
Prosecutors Say Cole Tomas Allen Took Selfies and Carried Weapons Before White House Correspondents’ Dinner Shooting
Key Takeaways
- Cole Tomas Allen charged with attempted assassination of Trump at White House Correspondents' Dinner.
- Selfies and weapons were photographed before the attack, prosecutors say.
- Writings and a manifesto to family indicate anger toward Trump officials.
Selfies, Weapons, and Arrest
Federal prosecutors say Cole Tomas Allen took selfies and carried weapons before the White House Correspondents’ Association Dinner shooting, and the U.S. government submitted new images in a memorandum filed to keep him detained pending trial.
The BBC reports that the 31-year-old has pleaded not guilty to several charges, including attempting to assassinate President Donald Trump, and that prosecutors say the photos show Allen in his hotel room posing in front of a mirror with weapons strapped to his body.

Reuters and other coverage in the BBC account describe the alleged weapons as including a sheathed knife, a bag with ammunition, and a sheathed knife alongside a shoulder holster, pliers and wire cutters that prosecutors say were later recovered.
The BBC says Allen is accused of carrying a semi-automatic handgun, a pump-action shotgun and three knives as he charged past a security checkpoint at the dinner on Saturday.
During the incident, the BBC says Trump, Vice-President JD Vance, cabinet members, and other White House officials were rushed from the Washington Hilton hotel ballroom after gunfire rang out, and a Secret Service agent was shot but not seriously wounded.
The BBC adds that prosecutors say Allen took photos at around 20:03 EST (1:03 BST) and that for the next half hour he checked websites for live coverage of the dinner and the president’s attendance.
The memo, the BBC reports, says prosecutors consider his alleged actions “premeditated, violent, and calculated to cause death,” and it argues there is “no condition or combination of conditions that will reasonably assure the safety of other people or the community if the defendant were released from custody.”
Prosecutors’ Timeline and Travel
Multiple outlets describe a weeks-long planning timeline for the alleged attack, anchored by prosecutors’ filings and the suspect’s cross-country travel.
The Guardian says prosecutors provided “the most detailed account to date” of Cole Tomas Allen’s “weeks-long plan to kill Donald Trump,” and it reports that the motion was aimed at keeping Allen detained and filed by the US attorney for DC, Jeanine Pirro.

CNN reports that prosecutors alleged Allen came to Washington, DC, after a lengthy cross-country train journey and approached the Washington Hilton ballroom on Saturday night with what they described as a “veritable armament.”
CNN lays out dates and movements, saying that on April 6 Allen searched for information on the event and booked a two-night stay at the Washington Hilton during the weekend it was to take place, and that on April 21 he departed Los Angeles on an Amtrak passenger train to Chicago.
CNN further says that on April 23 Allen boarded a second train to Washington, DC, and that he arrived at Union Station on April 24, taking the metro to Dupont Circle and checking into the Hilton at approximately 3:15 p.m.
The Guardian says Allen was first detained and arrested after allegedly charging through a US Secret Service security checkpoint outside the black-tie dinner with a 12-gauge shotgun, and it adds that a Secret Service agent stopped Allen at about 8.40pm on Saturday night.
WDEF describes prosecutors’ timeline as beginning with President Trump publicly announcing he would attend the White House Correspondents’ Dinner in a post on his Truth Social account on March 2, and it says Allen began searching online about the event on April 6.
Arsenal, Checkpoint, and Court Arguments
Court filings and released images are central to how outlets describe the alleged arsenal and the immediate moments at the checkpoint.
Fox News says DOJ released photos showing weapons recovered after the attempted assassination of President Donald Trump, including a 12-gauge pump-action shotgun equipped with a sling and shell holder and a .38 caliber semi-automatic pistol recovered at the scene, along with several knives including a large fixed-blade knife.
Fox News also quotes U.S. Attorney for Washington, D.C., Jeanine Pirro, saying, “We have a solid case,” and it reports that she said investigators identified a manifesto and “clear statements of intent.”
Fox News further quotes Pirro saying, “It’s very clear what his intent was… it was to kill the president,” and it says she described extensive premeditation including cross-country travel, transport of weapons, and advance hotel booking.
CNN reports that prosecutors alleged a Secret Service officer saw a shotgun-wielding suspect fire his weapon toward the stairs leading to the hotel ballroom, and it says prosecutors argued there was “no combination of conditions that will reasonably assure the community’s safety” if the suspect were to be released.
ABC7 San Francisco adds a specific description from the court filing, saying agents observed the suspect “fire the shotgun in the direction of the stairs leading down to the ballroom,” and it quotes the filing: “The USSS officer and others at the checkpoint heard the gunshot.”
ABC7 San Francisco says the filing states, “The USSS officer drew his service weapon and fired five times at the defendant,” and that “The defendant fell to the ground, was restrained by law enforcement, and was placed under arrest.”
Security Failures and Political Voices
Political figures and security-focused reporting frame the shooting as a test of protective systems, while prosecutors and officials emphasize planning and evidence.
Fox News quotes Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, D-N.Y., saying the attack was a “very clear failure of systems” and urging a thorough investigation into “how such a catastrophic failure to secure the perimeter occurred.”

