Trump WHCA Dinner Shooting Renews Scrutiny of Secret Service Response

By AJP Posted : April 28, 2026, 09:22 Updated : April 28, 2026, 09:22
Scene from the White House Correspondents' Association dinner at the Washington Hilton in Washington, D.C., on April 25 (local time). (AP/Yonhap)
The shooting incident at the White House Correspondents' Association dinner attended by President Donald Trump has renewed scrutiny of the U.S. Secret Service after an armed suspect moved through the hotel and reached an area near the event. Former Secret Service agents, however, said the core protective layers worked.
 
According to CBS News and Reuters, the suspect, Cole Thomas Allen, left a 10th-floor room at the Washington Hilton on April 25 (local time). Carrying a shotgun, a handgun and three knives, he used an internal stairwell toward the event area, then charged toward a hotel security screening point with metal detectors. Allen was subdued by uniformed Secret Service officers one floor above the ballroom where Trump was.
 
Reuters reported Allen was charged with attempted assassination of President Trump and could face life in prison if convicted.
 
Former agents largely framed the outcome as damage prevention rather than a breakdown.
 
Timothy LeBoeuf, who took part in WHCA dinner security during the George W. Bush and Barack Obama administrations, told CBS News that “everyone did their job,” calling it a “textbook response” in which a multilayered defense worked. He said the Secret Service uses outer, middle and inner perimeters, and the suspect did not reach the ballroom.
 
Paul Eckloff, a former senior official in the presidential protection detail, told CBS News the incident should be seen as preventing mass casualties. “Dozens could have been shot, but everyone walked out,” he said.
 
Former agent Mike Matranga also said the agency’s concentric security model held. He said the suspect ran at full speed toward the screening area, leaving officers only seconds to react. But he added that “you can’t completely secure an entire hotel,” and that public-venue events carry inherent risk.
 
The venue remains a central issue. The Washington Hilton is where former President Ronald Reagan was shot in 1981. Security upgrades later included an enclosed garage allowing a presidential vehicle to enter without outside exposure. Still, the building’s scale poses limits because guests, staff, delivery workers and other visitors share the same space.
 
LeBoeuf said that without defining where a venue begins and ends, “it becomes infinite.”
 
A.T. Smith, a former deputy director of the Secret Service, told CBS News it is possible to fully lock down an open hotel, but that is not typically done in the United States. Instead, he said, the agency sets its protective footprint around the event area where the president is and the access routes.
 
Some former agents said additional steps should be considered. The Independent quoted former agent Bobby McDonald as saying the system worked but could improve, calling it less a “successful outcome” than a “positive outcome.” Former agent Bill Gage said the defense model worked but that strengthening screening points and expanding protected zones could be reviewed.
 
The Secret Service also left room for changes. The Independent quoted spokesman Anthony Guglielmi as saying the WHCA dinner protection model proved effective, but improvements are expected “at every level” for future events.



* This article has been translated by AI.

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