The Daily Telegraph - Features

How they keep the world’s most famous pop star safe

- By Kate Wills

In 2010, I found myself at the sharp end of Taylor Swift’s security detail. The teen magazine I worked for at the time had sent me to interview her and we had spent the week in London together. She hadn’t yet become a household name in the UK and her entourage seemed to consist of just her mother, her manager, a publicist and an assistant. I was invited to the aftershow party following her gig at the O2 but, as the crowd thinned out, a burly man with a headpiece asked me to leave. “Friends and family only,” he told me, as he manhandled me out the door.

In the 14 years since, Taylor’s star has risen substantia­lly and her security detail has beefed up, too. In fact, Swift’s security operations would now match that of any member of the British Royal family or the American president. I probably wouldn’t even be allowed through the door.

Last week, Swift was forced to cancel three planned performanc­es in Vienna after Austrian police disclosed a plot to “kill as many people as possible outside the concert venue”. Two people have since been arrested on suspicion of planning the attacks. It comes just a fortnight after three girls were killed at a Swift-themed holiday dance club in Southport, northwest England.

Taylor Swift’s fame and fortune – 14 Grammys, a record-breaking tour, the first musician to reach billionair­e status solely from her music – make her a potential target for anyone from criminals to extremists. She has endured many stalkers and crazed fans over the years and her security has resorted to controvers­ial methods to keep her safe.

In 2018, Swift reportedly used facial recognitio­n software at her concerts to stop known stalkers or harassers from entering any venues. In February, the singer brought down the full heft of her mighty legal team upon Jack Sweeney, a 21-year-old student who tracks emissions from celebrity private jets and shares details of them on social media, claiming it constitute­d “stalking and harassing behaviour”.

Last month, a video made by a fan at a concert in Zurich went viral on TikTok after it appeared to show her security guard following her every move across the stage without looking away from the crowd, suggesting he either has her choreograp­hy memorised or was being fed informatio­n on her moves via an earpiece.

Another clip of her tour caused a stir in 2023, when Taylor waved to fans while her eager bodyguard wildly scanned the crowd for threats. “Give this man a raise!” and “He is ELITE” were just a couple of the comments. That particular security guard has reportedly since left the US to join the Israel Defence Forces. Many close protection officers (CPOs), as bodyguards are known in the industry, will have prior law enforcemen­t or military background­s.

“Obviously, anywhere she goes is a security issue,” says Clark Hunt, the chairman of the Kansas City Chiefs, the American football team that Taylor’s boyfriend, Travis Kelce, plays for. “It’s something that we’ve helped her security team handle when she comes to the games in Kansas City. She has a really talented security team.”

Videos of the singer clubbing with Kelce and friends at the Super Bowl victory party disclosed that any time anyone even walked past her, one of her private security guards – dressed casually except for the telltale earpiece – stepped in between Swift and the stranger.

Clearly keeping Swift safe is a serious business. When she landed in Cardiff this June for a show, her convoy of black-windowed cars was reportedly given a police escort to the Principali­ty Stadium gig. If the fan who spotted the police flanking Swift’s convoy was correct, then it would appear that she is afforded a higher level of protection in Britain than any other civilian.

Of course, Taylor isn’t the first superstar to enlist protection services, but the industry has become more sophistica­ted in the past couple of years. An experience­d CPO will set you back from about £800 a day, or £80,000 per annum. The exact number Swift has remains undisclose­d, but insiders suggest that during her Eras tour, she has 83 full-time CPOs, including four personal guards at all times – known in the trade as the “Quartet Formation” – and an extra 140 individual­s around the venues whenever she needs access. It’s not quite the “Star of David” formation of six bodyguards at all times – the kind of high-level protection afforded to monarchs and presidents – but close enough.

Swift’s security team are also responsibl­e for her safety at home and when she goes out to public places such as clubs or restaurant­s. They visit premises in advance, and conduct research on every employee she might come into contact with. They are trained never to get in the way, but to stay close enough to step in if need be.

However, it appears they can relax a little bit when Kelce is around. “Whenever I’m on a date, I’m protective, yeah, sure,” Kelce has said. “You always have that kind of feeling, that selfawaren­ess, I guess… You’ve just gotta know where the exits are.”

After a foiled terrorist plot in Vienna, Taylor Swift’s formidable security team will be on high alert as she re-opens in London today.

Insiders suggest she has 83 full-time close protection officers

 ?? ?? VIP: Swift brings her Eras tour back to Wembley Stadium tonight
VIP: Swift brings her Eras tour back to Wembley Stadium tonight

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