Ditch the Bodyguards

"Clark Kent: Granted, Lois, Luthor does a lot of strange things. But what reason could he possibly have for trying to fool his own bodyguard? Lois Lane: Maybe he just needed some space. Haven't you ever noticed how she hovers over him, everywhere he goes? Clark Kent: But Lois, that's her job.  Lois Lane: It's no wonder why you're still single, Kent."

- Superman: The Animated Series, "Ghost in the Machine"

Witness Protection is boring. If it's done right, there's no opportunity for adventure. So when the protagonist is asked to hole up in a cheap motel until he can testify at the trial, odds are he won't comply. Perhaps he needs to save someone else in danger. Maybe he needs the freedom to catch the real bad guy. Or maybe he just doesn't believe he's in as much danger as the police say he is. Whatever the reason, he'll take the first opportunity to lose his bodyguards and strike out on his own, leaving the police to track him down before The Mafia assassins do.

Compare Unsafe Haven. An all-too-common source of headaches for anyone on a Live Action Escort Mission, or any Secret Service agents trying to protect The President's Daughter.

Anime
"Triela: (picking the lock on their handcuffs) Say, what did she mean by we should "Talk about love"? I think she's got the wrong idea about us. Hilshire: We're fratello. We don't need to talk about love."
 * Bleach anime episode 173. Lurichiyo evades her guardians Kenryu and Enryu to go to a tea party with other noble children.
 * Bradley does this once in Fullmetal Alchemist. Not that he needs them.
 * Mamotte Lollipop, early on Nina gets really fed up with her male protectors and slips away more than once. One time was into the girls' room, only to have the antagonists waiting for her there. (This backfired on them when one admitted he was actually a boy in drag—in front of the female audience.)
 * Gunslinger Girl. Mimi Machiavelli, daughter of a witness who's testifying in a mob trial, handcuffs Hilshire and Triela together and nicks out the door to see her boyfriend, only to get immediately nabbed by mafiosi. Fortunately the Agency is on the ball and quickly snatches her back. Naturally the event gets used for a Shipping moment.

Comic Books

 * Played With in the Tintin album The Calculus Affair, while staying in Borduria as supposed "guests" of the state, Tintin and Haddock get their "bodyguards" drunk so that they can escape.
 * In the recent Batman storyline, "Bruce Wayne: The Road Home", Vicki Vale does this in just about every early chapter, thinking she isn't in too much danger just because she wants to reveal the secret identities of the entire Bat-Family. It isn't until a disguised Bruce Wayne Batman is able to snatch her away and tell her the severity of the situation is she able to settle down slightly.
 * Bruce Wayne actually averted this trope during the run-up to No Man's Land. When the board of directors for Waynetech hired a bodyguard -- Sasha Bordeaux -- for their wayward chairman of the board and business concerns made it impossible for him to refuse the offer, he faced a rather serious complication in that a high-end executive bodyguard will quite naturally want to know where their charge is at all times and Bruce needs to be able to sneak out and go be Batman. However, Bruce is intelligent enough to realize that repeatedly sneaking away from Sasha will only arouse her suspicions, and so deals with the problem simply by observing her carefully until he decides whether he can trust her with his secret or not... and then trusting her with his secret.

Fan Fiction

 * Somewhat of a Running Gag in this Star Trek fanfiction.
 * Also a common trope in Tin Man fanfic. Then again, it's perfectly in character for DG to really hate being confined, and too much of a troublemaking farmgirl to really take any pleasure in being a Princess Classic. However, Cain is always going to be the exception - no matter how hard she tries, she can't seem to ditch him.

Film

 * Romeo Must Die: Trish rather easily evades her bodyguard Maurice when he's distracted chatting up a female at the record store.
 * Wicked City (1987). Giuseppi Mayart escapes from his bodyguards Taki and Makie at the hotel they're staying at.
 * The whole plot of Chasing Liberty proceeds from The President's Daughter ditching her Secret Service detail to get some personal space.

