Live
Updates: Gunman Who Charged at Washington Press Gala Faces Arraignment
Two law
enforcement officials identified the suspect as Cole Tomas Allen of Torrance,
Calif. Authorities said the suspect appeared to express anger at administration
officials and President Trump, who was rushed from the dinner unharmed.
Luke
BroadwaterMichael M. GrynbaumShawn McCreeshTyler PagerDevlin BarrettMaggie
Haberman and Amy Qin
https://www.nytimes.com/live/2026/04/27/us/white-house-dinner-trump-shooting
Here’s
the latest.
A suspect
detained in connection with gunfire at the hotel where President Trump was
attending the White House correspondents’ dinner in Washington over the weekend
was expected to be arraigned in federal court on Monday.
Jeanine
Pirro, the U.S. attorney for the District of Columbia, said that the suspect
would face two counts of using a firearm and one count of assault on a federal
officer using a dangerous weapon. Additional charges are expected, she said.
Two law
enforcement officials familiar with an investigation into the shooting
identified the suspect as Cole Tomas Allen, 31, of Torrance, Calif. They asked
to remain anonymous because they had not been authorized to disclose the
information. Federal authorities in Los Angeles said that a search warrant was
served late Saturday night at Mr. Allen’s home.
The
suspect was taken into custody on Saturday night after running through a
security checkpoint inside the Washington Hilton, setting off a flurry of
gunfire. Mr. Trump and members of his cabinet, who were attending the dinner in
the hotel’s ballroom with hundreds of journalists, were rushed out of the room
and were unharmed.
A note
that the authorities say was written by the suspect appears to express deep
anger at the administration and the president. Administration figures were the
suspect’s “targets, prioritized from highest-ranking to lowest,” according to a
copy of the roughly 1,000-word document shared by two law enforcement officials
who were not authorized to disclose the information.
The
suspect expressed surprise at having been able to check into the hotel a day
before the event with a shotgun, a handgun and a knife, according to the
document.
The
attack has raised fresh questions about whether the Secret Service is
adequately prepared to protect the president in an age of rising threats and
political violence. Officials insisted that the security measures at the dinner
worked as intended, noting that the suspect never made it into the ballroom.
On Sunday
night, President Trump told 60 Minutes that he told agents to “wait a minute”
as they urged him to get down, saying he was curious to see what was happening.
He said he finally dropped to the floor with the first lady. “My thought was,
‘I’ve been through this a couple of times before,’” but his wife had not, he
said.
Still, he
said, she was good under pressure in the moment.
Here’s
what else we’re covering:
Royal
guest: The state visit by King Charles III of Britain will proceed as planned,
according to a statement released by Buckingham Palace. Charles was expected to
arrive in Washington on Monday.
Suspect:
Mr. Allen worked as a tutor and graduated from the California Institute of
Technology. Those who knew him are struggling to reconcile the man they knew
with the shocking act of political violence that he is accused of.
California
resident: Investigators determined that the suspect took a train from Los
Angeles to Chicago, and then from Chicago to Washington, Todd Blanche, the
acting attorney general, said.
Rumors
and speculation: Influencers jumped to fill the information void with
conspiracy theories about the attack.

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