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D.C. gala gunman wrote ‘manifesto,’ traveled from California before attack, officials say
Cole Tomas Allen, the suspected gunman who rattled Washington’s leaders by exchanging gunfire with officials just outside a press gala late Saturday, had made a long journey from Southern California and written a “manifesto” threatening Trump administration officials before the attack, officials said.
Allen, a 31-year-old Caltech graduate and high school tutor from Torrance, is believed to have taken a train first to Chicago and then to D.C. before checking into the Washington Hilton with two guns he had previously purchased, authorities said.
The attacker managed to bypass several layers of security at the White House Correspondents’ Assn. dinner before being taken down by armed agents outside the ballroom where President Trump and an array of other top federal officials were seated.
Members of law enforcement respond during the White House Correspondents Dinner on Satruday.
(Tom Brenner / Associated Press)
Neither Allen nor a legal representative for him could be reached for comment Sunday.
According to Trump, Allen wrote a “manifesto” prior to the attack, and shared it with family. His brother flagged it to local law enforcement in New London, Conn., late Saturday. The New York Post reported that Allen described himself in the document as the “Friendly Federal Assassin” and revealed he intended to kill Trump administration officials.
New London Police Deputy Chief John Perry said that around 10:30 p.m. a man came to the lobby of the agency’s headquarters to report that he’d received a troubling email from Allen. The relative initially thought it was spam, but then saw the news of what had unfolded in D.C. and felt he needed to report it.
Perry would not say what was in the email, and did not know exactly what time it was sent, but said that the relative said he only saw and opened it around 10 p.m. “I think he was watching what was going on and kind of put 2 and 2 together and said, ‘I need to go to my local PD,’” Perry said.
Police officials provided the email to the Secret Service and FBI, he said. Trump, who like other top officials was escorted from the ballroom unharmed, said the document would be released, but it had not been as of Sunday.
One officer was shot during the incident at “close distance with a very powerful gun,” but saved by his ballistic vest and was in “great shape” and “high spirits” afterward, Trump said late Saturday. The president called the suspect a “thug that attacked our constitution.”
Jeanine Pirro, the top federal prosecutor in D.C., said the suspect faces two criminal charges of using a firearm in a violent crime and assaulting a federal officer using a dangerous weapon. Officials said that more charges could follow and that an initial court appearance is likely Monday.
FBI agents arrive at a house in Torrance that is connected to shooting suspect Cole Tomas Allen.
(Robbin Goddard/Los Angeles Times)
Late Saturday, both local and federal law enforcement, including the FBI, swarmed the Torrance residence where Allen is believed to have lived with his family, with officers clearing the road and stringing police tape along part of the street. A man who responded to a knock on the front door said, “Not right now,” and declined to comment further.
The thwarted attack marked the latest in a string of incidents in which gunmen have gotten dangerously close to Trump, renewing questions about the safety and security of the president at a time of intense political division at home and roiling conflicts abroad.
Trump was grazed on the ear by a bullet at a presidential campaign event in Butler, Pa., in 2024 — the first of two attempts on his life during the campaign. The other involved a gunman targeting the president as he golfed in Florida, before federal agents intervened. Earlier this year, a gunman was killed at the president’s Mar-a-Lago residence after breaching a security perimeter.
On Sunday, questions swirled as to how such a security lapse could happen yet again — and whether large, high-profile events are safe for top officials in a nation where firearms are easy to obtain and ubiquitous.
Acting Atty. Gen. Todd Blanche, in an interview on NBC’s “Meet the Press” Sunday morning, said that federal authorities believe the suspect had set out alone “to target folks that work in the administration, likely including the president,” but that a motive was still being determined and evidence still being gathered — including from devices taken from Allen and in interviews with people who know him.
“As of now, we don’t have any connection to any particular policy directive of President Trump or Iran or anything else that we’re doing in this country, but we are looking into it,” he said.
Blanche also downplayed the threat posed to Trump, other officials in the room such as Vice President JD Vance and First Lady Melania Trump, and the hundreds of other attendees to the annual event. He said the gunman was stopped almost immediately after he darted past metal detectors and federal agents — a dramatic moment that was captured on surveillance video and posted online by the president.
Agents stand guard after an incident at the White House Correspondents’ Dinner.
(Andrew Harnik / Getty Images)
“Let’s not forget that the suspect didn’t get very far. He barely broke the perimeter,” Blanche said. “And so while this was extraordinarily dangerous and put a lot of lives at risk and there’s no doubt that that’s something that we’re going to have to learn from over the next couple weeks, the system worked. We were safe, President Trump was safe. His Secret Service agents kept him safe. All of us were safe.”
Blanche’s assessment of the attacker’s breach of security — which he said was only “by a few feet” — was disputed by some.