Literature

 * Artemis often does this in Artemis Fowl to Butler.
 * In The Belgariad, spoiled brat Princess Ce'Nedra of Tolnedra is bored and wants to go shopping. Her father, Emperor Ran Borune, won't let her leave the Imperial Palace because it's too dangerous (true of Tolnedra at almost any time, and particularly that year as they're building up to a possible civil war). She cons her rather gullible and egotistical tutor into believing that her father wants him to escort her while she visits relatives in another city. (For her own safety, naturally.) On the road, they meet Belgarath and company. Of course, none of them—even Garion—believe her story. Hilarity Ensues.
 * In several of his books, Harry Potter is being threatened by someone (usually Voldemort), and everybody tries to keep him safe. It never works—somehow, for some reason, he always finds his way to the source of the problem to face it himself. This habit comes back to haunt him in the last few books.
 * In Monster Hunter Vendetta, Owen is instructed by the Monster Control Bureau to stay at MHI's compound as bait for the Church of the Temporary Mortal Condition. However he's a pro-active kind of guy, and prefers to take the fight to them.
 * The finale of the first Twilight novel involves Bella having to sneak away from her vampire bodyguards to meet the bad guy vamp.
 * Prince Roger MacClintock's habit of doing this (and the bodyguards' refusal to admit that Roger, the bratty clotheshorse, manages to slip them) on big game hunting trips means that it takes them a while to realise he actually is a badass dead-eye shot with a rifle. They just try and reconcile his "Great White Hunter" reputation with the brat by believing his guides and bodyguards are the ones who kill the trophies... until the trip to Marduk rather impressively underscores how much they've been underestimating him.
 * "Devo" ditches most of his bodyguards in Guilty Wives. That sets the drama in motion.

Live-Action TV

 * On an episode of Bones, a man who was to testify slipped away from his bodyguards in the safe house after his wife was killed and son kidnapped to keep him from testifying.
 * Dark Angel, when Max has to protect Bruno.
 * On Dexter, after the FBI suspect that  is the Bay Harbor Butcher, Dexter is given a protective detail since they assume the Butcher will come after him. He slips away from them by climbing out the window of his apartment.
 * Due South had a Canadian diplomat's daughter ditching Fraser, who was assigned as her escort while in Chicago, in the two parter Chicago Holiday. Trouble is she has also inadvertently gotten herself on a mobster's hitlist, so we have the old 'can they find her before the mobster does.'
 * Frequent element of In Plain Sight, a show about the Witness Protection Program.
 * In the last episode of Special Ops Mission, the assassination target is covered very well by his protectors, who show him around the large and sprawling compound while, unknown to them, the sniper, Will, is trying desperately to get a shot when the target is unprotected. All seems lost, as the bodyguards know what they're doing, until the target decides he needs to get some fresh air, away from them. The focus rapidly shifts from assassination to evasion after that.
 * On one episode of NCIS, somebody puts out a hit on a Navy lieutenant commander that, naturally, he does not believe is genuine. But the trope is subverted twice: when he ditches Ziva halfway through the episode, absolutely nothing untoward happens.
 * Played straight on an episode of Burn Notice when one of the protectees sneaks out of the safe house (read: "Michael's mother's garage") so she can go to prom. Reality Ensues, but fortunately Michael is able to get there in time to rescue her.
 * And again when Sam's friend Virgil, an ex-Navy SEAL, sneaks out with Michael's mom (mutual attraction), then one of the two sets of Villains of the Week shows up at the club and kidnaps him.

Video Games

 * In The Legend of Zelda: Spirit Tracks, one of the early missions is to help Zelda escape her own castle and bodyguards.
 * In Paper Mario the Thousand Year Door Princess Peach ditches Toadsworth in the intro, Because he was Irritating, This leads to her being Captured by The Big Bad and his Minions later.

Western Animation

 * Helping her do this was how Bruce Wayne met Rebellious Mafia Princess Kathleen Duquesne in Mysteryofthe Batwoman.
 * Wonder Woman and Princess Audrey of Kasnia do this when they first meet in Justice League. Audrey admits that she's been ditching bodyguards since childhood.
 * In ThunderCats (2011) Catfolk King Claudus learns that his presumed-dead friend Panthro is actually being held in a Hostage for Macguffin bid by an invading Lizard Folk army, and charges out of range of his own Praetorian Guard to go on a Roaring Rampage of Rescue, which directly leads to his own assassination by the Lizard army's Sorcerous Overlord and series Big Bad Mumm-Ra.

Truth in Television

 * The United States Secret Service bemoans the number of times certain protectees (usually teen-aged children) attempt to give their watchdogs the slip or change the itinerary to stop some place more fun. This creates headaches for the secret service, who then have to clear new locations, or sometimes can't vet a route ahead of time. Sometimes adult politicians who really are targets do this, too.
 * Harry Truman and Jimmy Carter have done this on occasion.
 * Franklin D. Roosevelt would try to outrun his security detail when they were following him in a chase car.
 * Bill Clinton did this, seemingly for his many affairs. His wife Hillary Clinton was even worse, doing this for no reason at all while repeatedly abused secret service agents and military personnel stationed at the White House on top of it. Chelsea Clinton was, surprisingly for her age and parentage, not an example and described by agents as a model protectee.