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Who shot a Secret Service officer at the Trump press dinner?
May 2, 2026 International Source: BBC World
Court papers do not explicitly accuse the suspect of shooting the officer, even as officials say it was not "friendly fire".
Who shot a Secret Service officer at the Trump press dinner?
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'Are they gunshots?' BBC correspondent's minute-by-minute account of dinner shooting
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From left, Jeanine Pirro, the U.S. attorney for Washington, D.C., Acting Attorney General Todd Blanche, FBI Director Kash Patel, and Darren B. Cox, deputy assistant director of the FBI Criminal Investigative Division, conduct a news conference at the Department of Justice about Cole Tomas Allen, the suspect in the White House Correspondents' Association dinner shooting, on Monday, April 27, 2026.
Nearly a week after a suspect allegedly tried to assassinate President Donald Trump at a press gala, key details about the shooting remain unclear.
As the investigation has evolved, prosecutors' statements have changed on whether the suspect shot a US Secret Service officer as gunfire rang out at the Washington Hilton last Saturday.
The president and other top officials have said a Secret Service officer was shot as the attacker charged a security checkpoint at the hotel, and that he survived thanks to a bulletproof vest.
But court documents filed by government attorneys do not explicitly allege the accused shot an officer on the night of the White House Correspondents' Association dinner.
The Secret Service officer also fired five times on the suspect as he charged, authorities said, but did not strike him.
CCTV image of suspect charging security at WHCD dinner
"There's this insatiable public interest in the case, pressure to get information out to the public," Mark Lesko, a former US Attorney for the Eastern District of New York, told the BBC.
"But on the other hand, you want to conduct a thorough investigation, which could take weeks in a case like this."
It was understandable that law enforcement could make contradictory public statements in the heat of such a high-profile investigation, Lesko said.
But any inaccuracies could open the door for defence attorneys to poke holes in the case, he warned.
The BBC has contacted the justice department for comment.
The Secret Service and US Attorney's office for the District of Columbia declined to comment.
The public first learned from Trump that a Secret Service Officer had been shot.
He told reporters at a Saturday news conference that the agent "was shot from very close distance with a very powerful gun".
Trump jokes he would not wear bulletproof vest: “I don’t know if I can handle looking 20lbs heavier"
President Donald Trump wearing a navy suit and royal blue tie sits in the Oval Office with suited men behind him.
An affidavit issued by the justice department that night named Cole Tomas Allen, 31, as the suspect, and listed the charges against him, including that he discharged a firearm.
Allen, who is in custody, was armed with a semi-automatic handgun, a pump-action shotgun and three knives, according to authorities.
On Sunday, Acting US Attorney General Todd Blanche was asked on CBS News if the alleged assailant had shot the Secret Service agent.
"That's what we understand as of now," Blanche replied.
But at a news conference on Monday, he retreated from that stance. A reporter asked him again who had shot the officer.
"We wanna get that right, so we're still looking at that," Blanche said.
It appeared, he said, that five shots in total were fired during the incident.
Blanche said the suspect "fired out of a shotgun, and we know that happened".
He added that the ballistics were still being "looked at and finalised".
The same day, the government unveiled its criminal complaint against Allen.
It stated that the accused "approached and ran through the magnetometer holding a long gun".
"As he did so, US Secret Service personnel assigned to the checkpoint heard a loud gunshot.
"US Secret Service Officer V.G. was shot once in the chest; Officer V.G. was wearing a ballistic vest at the time."
Prosecutors do not specifically allege that Allen shot the officer, however.
"That is interesting and noteworthy because what it shows is the government does not yet have conclusive proof that the suspect did shoot the agent," Lesko said.
The legal expert also noted that prosecutors have not charged Allen with assaulting a Secret Service officer, although Blanche has said the justice department could file more counts.
Neither did a government filing for Allen's detention on Wednesday contain any reference to a Secret Service officer being shot.
It said a Secret Service officer had "observed the defendant fire the shotgun in the direction of the stairs leading down to the ballroom".
But the government does not say whether Allen's alleged shot struck anyone.
Watch: 'Are they gunshots?' BBC correspondent's minute-by-minute account of dinner shooting
A split screen with Tom Bateman on the left and a photo of people hiding under dinner tables on the right
In a filing arguing for his release, defence lawyers wrote: "Moreover, the government, after essentially asserting that Mr Allen shot a Secret Service Officer in the criminal complaint, has apparently retreated from the theory by not mentioning the alleged officer at all in its memorandum."
Lawyers for Allen did not immediately return the BBC's request for comment.
On Thursday, Jeanine Pirro, a former Fox News host and now the US Attorney for the District of Columbia, posted new security footage of the incident on X.
The video shows a gunman, identified by authorities as Allen, running through a security checkpoint at the hotel.
Pirro said the clip showed the suspect shoot a Secret Service officer, though it is unclear from the footage if he does fire.
The clip also shows a Secret Service officer raising his gun - several muzzle flashes can be seen from his firearm.
"There is no evidence the shooting was the result of friendly fire," Pirro wrote.
That same day, Secret Service Director Sean Curran told Fox News: "All the evidence that I've seen, the suspect shot our officer point-blank range with a shotgun."
Reviews of ballistics and other evidence can take weeks, if not months, and authorities will probably release more information as the case continues.
Ultimately, whether the defendant shot the officer or not may not matter too much to prosecutors if they can secure a conviction.
"They have enough charges here to put Allen away for a very long time", if a jury finds him guilty, Lesko said.
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