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This is the incident where two female Secret Service agents engaged in a brawl outside Barack Obama’s residence in Washington DC, with one heard over the radio threatening to “whoop this girl’s a**.”
Shocking footage shows the uniformed officers swinging punches and shoving each other in the dead of night, just two miles from the White House.
In the jaw-dropping clip, one agent can be seen grabbing her radio and calling for help.
She yelled: “I need a supervisor out here… immediately before I whoop this girl’s a**.”
The bust-up reportedly erupted around 2.30am local time on May 21 outside the ex-president’s upscale Kalorama residence.
The video was shared on X by RealClearPolitics reporter Susan Crabtree on Tuesday.
It was reported: “#BREAKING AND EXCLUSIVE: @RCPolitics has secured footage of the altercation between two female Secret Service Uniformed Division Officers outside former President Obama’s home last week, after one officer requested a supervisor’s presence before ‘I whoop this girl’s a**.’”
The Secret Service confirmed the fight to The New York Post, saying the agents involved have been suspended.
A representative stated: “The U.S. Secret Service acknowledges an on-duty confrontation that took place between two Uniformed Division officers at roughly 2:30 a.m. on May 21.”
“The individuals involved were suspended from duty and this matter is the subject of an internal investigation.
“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.”
The agency has yet to confirm whether the brawling agents outside Obama’s home are still on the job.
The brawl is just the latest embarrassment for the Secret Service — which has spent the past year lurching from one scandal to another.
Last April, Michelle Herczeg – assigned to then-Vice President Kamala Harris – allegedly attacked a supervisor after being pulled from duty for throwing sanitary pads and screaming at colleagues, according to reports.
DRINKING
In September, the agency was rocked by bombshell claims that one of its agents sexually assaulted a Kamala Harris staffer during a night out in Wisconsin.
The alleged assault reportedly took place in a hotel room after the agent and several staffers had been out drinking.
Witnesses said the agent was so drunk they were thrown out and passed out in the hallway, where colleagues snapped photos of them.
The agent was placed on administrative leave and the Office of Professional Responsibility launched a misconduct probe.
At the time, a Harris campaign spokesperson said: “The Office of the Vice President takes the safety of staff seriously. We have zero tolerance for sexual misconduct.”
That scandal erupted after another stunning breach — when an armed stranger managed to get within inches of Obama in Los Angeles.
The man, who turned out to be a private security guard working a nearby event, reportedly approached Obama’s SUV in an alleyway and was stunned to find the former president sitting in the backseat — with no agents visibly nearby.
The guard, who quickly backed away, later said: “I think they were obviously embarrassed by the situation.”
SECRET SERVICE UNDER FIRE
THE Secret Service has faced a number of challenges this year that have resulted in its director stepping down and calls for a “paradigm shift
- July 13: Donald Trump is shot at a rally in Butler, Pennsylvania. The Secret Service is slammed for failing to take out gunman Thomas Crooks.
- July 15: Secret Service Director Kimberly Cheatle does her first network interview since the shooting, telling ABC News it was “unacceptable,” but refuses to resign, blaming local police for refusing to secure the building from where the gunman launched his attack.
- July 20: A week on, Pennsylvania Congressman Brendan Boyle calls on Cheatle to resign, making himself the first congressional Democrat to do so. That same day, House Speaker Mike Johnson and Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell both called on Cheatle to step aside.
- July 22: Cheatle testifies before Congress and acknowledges “significant operational failure” in Butler, but refuses to resign.
- July 23: Director Cheatle resigns. Her deputy, Ronald Rowe, takes over as acting director.
- July 30: Rowe tells Congress the attempted assassination on Trump was a “failure on multiple levels.”
- August: It is later revealed the White House asked for extra funding for the Secret Service in the run-up to November’s election, warning of “insufficient resources.”
- September 15: A gunman is arrested after being spotted with a rifle on Trump’s West Palm Beach golf course. Secret Service agents say it was a credible plot on the former president’s life.
- September 16: Ronald Rowe makes astonishing admission that the Secret Service needs a total overhaul in the wake of both attempts on former President Trump’s life, and calls for a “paradigm shift.”
- September 20: Rowe takes “full responsibility” for events at Butler, and repeats calls for “paradigm shift” in the Secret Service.