Secret Service Barred From Jared And Ivanka's Bathrooms Rented A Toilet For $3,000 A Month

A Washington Post report revealed that agents had to go to extraordinary lengths to relieve themselves — including using a bathroom in the Obamas' nearby garage.

Secret Service agents assigned to protect Ivanka Trump and Jared Kushner were denied access to bathrooms in the couple’s house and had to rent a nearby basement for $3,000 a month simply to use the toilet, a surreal report by The Washington Post revealed on Thursday.

Trump and Kushner’s six-bedroom, 5,000-square-foot home is located in Washington, DC’s Kalorama neighbourhood — where the Obamas and other elite political figures reside — and contains six bathrooms that were off-limits to the Secret Service detail assigned to protect the pair.

According to the report, which cited neighbours and local law enforcement officials, agents were forced to resort to unorthodox measures simply to relieve themselves. They frequented nearby businesses, drove to Vice President Mike Pence’s home at DC’s Naval Observatory and used a bathroom in the Obamas’ nearby garage that had been converted into a Secret Service command area.

Eventually, after a member of the team protecting Trump and Ivanka left an “unpleasant mess” in the Obama bathroom, they were banned from the garage.

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The home of Ivanka Trump and Jared Kushner, in Washington, DC's Kalorama district.
PAUL J. RICHARDS via Getty Images

White House spokesman Judd Deere told The Washington Post that Trump and Kushner had never denied agents access to their bathrooms, and “it was only after a decision by the [Secret Service] was made that their detail sought other accommodations.”

These alternate accommodations were found after a port-a-potty set up for the agents drew protests from Kalorama residents in 2017. From September 27, 2017, onwards, they rented an 820-square-foot basement with a “tidy bathroom” from Kay Kendall, chair of the DC Commission on the Arts and Humanities. At $3,000 a month in rent, the basement has cost $144,000 in taxpayer dollars thus far.

A number of voices across social media chimed in on the remarkable nature of the Post’s story — with several citing the similarities to the plot of the 2009 novel and 2011 film “The Help,” where a maid in Jackson, Mississippi, is fired for using the bathroom of her employers.

Read The Washington Post’s full report here.