Fox News also reports Ocasio-Cortez rejected conspiracy theories and said events like this demand a “very thorough and very real investigation,” while she added, “I never have” when asked if she feels safe as a member of Congress.
MS NOW reports that White House Chief of Staff Susie Wiles requested a meeting with the Secret Service director and Department of Homeland Security officials about both the incident and how to harden security for Trump for a series of large events planned in the coming weeks.
MS NOW also says the Secret Service began a sweeping internal investigation known as a Mission Assurance Review, run by the Service’s Office of Professional Responsibility, to determine whether there were any security lapses or a need for hardening security protocols.
The Washington Post says the White House is reviewing how best to protect President Donald Trump after Saturday’s shooting raised new questions about protocols and procedures needed to keep the nation’s leaders safe.
At the same time, Fox News and the BBC emphasize prosecutors’ view of intent and premeditation, with Fox News quoting Pirro that “Everything about what he did, what he said, the guns that he brought with him across state lines… I mean, this is a solid case,” and the BBC reporting prosecutors’ characterization of the alleged actions as “premeditated, violent, and calculated to cause death.”
What’s Known, What’s Disputed
Even as prosecutors’ filings provide a detailed narrative, some reporting highlights uncertainty about the mechanics of the shooting and the officer’s injury.
MS NOW says that three days after the correspondents’ dinner, the FBI still had not found the fragment that pierced a Secret Service officer’s bulletproof vest, leaving investigators unable to say for certain whether the armed attacker shot the officer or how he was injured.

MS NOW reports that law enforcement agents on the scene believe Cole Tomas Allen fired his shotgun and struck the officer with buckshot from his weapon, according to one person briefed on the probe who asked not to be named.
MS NOW also says investigators collected the firearms of all Secret Service officers and agents on the scene and found no evidence that anyone else fired their weapons, citing one law enforcement official.
In contrast, CNN’s account centers on prosecutors alleging a Secret Service officer saw Allen fire his weapon toward the stairs and that the officer’s actions included firing at Allen, while ABC7 San Francisco quotes the court filing that the USSS officer “fired five times at the defendant.”
The Guardian reports that one officer was shot during an exchange of fire, but was uninjured due to a bulletproof vest, citing Jeffery Carroll, a Washington police chief.
The BBC says a Secret Service agent was shot but not seriously wounded during the attack at the hotel, and it places the incident at the Washington Hilton after gunfire rang out.
Next Steps and Potential Sentences
As the case moves through federal court, outlets describe both the legal stakes for Allen and the operational stakes for security planning around major events.
The BBC says Allen faces life in prison if found guilty and that prosecutors are seeking to keep him detained pending trial, arguing “there is no condition or combination of conditions that will reasonably assure the safety of other people or the community if the defendant were released from custody.”
Fox News says Pirro told viewers the suspect faces the possibility of life in prison as officials continue to build their case, and it quotes her saying, “We’re just getting started.”
The Guardian reports that the filing states Allen faces a possible sentence of life in prison and a mandatory minimum sentence of 10 years in prison, and it says Allen has not yet entered a plea in the case.
CNN reports that Allen has not entered a plea yet and that the judge granted lawyers’ request allowing Allen “unrestricted legal visits” for the rest of his case, while lawyers complained they were having difficulty meeting with him because the jail kept it locked down.
WDEF says prosecutors allege Allen’s notes included “[t]he southwest desert in spring Distant wind turbines looming like snowy mountains across the hazy NM desert,” and it reports that Allen’s final letter was signed “Cole ‘coldForce’ ‘Friendly Federal Assassin’ Allen.”
MS NOW says the Secret Service began a Mission Assurance Review and that White House Chief of Staff Susie Wiles requested meetings to harden security for Trump for a series of large events planned in the coming weeks.
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