WASHINGTON — What was supposed to be one of Washington’s most choreographed nights turned chaotic in seconds.
Investigators now believe the man accused of opening fire during the White House Correspondents’ Association dinner on Saturday night was likely aiming at President Donald Trump and other senior administration figures, according to acting Attorney General Todd Blanche and multiple U.S. media reports. Trump was rushed from the ballroom at the Washington Hilton by Secret Service agents and was not injured.
The suspect has been identified by law-enforcement officials as Cole Tomas Allen, 31, of Torrance, California. Authorities say he traveled across the country before arriving in Washington and checking into the same hotel where the annual dinner was being held. Investigators are reviewing his electronic devices, writings and movements in the hours before the attack as they try to pin down motive and possible intended targets.
The shooting unfolded just after Trump had appeared on stage at the black-tie event — his first attendance at the correspondents’ dinner as president. Gunfire erupted outside the ballroom near a security checkpoint, setting off panic inside the packed room. Secret Service agents quickly swarmed the stage and escorted Trump, Vice President JD Vance and other top officials to safety.
At least one law-enforcement officer was struck, but officials said the officer’s ballistic vest absorbed the impact and the injuries were not life-threatening. By Sunday, reports said the officer had been released from the hospital. The suspect was taken into custody alive.
Blanche said Sunday that the early evidence points to a targeted attack, though he stressed that the investigation is still in its opening phase. In interviews, he said authorities believe the suspect was targeting members of the Trump administration and that charges could expand as investigators learn more. ABC reported Blanche also described the response in blunt terms: “the system worked.”
That detail matters. A lot. For hours after the shooting, the biggest unknown was whether this had been a general act of violence at a crowded hotel or something more specific. By Sunday morning, officials were leaning toward the second explanation: that this was not random, and that the president himself may have been among the intended targets.
The venue gave the moment an added, uneasy historical echo. The Washington Hilton is the same hotel where President Ronald Reagan was shot and wounded in 1981 after leaving an event there. Saturday night’s attack did not reach the ballroom itself, but it still reopened familiar questions about presidential security, especially at events that blend politics, media and public access.
The dinner was ultimately canceled and will be rescheduled, according to reports. Weijia Jiang, the White House Correspondents’ Association president, said the group intends to hold the event again. Trump later praised law enforcement and said the officer who was hit was “doing great,” while also criticizing the hotel’s security setup.
There are still big gaps in what’s known. Authorities have not publicly laid out a full motive, and some of the details circulating about the suspect’s background remain pieced together from interviews and records checks rather than formal court filings. But the broad outline is now clearer than it was overnight: a heavily armed man made his way toward one of the country’s highest-profile political gatherings, shots were fired, an officer was hit, and investigators increasingly believe Trump and his inner circle were the intended targets.