According to other attendees, including Times journalists, event staffers were checking tickets, though not very thoroughly, at multiple points prior to escalators that descended to the metal detectors where Allen allegedly bolted past armed security.
The detectors were right outside the event hall and where the bathrooms for the event were located, and the assailant was taken to the ground about 10 to 15 feet beyond them, attendees said. The shots — including two from the gunman, according to Blanche — were heard in the ballroom.
Allen, who graduated from Caltech in 2017 with a degree in mechanical engineering and is registered to vote with no party preference, made a $25 political contribution earmarked for then-Vice President Kamala Harris’ campaign challenging Trump for the presidency in 2024.
While at Caltech, he was a teaching assistant and a member of the school’s Christian fellowship and the Nerf club, according to his LinkedIn profile. He later studied computer science as a postgraduate student at Cal State Dominguez Hills.
Allen was named teacher of the month in December 2024 at C2 Education, which specializes in college test preparation, tutoring and academic advising. A representative for C2 Education was not immediately available for comment.
According to the New York Post, Allen himself had derided the event security in his writings beforehand, describing finding far less security at the hotel than he had expected when he arrived, armed, to check in.
U.S. Secret Service agents patrol the North Lawn at the White House after a shooting incident outside the ballroom at the annual White House Correspondents’ Assn. Dinner in Washington on Saturday night.
(Tom Brenner / Associated Press)
“I expected security cameras at every bend, bugged hotel rooms, armed agents every 10 feet, metal detectors out the wazoo. What I got (who knows, maybe they’re pranking me!) is nothing. No damn security. Not in transport. Not in the hotel. Not in the event,” he wrote, according to the Post. “I walk in with multiple weapons and not a single person there considers the possibility that I could be a threat.”
“I could have brought a damn Ma Deuce in here and no one would have noticed s—,” wrote the author, referring to a .50 caliber machine gun.
Authorities did not detail Allen’s alleged travel route to D.C., other than to say it was by train. In response to questions about whether Allen had taken Amtrak to get to Washington and whether his luggage would have undergone any security screening, Amtrak said only that it is cooperating with federal authorities.
Trump also zeroed in on security at the hotel being inadequate, in addition to posting the video of the suspect rushing past security and multiple pictures of him detained on the floor of the hotel.
While praising the federal agents who took the attacker down, Trump suggested that events with top U.S. officials should be held in more secure facilities — such as the giant ballroom he is trying to build on the White House grounds after demolishing the former East Wing.
“What happened last night is exactly the reason that our great Military, Secret Service, Law Enforcement and, for different reasons, every President for the last 150 years, have been DEMANDING that a large, safe, and secure Ballroom be built ON THE GROUNDS OF THE WHITE HOUSE,” Trump wrote on social media Sunday. “This event would never have happened with the Militarily Top Secret Ballroom currently under construction at the White House. It cannot be built fast enough!”
Weijia Jiang, president of the correspondents’ association, said in a statement Sunday that the group’s board “will be meeting to assess what happened and determine how to proceed.” She also thanked the U.S. Secret Service and other law enforcement for keeping people safe, and praised journalists in the room for leaping to work to inform the public of what had occurred.
Brian Levin, a professor emeritus of Cal State San Bernardino and founder of the Center for the Study of Hate and Extremism, said “newer and real, but mostly loner” threats of “hard left violence” against public officials have been on the rise.
“During this polarized era, self radicalization, psychological factors, weapons access, and the normalization of aggression have been recurrent recent themes as both extremist motivated homicides, threats against public officials, hate crime killings and aggravated bias assaults have all increased,” he said.
However, the threat is less organized and intertwined with peaceful civil society movements than some in the Trump administration have tried to portray, he said.
After Allen was first named in connection with the D.C. incident late Saturday, more than 100 journalists and other curious observers stood behind lines of yellow police tape at both ends of the Torrance street where he is believed to have lived — and where FBI agents had arrived in unmarked cars and armored vehicles about 9:45 p.m.
One local resident, who identified herself as Bora but declined to give her last name, said Sunday that it had been “loud until after midnight” in the usually quiet neighborhood. “Helicopters were overhead and people were out all night.”
She said she often waved to the friendly residents of the home agents had swarmed, who seemed “nothing special, just normal.”
Times staff writers Richard Winton, Ben Wieder and Justine McDaniel contributed to this report.
News
Two shot with BB gun at naked bike ride in downtown L.A.; suspect arrested

Two people were shot with a BB gun in downtown Los Angeles on Saturday morning, around the time of the city’s 19th annual naked bike ride.
Two adult males were shot and treated for lacerations at the scene, said Los Angeles Police Department spokesperson Officer Charles Miller.
Police were dispatched at around 11 a.m. to the corner of Temple and Alameda streets. The bike ride began at 10 a.m. near that intersection, and was set to end at around noon, according to the event’s schedule.
