Emily Jashinsky
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Appearances Over Time
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A man arrested by the Secret Service early Tuesday morning after driving a van into a security barrier outside the White House.
Authorities saying the vehicle crashed into a temporary gate around 6.30 a.m., with officers immediately taking the driver into custody.
Little is known about the suspect so far, though NBC4 Washington capturing video of officers detaining the man at the scene.
The suspect appearing to be a white male, bald, with facial hair, wearing brown cargo pants, black sneakers, and a t-shirt appearing to read, "'Trump is my president' and "'Jesus is my savior.'"
Officers seen administering what appeared to be a field sobriety test.
The incident prompting road closures in the area as the bomb squad investigated the vehicle, later determining it posed no threat, according to the Associated Press.
The Secret Service says criminal charges are pending.
The incident coming just weeks after a deadly security breach at President Trump's Mar-a-Lago estate in Florida, where a 21-year-old North Carolina man, armed with a shotgun and gas canister, was shot and killed by law enforcement after entering the property's perimeter.
Coming up, Attorney General Pam Bondi reportedly the latest Trump official to move on to a military base as security threats against Trump administration officials intensify.
A ritzy Upper East Side private school thrown into chaos after posters exposing an alleged staff affair appear outside during morning drop-off.
Attorney General Pam Bondi is becoming the latest Trump administration official to relocate into military housing amid a heightened threat environment.
The New York Times reporting A.G.
Bondi moved from a Washington apartment to housing on a military installation within the past month after federal law enforcement flagged a growing number of threats directed at her.
the move placing the attorney general among at least seven senior administration officials now living on military bases, according to reporting from The Atlantic.
The officials include Secretary of War Pete Hegseth, White House Deputy Chief of Staff Stephen Miller, and outgoing DHS Secretary Kristi Noem, among others.
In some cases, the relocations following historical precedent.
Former Defense Secretary Robert Gates, who served under Presidents W. Bush and Obama, as well as General James Mattis, who served as Defense Secretary under the first Trump administration, living in Navy housing during their tenures.
Secretary of War Pete Hegseth's lodgings at Fort McNair in D.C.,
Falling within that tradition, other officials moving onto bases in direct response to security threats, doxing, and persistent harassment, targeting not just them, but their families as well.
Threats against public officials intensifying in recent years.