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White House goes into lockdown after security scare during Turnbull visit

Australian journalists were placed in temporary lockdown after a car crash into White House security barriers.

A passenger car sits at a security barrier it appears to have struck near the White House in Washington, DC on 23 February, 2018.

A passenger car sits at a security barrier it appears to have struck near the White House in Washington, DC on 23 February, 2018. Source: Getty Images

A Tennessee woman driving a white van on Friday intentionally drove into a White House security barrier but did not breach it, and she was immediately apprehended and put under arrest, the US Secret Service said.

No shots were fired and no law enforcement personnel were hurt, the Secret Service said in a statement.

Previous encounters with the 35-year-old woman from La Vergne, Tennessee, near the White House had resulted "in numerous arrests for a variety of criminal violations," it added, without giving her name.

"The female was again charged today with numerous criminal violations and transported to the Metropolitan Police Department," the statement said, adding normal operations had resumed at the White House complex.

"This minivan came and crashed into the barricade and tried to push through the barricade and his tires were burning rubber and a lot of smoke was coming up," eyewitness Chris Bello, 50, of New York, told reporters near the scene.

"And then about 30 seconds after that the two security guards that were in the booth, you know, ordered him to stop doing what he was doing and he didn't listen," Bello said.

The White House was put on a temporary partial lockdown following the crash, which occurred shortly after a meeting there between President Donald Trump and Australian Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull, who was still at the White House.

A passenger car sits at a security barrier it appears to have struck near the White House in Washington, DC on 23 February, 2018.
A passenger car sits at a security barrier it appears to have struck near the White House in Washington, DC on 23 February, 2018. Source: Getty Images

Mr Trump later tweeted: "Thank you to the great men and women of the United States @SecretService for a job well done!"

Streets surrounding the White House were cordoned off, snarling local traffic.

A reporter for the local Fox channel affiliate tweeted a witness had reported seeing officers pull a woman out of the vehicle's window at gunpoint.

He posted a photograph of what he said was the white Chevrolet minivan that hit the barrier.

Reuters video showed the minivan with an American flag emblem on the back and with both its rear window and a side window smashed.

The video showed a law enforcement officer checking the underside of the van with a mirror.

CNN, citing unnamed law enforcement sources, said the action of driving into the barricade was not directed at the president or anyone at the White House and that mental health issues may have been a factor.

The Australian Federal Police said the incident 'had no impact on the prime minister' who was inside meeting with Vice President Mike Pence at the time.

Sky News chief political reporter Kieran Gilbert said he and other journalists were kept in the basement for about 20 to 25 minutes during the lockdown.

President Donald Trump and Australian Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull shake hands during a news conference in the East Room of the White House in Washington, Friday, Feb. 23, 2018. (AP Photo/Andrew Harnik)
President Donald Trump and Australian Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull shake hands during a joint news conference in the East Room of the White House. Source: AP


3 min read

Published

Updated

Source: AFP, SBS



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