Cole Allen, accused of Saturday’s shooting at the White House Correspondents’ Dinner in Torrance, California, apparently sent a 1,052-word anti-Trump manifesto to relatives minutes before the attack. The screed excluded only FBI director Kash Patel …
Donald Trump and a cadre of top officials—including J.D. Vance, Pete Hegseth, and Marco Rubio—were hustled out of the Washington Hilton after gunshots prompted pandemonium during the annual White House Correspondents’ dinner. The Secret Service assures us all are unharmed, the suspected shooter is in custody, and, ever the showman, Trump suggested the festivities resume—a testament, perhaps, to the American devotion to both drama and dinner.
Donald Trump emerged unscathed after gunfire disrupted the White House Correspondents’ Dinner, prompting world leaders from Keir Starmer to Javier Milei to denounce violence against democracy with an enthusiasm just shy of spontaneous applause. US and European politicians alike urged that ballots, not bullets, settle disputes—reaffirming, perhaps optimistically, that would-be assassins are rarely invited back for coffee.
Cole Allen of Torrance, California, was named as the gunman at the White House Correspondents’ Dinner, where his charge toward the Washington Hilton ballroom prompted Secret Service to whisk President Trump away mid-salad. A Caltech graduate and test-prep tutor—plus $25 Kamala Harris donor—Allen allegedly acted alone, packing an arsenal fit for a lower-budget action sequel. Federal officials insist order is restored, at least until dessert.
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Police have identified and arrested the suspect in Saturday’s White House Correspondents’ Dinner shooting, an attack that thankfully left President Trump and other guests unhurt. The annual Washington event, usually more raucous in rhetoric than in reality, now adds gunfire to its list of journalistic hazards, though the guest of honour appears to have dodged both literal and metaphorical bullets on this occasion.
Gunfire at the annual White House Correspondents’ dinner at the Washington Hilton startled a tuxedoed who’s who, as Secret Service agents hustled President Donald Trump, Melania Trump, and Vice President J.D. Vance out amid at least four shots. The ensuing chaos saw toppled tables, rattled officials—including Scott Bessent and Pete Hegseth—and communications failing across the hall, a rare case of inside-the-Beltway noise not being purely metaphorical.
A would-be gunman, Cole Tomas Allen of Torrance, California, was detained after exchanging fire with agents outside the White House Correspondents’ Dinner in Washington, DC, rattling a ballroom packed with politicians, journalists, and President Donald Trump. Rapid response by Secret Service left one agent bruised but not beaten—his vest absorbed the worst—while New York’s political chorus expressed relief, regret, and the unfulfilled urge for duller dinners.
After shots rang out at the annual White House Correspondents’ Dinner in Washington, agents cordoned off the California home of Tomas Cole Allen, 31, who was arrested at the venue and now faces federal weapons and assault charges. While one Secret Service agent was treated and released, President Trump and his entourage were unharmed—a testament, as ever, to America’s enduring talent for dramatic evenings and swift recoveries.
After an assassination attempt on Donald Trump during Saturday's White House Correspondents' Dinner, Vito Fossella, Staten Island’s borough president, wasted no time condemning the act as “pure evil.” The dinner, usually reserved for nervous jokes and rubber chicken, saw an uncharacteristic spike in drama; authorities are probing both security lapses and motivations, though we suspect world-weary reporters might welcome even a return to garden-variety political sniping.
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