Report: Former FBI agent charged CIA headquarters, NSA

Melanie Eversley | USA TODAY

Show Caption Hide Caption Former FBI agent charged NSA, CIA headquarters Court documents show a former FBI agent, who showed up at both CIA headquarters and the NSA last week, said she wanted to "die by police brutality" and threatened to blow everyone up.

A former FBI agent went on a bizarre rampage last week that included visits to the National Security Agency and Central Intelligence Agency headquarters, NBC reported.

Neither the FBI nor the CIA responded to requests for comment late Monday night.

NBC reported a court affidavit it obtained said Tunisia Davis was arrested last Thursday after driving to the main gate of the CIA headquarters in Langley, Va., that afternoon, passing one officer who tried to stop her before a second officer was able to block her path.

Earlier Thursday, Davis showed up to the door of the National Security Agency in Maryland and told NSA police that she "wanted to know what they would do if she showed up," NBC reported.

Davis was placed in the custody of U.S. Marshals and was scheduled to appear Tuesday in federal court in Alexandria, Va., NBC reported.

Davis' Facebook page includes video in which she declares she is running for president of the United States and also says that if the president is limited to two terms, members of Congress must be as well.

The page does not list former employment at the FBI but does say that she graduated from George Mason University and that she is currently a "change agent" at MahoganyChange.org. The website address leads to a Facebook page that also includes videos by Davis in which she decries police brutality and hails inclusion.

Davis referred to herself as Mahogany in conversations with CIA officers, NBC reported.

Derek Delgadillo, who told NBC he was Davis' landlord, described her as a "nice person."

"She's one of the people I met in this country who wants to fight for what is right," Delgadillo told NBC.