It’s not confirmed whether the victims were participating in the naked bike ride, Miller said. The event’s starting point was at a parking lot on the corner of Temple and Alameda streets, where the incident took place, according to the event’s Instagram account.
The event’s organizers didn’t immediately respond to The Times’ request for comment.
The suspect, an adult male, wore all black and traveled on a scooter. He was later taken into custody and is in jail awaiting booking, Miller said.
The annual event is part of World Naked Bike Ride, an international grassroots movement created to promote positive body image and encourage safer roads for cyclists. The bike rides take place in 70 cities nationwide and each draw hundreds of nude or semi-nude cyclists each year.
This year’s event held two 7- and 9-mile bike rides through downtown Los Angeles. Nudity is not required, though cyclists were encouraged to “ride as bare as you dare,” according to the event’s rules posted on social media.
Some cyclists attend naked, while others cover their bodies in paint, and bike in unison down L.A.’s streets. The bike ride is a permitted event by the LAPD, according to the organization’s Instagram account.
News
U.S.-Iran Deal’s Vague Language Comes Back to Haunt Peace Efforts
The deal called for Iran to “make arrangements” for the passage of ships through the Strait of Hormuz. Iran has interpreted that to mean it can designate which routes ships take.
News
The Nancy Grace Roman Space Telescope Arrives in Florida Ahead of Launch
On June 21st, NASA’s *Nancy Grace Roman Space Telescope* arrived at the Kennedy Space Center in Florida. This marks the beginning of the final phase of its prelaunch preparations ahead of the observatory’s launch on August 30th. It also puts NASA eight months ahead of schedule with the observatory, which was initially scheduled for launch in 2027. To get there, Roman was loaded into a protective, environmentally controlled transportation container and shipped to Baltimore.
From there, the agency’s Pegasus barge carried the spacecraft down the coast to Cape Canaveral, where it was unloaded and transported to NASA’s Kennedy Space Center. Over the next few weeks, technicians will perform numerous tests to ensure that Roman is ready for launch. This includes testing the telescope’s six solar panels and inspecting the insulation and thermal blankets, and loading its fuel tanks with about 290 gallons of hydrazine fuel.
The Nancy Grace Roman Space Telescope* is named in honor of NASA’s first female executive at NASA and the agency’s first Chief of Astronomy. Throughout the 1960s and 70s, Roman made significant contributions to the classification of stars and stellar motions. She was also a major advocate for space telescopes, and her work eventually led to the development of the first space observatory: the Hubble Space Telescope*. It is therefore fitting that Hubble’s direct successor would be named after the “Mother of Hubble.”
*NASA’s Pegasus barge arrives at the Launch Complex 39 turn basin at the agency’s Kennedy Space Center in Florida carrying NASA’s Nancy Grace Roman Space Telescope on Sunday, June 21, 2026. Credit: NASA/Amber Jean Notvest*
After arriving at the Cape, Roman was then transported to the Kennedy Space Center’s Payload Hazardous Servicing Facility, which recently completed upgrades in anticipation of Roman‘s arrival. After a series of cleanings to remove contaminants Roman had picked up during its long trip, the telescope was transported through the facility’s airlock and unboxed in the clean room. The telescope was then placed in a vertical position and moved by cranes to the facility’s work platform (the Pantheon).
Once deployed to the second Sun-Earth Lagrange point (L2), Roman will conduct some of the deepest views of the cosmos yet. Between its 2.4-m (7.9 ft) primary mirror and a field of view at least 100 times that of Hubble, the observatory is expected to collect and measure light from a billion galaxies during its 5-year primary mission. Using its coronograph instrument, Roman will be able to block starlight to directly image exoplanets orbiting closer to their stars (where habitable rocky planets are expected to be found).
All told, Roman is predicted to detect over 100,000 exoplanets during its mission, greatly expanding the current census and adding many more potentially habitable planets to the rolls. Using its spectrographs, the telescope will also obtain spectra from transiting and directly imaged planets, thereby allowing scientists to determine the chemical composition of their atmospheres. This is a crucial step in the characterization process, which is essential for gauging an exoplanet’s habitability.
Roman‘s wide field of view and rapid survey capabilities will allow it to observe billions of galaxies spanning multiple cosmological epochs. The resulting data will help scientists refine measurements of cosmic expansion (the Hubble-Lemaitre Constant), which could finally resolve the mystery of Dark Matter and Dark Energy.
In addition to Roman, the Pegasus barge also carried a weather cover for the core stage of the Artemis III‘s Space Launch System (SLS). This cover will protect the core stage’s thermal systems while it waits on Launch Pad 39B to be moved into the Vehicle Assembly Building (VAB), where it will be stacked in advance for its launch next year.
Further Reading: NASA
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