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originally posted by: ByeByeAmericanPie
a reply to: SchrodingersRat
Yes mental health problem seems to be what they mean…
originally posted by: network dude
Wow, a mentally unstable guy with a gun who's job is to be right there with the VP and the POTUS. What could possibly go wrong.
A source familiar with the incident told NBC News that Harris was headed to work at the White House in her motorcade when the vehicle she was riding in clipped a high curb with its back wheel and was disabled.
The source said that a stopped motorcade is considered a situation of concern, “a big no-no for us,” and that Harris was quickly moved to the replacement vehicle. Her previous vehicle had been traveling at a high rate of speed, estimated at up to 50 mph, on city streets, the source said.
When the motorcade arrived at the White House, the medical office checked Harris out to make sure she was OK, the source added.
Guglielmi added that because it was a “medical matter,” the department would not “disclose any further details.”
There had also apparently been longstanding concerns about the agent in question prior to Monday’s incident, per the report.
originally posted by: ByeByeAmericanPie
a reply to: SchrodingersRat
Yes mental health problem seems to be what they mean…
originally posted by: grey580
a reply to: SchrodingersRat
If there were concerns. Why wasn't he removed from his position?
Sources confirmed Herczeg’s identity and her role in the earlier lawsuit to The Post on Thursday.
According to RealClearPolitics, Herczeg arrived at Joint Base Andrews Monday morning and began deleting apps off of a male agent’s personal cell phone before becoming more irate.
The outlet reported that Herczeg began mumbling to herself, hiding behind curtains and throwing menstrual pads and other items at another agent, telling her colleagues they were “going to burn in hell and needed to listen to God.”
When the special agent in charge relieved her of the assignment, Herczeg shoved, tackled and punched him, according to RCP, quoting a source who said she “snapped entirely.”
In her 2016 lawsuit, Herczeg charged she was retaliated against for reporting sexual harassment and other wrongdoing by Dallas cops.
After Herczeg was allegedly assaulted by a male superior officer in May 2015, she claimed, “intimidation tactics were used as investigative tools to persuade Herczeg from seeking criminal relief against the officer who assaulted her,” according to the Morning News.
The lawsuit also alleged that Herczeg was not allowed to return to a special crime reduction team after reporting the alleged assault and was also refused overtime patrol shifts, causing “stress and mental anguish from loss in payment compensation.”
Herczeg further charged that DPD “tolerates unprofessional behavior such as fraternization and unprofessional male and female working relationships based on an atmosphere which finds the male officer in charge, regardless of rank or ability.”
A Texas court dismissed Herczeg’s suit and a court of appeals denied both her appeal in 2021 and a request for a rehearing the following year.
Herczeg did not respond Thursday to an inquiry from The Post
The Morning News reported that Herczeg was an Air Force veteran who joined the Dallas PD in September 2008.