The 23-year-old man accused of jumping over the White House fence and making it onto the North Lawn last week was found “incompetent” for trial after a preliminary psychiatric screening, which was made public Monday in court. In a dramatic scene, two marshals had to escort the defendant, Dominic Adesanya, out of a U.S. district courtroom after he shouted “help me” and yelled that he was a “targeted individual.”
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Last Wednesday, Secret Service officials and their dogs tackled and arrested Adesanya, of Bel Air, Maryland, about 20 yards past the fence. Adesanya, who was unarmed, sustained dog bites on his arms, back, chest and knee. Two Secret Service dogs suffered bruising injuries during the incident, but have since returned to duty.
Adesanya was charged with multiple counts of felony assault, resisting arrest, unlawful entry and making a threat. During the preliminary hearing, authorities physically had to remove him from the courtroom. The defense had requested another court appearance following a preliminary psychiatric screening on Adesanya, which the judge had granted and scheduled for Monday.
He was also expected to appear Monday afternoon in Superior Court, but it remained unclear whether he would attend. He is now expected to return to U.S. District Court on Dec. 22.









