Body‑camera footage released on Thursday captures a tense exchange that unfolded on July 2, 2026, inside the Westin Dallas Downtown hotel lobby, where a Dallas police officer confronted members of Egypt’s national soccer squad over missing identification.
The video shows two officers standing near the hotel’s reception before moving toward Ibrahim Hassan, the team’s manager, and Mahmoud Hassan, better known by his nickname Trézéguet, as well as several other players wearing the Egyptian colors.
One officer places a hand on the manager’s chest and pulls him back, demanding to see credentials, while a teammate without any visible identification steps between them, prompting a flurry of shoves and heated words.
De‑Escalation and Diplomatic Response
Later, the squad’s leaders meet with Deputy Chief Osama Ismail, and the matter is formally resolved; the police department later posted images of Ismail posing with the players, credentials now clearly visible around their necks.
Cherif Mokhtar, Egypt’s consul general in Houston, issued a public letter thanking Dallas Police Chief Daniel Comeaux and the department for their professionalism, singling out Ismail for ‘exceptional dedication’ during the delegation’s stay.
Aftermath on the Field
Comeaux defended the officer’s actions, stating that he was merely creating space between a player and individuals who were not authorized to be in a secured area, and insisted that no apology was offered by the department.
Head coach Hossam Hassan, twin brother of Ibrahim, later told reporters through a translator that the team had accepted an apology, a claim that the police chief disputes.
The incident coincided with Egypt’s dramatic 4‑2 penalty victory over Australia at AT&T Stadium, a win that marked the nation’s first knockout‑stage triumph in World Cup history and amplified global attention on the earlier hotel episode.