes a cigarette as she relaxes in the backyard of a supporter's house during her trial. 'This is a private moment,' says Shames. 'The Panthers introduced me to Angela and she allowed me to be present during private moments like this with her family and support team. Photographs like this are what make this exhibit at the Amar Gallery so special - the behind the scenes moments that I was one of the few people to be able to document' A child at the Intercommunal Youth Institute, and the Oakland Community School. In 1970, in Oakland, David Hilliard created the idea for the first full-time liberation day school. This school, and its attendant dormitories in Oakland and Berkeley, was simply called the Children's House. This school concept, directed by Majeda Smith and a team of BPP members became the way in which sons and daughters of BPP members were educated Black Panthers carry George Jackson's coffin into St Augustine's church. In 1961, Jackson was convicted of armed robbery (as a teenager stealing $70 at gunpoint) and sentenced to one year to life in prison. During his first years at San Quentin state prison, Jackson became involved in revolutionary activity, as well as assaults on guards and fellow inmates. This behaviour was used to justify his continued incarceration on an indeterminate sentence. Jackson was killed on 21 August 1971 while in the maximum security prison Martin Luther King Jr speaks at the University of California at Berkeley. The speech about the Vietnam war drew thousands of students George Murray, minister of education for the Black Panther Party, speaks at a Free Huey rally in Defermery Park, which the Panthers re-named Bobby Hutton Park, in honour of their slain 17-year-old comrade. Murray was a leader of the San Francisco State student strike, which was put down by governor Ronald Reagan. Far left is Kathleen Cleaver, communications secretary and the first female member of the party's decision-making Central Committee

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store