Alright, folks, buckle up, because we’ve got another episode of “The Biden Family Treats the Government Like a Personal Concierge Service”. This time, it’s not Hunter, it’s not Ashley—it’s Maisy Biden, one of Hunter’s daughters. And the allegation? A Secret Service agent got punished for refusing to play Uber driver for Maisy’s friends.
Yeah, you heard that right.
Here’s the deal: According to a legal complaint filed by the agent, he was assigned to protect Maisy Biden—codename “Cowboy”. One night, after Maisy and her friends wrapped up a fun evening of clubbing, the agent drove them home, which is part of his job.
But then, one of Maisy’s friends repeatedly demanded that the agent take a detour and drop her off at a different location. The agent refused, making it clear that the U.S. Secret Service is not a personal chauffeur service.
Seems reasonable, right? Well, apparently not.
The lawsuit alleges that after the incident, the agent was forced to write a memo about what happened. But here’s where things get really interesting—his superiors allegedly told him not to include any details that could make Maisy or her friends look bad. Then, after following proper policy and standing his ground, the agent claims he was repeatedly passed over for promotions as retaliation.
Let’s call this what it is: a complete abuse of power.
Now, to be fair, there’s no direct evidence (yet) that Joe Biden or anyone in his administration personally ordered this. But let’s think this through: How did this even become an issue in the first place? Where did the complaint originate? The only people who could’ve made a stink about this were Maisy and her friends. It doesn’t take a genius to connect the dots.
🚨SECRET SERVICE EXCLUSIVE: AGENT ALLEGES RETALIATION AFTER BIDEN GRANDCHILD INCIDENT — ‘The USSS is not an Uber Service’
Many Secret Service agents are celebrating Trump’s decision to drop Hunter and Ashley Biden’s USSS details as the agency continues to struggle with manpower… pic.twitter.com/YUI2envjUr
— Susan Crabtree (@susancrabtree) March 18, 2025
But beyond the obvious entitlement at play here, there’s a much bigger question: Why do Biden’s grandchildren still have Secret Service protection in the first place? That’s not standard once a president leaves office.
Trump was right to remove these privileges when he was in charge. If Maisy Biden is worried about security, maybe she should hang out wherever her grandfather has been stashed away these past few weeks—because no one seems to know where he is.