A high-profile annual media gathering in Washington descended into chaos Saturday night when a gunman attempted to breach security checkpoints leading to the White House Correspondents’ Association dinner, leaving one law enforcement officer injured and triggering a full evacuation of hundreds of attendees, including sitting U.S. President Donald Trump. No members of the presidential party or gala guests suffered harm in the incident, which has now launched a full federal investigation into how the attacker was able to bring multiple weapons into the venue.
According to initial official briefings and witness accounts, the incident unfolded shortly after 8:30 p.m. local time, just after opening remarks had concluded at the dinner, held at the iconic Washington Hilton Hotel. Shots rang out near the entrance to the main ballroom, where Trump was seated alongside first lady Melania Trump, Vice President JD Vance and other senior U.S. government officials. Tactical security teams immediately moved to secure the presidential party, rushing all high-level attendees out of the ballroom to a safe location. Hundreds of formally dressed guests, many of whom had gathered for the black-tie industry tradition, took cover under banquet tables before being guided out of the event space one by one, eventually moving outside the hotel as organizers postponed the annual gathering indefinitely.
Law enforcement officials confirmed the incident involved a single suspect, who attempted to charge through a security checkpoint positioned just outside the ballroom. Metropolitan Police Department Interim Chief Jeffery Carroll confirmed the attacker was carrying a fully loaded shotgun, a handgun, and multiple edged weapons when he rushed the checkpoint. Footage shared by Trump on his Truth Social platform shows the suspect moving aggressively toward the checkpoint before uniformed officers swarm and subdue him. Law enforcement exchanged gunfire with the suspect during the confrontation, and one uniformed Secret Service officer was struck in his ballistic vest by gunfire. The officer was transported to a local hospital for evaluation; Chief Carroll confirmed the officer is in stable condition and expected to make a full recovery. The suspect was not hit by any gunfire during the incident, but was also taken to a hospital for mental evaluation before being placed into official custody. He is scheduled to be arraigned on federal charges Monday morning.
FBI Director Kash Patel confirmed that investigators recovered a long gun and multiple spent shell casings from the scene, and agents have already begun interviewing dozens of witnesses to map out the suspect’s movements before the attack. While authorities have not yet formally released the suspect’s public identity, multiple U.S. media outlets have identified the man as 31-year-old Cole Tomas Allen, a resident of Torrance, California. Chief Carroll added that preliminary investigation indicates Allen was registered as a guest at the Washington Hilton, the venue hosting the dinner. U.S. Attorney Jeanine Pirro confirmed that the suspect currently faces two federal charges: use of a firearm during a violent felony, and assault of a federal officer with a dangerous weapon, with additional charges expected as the probe progresses. President Trump told reporters he believes the attacker acted alone, describing the suspect as “sick” and noting that investigators have not yet determined a clear motive for the attack.
The incident has sparked immediate questions about potential gaps in event security, particularly how the suspect was able to bring multiple weapons into the hotel property. Multiple attendees noted that while magnetometers were in place outside the dinner ballroom, no weapons screening was conducted at the main entrance to the hotel itself. Initially, Trump acknowledged that the venue was “not a particularly secure building,” but later walked back the comment, confirming that the gunman never actually breached the ballroom space, which he described as “very, very secure.” Authorities emphasized that the outermost checkpoint outside the ballroom functioned as intended to stop the attack, noting that no guests or dignitaries were harmed as a result. Investigators have said they will review all hotel security footage to trace how the weapons were brought into the building and down to the event space. In a comparison to a previous 2024 assassination attempt against him at a campaign rally in Butler, Pennsylvania, Trump praised the response of law enforcement in Washington, saying security teams performed a “much better job than Butler.”
