Bucs Legend Warren Sapp Hit With Serious Charges After Ugly Incident With Police At City Hall [VIDEO]

Tampa Bay Buccaneers icon and Pro Football Hall of Fame defensive tackle Warren Sapp recently had another run-in with the law.
According to WSVN, Warren Sapp recently confronted staff and obstructed operations at Hollywood City Hall in Florida. The confrontation started when Sapp ignored orders from police to stay out of private areas in city hall.
Per WSVN, Sapp repeatedly pushed back against police warnings that he was not to access specific areas of city hall. One cop informed Sapp that he was disturbing the peace and told the Bucs legend not to touch him. Sapp responded and told the officer not to touch him.
More from the report:
“After one of his most recent alleged arguments, Sapp was charged with “interference with city employees, performance of official duties where officials say it’s unlawful to obstruct, hinder, impede, delay [and/or] frustrate city employees from their official duty,” the report says.
During a court appearance on Thursday, Sapp was sacked with a standard pretrial supervision order “requiring him to report 2 times per week by telephone to [the] pretrial services office,” and prohibiting the multi-time All-Pro from returning to the records division of the Hollywood Police Department.
Sapp was also ordered to have no contact with victims/witnesses who work at the building.”
WSVN adds that police could arrest Warren Sapp if he violates the court order.
NFL Hall of Famer Warren Sapp charged with interfering with city employees after on-camera confrontations with Hollywood cops. Now under pretrial supervision, Sapp must follow court orders or go to jail. @wsvn #Exclusive story: pic.twitter.com/rXSYKK3LZs
— Sheldon Fox-7 News (@fox_sheldon) May 8, 2026
Sapp was arrested in Feb. 2010 in Miami Beach on a domestic battery charge. In Feb. 2015, he was arrested in Phoenix for assault and soliciting a prostitute. Both charges were eventually dropped.
Warren Sapp Played For The Buccaneers & Raiders

Tampa Bay selected two future Hall of Famers in the first round of the 1995 draft: Warren Sapp, whom they took 12th overall, and Florida State linebacker Derrick Brooks, whom they selected at No. 28.
Those two helped the Bucs create one of the greatest defensive units ever seen under coaches Tony Dungy and Jon Gruden. Sapp, who won 1999 Defensive Player of the Year honors, was instrumental in the Bucs’ Super Bowl 37 championship-winning season in 2002.
A year after leading the Bucs to their first Super Bowl, Sapp signed with the Oakland Raiders in free agency. He would spend the final four seasons of his career there, retiring after the 2007 season.
Sapp retired with 96.5 sacks, 20 forced fumbles and 21 pass breakups in 198 NFL games.
Bucs Legend Warren Sapp Hit With Serious Charges After Ugly Incident With Police At City Hall [VIDEO]
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