An armed individual at the White House Correspondents Association dinner was stopped near a Secret Service checkpoint. Investigations identify outer perimeter gaps and calls for review of hotel access procedures and inter-agency coordination.
International
-Swastika Sruti
The White House Correspondents’ Association dinner at the Washington Hilton turned chaotic when an armed guest reached an inner security point and exchanged gunfire with law enforcement. The incident happened before the formal programme, near a Secret Service checkpoint, and the suspect was quickly restrained and arrested after a brief confrontation.

Guest Cole Tomas Allen was arrested at the White House Correspondents’ Association dinner at the Washington Hilton after exchanging gunfire with law enforcement near a security checkpoint, carrying multiple weapons and facing felony firearm and assault charges.
Authorities later named the suspect as Cole Tomas Allen, 31, from Torrance, California. According to the Associated Press, the US attorney for the District of Columbia said Allen faced felony firearm counts and assault charges. Investigators said Allen appeared to have acted alone and had been staying at the hotel before the incident.
White House Correspondents’ Association dinner security and weapons recovered
Jeff Carroll of the Metropolitan Police Department said Allen “charged a US Secret Service checkpoint” carrying several weapons. Carroll said Allen had a shotgun, a handgun and multiple knives when attempting to move towards the secure area. Officers and agents brought Allen down, handcuffed Allen at the checkpoint and prevented further movement towards the ballroom.
Officials said access to the Washington Hilton tightened hours earlier, with the hotel closed to the general public from 2 pm ahead of the 8 pm dinner. Entry after that time was restricted to registered hotel guests, accredited ticket holders, invited attendees and people carrying official documentation from the White House Correspondents’ Association.
| Suspect | Age | Residence | Weapons Reported | Charges Announced |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cole Tomas Allen | 31 | Torrance, California | Shotgun, handgun, multiple knives | Felony firearm and assault charges |
White House Correspondents’ Association dinner security gaps inside hotel
Law enforcement officials said overall event planning relied on “multi-layered protection”, with outer and inner rings around the venue. The most secure perimeter sat near the ballroom, where Secret Service agents created a separate zone around the president, including a buffer from the head table to other guests and armed teams near the stage.
Investigators believed Allen reached close to that zone because of weaknesses in the outer layers. Since Allen was registered as a guest, Allen could move past the outermost checks at the hotel doors. Officials also confirmed there were no metal detectors at general hotel entrances, only at the deeper security perimeter near the ballroom.
Volunteer worker Helen Mabus described how Allen used an unsecured interior space to prepare. Mabus said Allen stayed in a “makeshift room” beside a terrace-level entrance where bar carts were stored and “there was no security” at that moment. “He was in that room … he grabbed it out of a bag or something,” Mabus said.
Mabus added that the weapon “was long” and “didn’t look like a typical gun.” Mabus said Allen was partly hidden from security staff while handling the firearm and then “put it together and … ran towards the stairs to go down to the ballroom.” That movement brought Allen towards the inner Secret Service screening point.
White House Correspondents’ Association dinner security review and Trump response
Inside the ballroom, security around the president remained intact. The Secret Service maintained another perimeter around the stage, with agents stationed in front and on the sides, supported by heavily armed counter-assault teams. Officials argued this showed the inner security design worked even though Allen reached the checkpoint with weapons.
Law enforcement representatives said the incident still highlighted vulnerabilities in areas considered less critical, such as guest-access corridors and service spaces. Former president Donald Trump said the episode reinforced arguments for a proposed $400 million ballroom project on White House grounds, which would include advanced security features and is currently subject to litigation.
Officials now faced questions about how a hotel guest with a shotgun, handgun and knives moved so close to a high-profile dinner built around press freedom. While authorities stressed that Allen was stopped before entering the ballroom, investigators continued examining hotel access policies and coordination between local police, hotel staff and federal agencies.
