Cole Tomas Allen case reveals Secret Service failures at D.C. gala

Cole Tomas Allen case reveals Secret Service failures at D.C. gala


According to Acting Atty. Gen. Todd Blanche and other top administration officials, the U.S. Secret Service did a fine job protecting President Trump and Cabinet members from the gunman who breached the White House Correspondentsโ€™ Assn. dinner Saturday.

โ€œThat horrible act was stopped because of the courage and professionalism of law enforcement โ€” the officers who responded without hesitation and did their jobs as they were trained to do,โ€ Blanche said Monday.

However, according to a detailed accounting filed Wednesday by federal prosecutors in the criminal case against suspect Cole Tomas Allen, the performance of the nationโ€™s preeminent protection agency was marred by inattentiveness and misfires and saved by โ€œextraordinary good fortuneโ€ and the gunman falling to the ground.

โ€œThe defendant, armed with a 12-gauge shotgun, a .38 caliber pistol, two knives, four daggers, and enough ammunition to take dozens of lives, was apprehended by [Secret Service] officers mere feet away from the ballroom where his primary target was located, along with other members of the Cabinet,โ€ prosecutors wrote Wednesday, in a filing arguing for Allen to be held in detention pending trial on one charge of trying to kill the president and two firearms charges.

Contradicting a prior claim by Blanche that officers had โ€œpromptly tackled and detainedโ€ Allen, prosecutors wrote that the 31-year-old tutor from Torrance simply โ€œfell to the groundโ€ after blowing past a team of agents just two open flights of stairs from the ballroom.

They wrote that one officer fired at Allen five times, but never hit him.

The same officer saw Allen fire his shotgun โ€œin the direction of the stairs leading down to the ballroom,โ€ prosecutors wrote, and officers later discovered โ€œone spent cartridge in the barrel and eight unfired cartridges in the magazine tube.โ€

Prosecutors said nothing about the Secret Service officer who Blanche said was shot in his ballistic vest during the incident โ€” adding to speculation that the officer may have been shot not by Allen, but by a fellow officer, or not at all.

Agency critiqued before

In all, the court filing brought further into focus a chaotic Secret Service response that appeared flawed from the start, including in a video Trump posted shortly after the incident in which agents appeared to be idling around an unobstructed entrance when Allen ran past them.

It added to concerns that law enforcement, security experts and members of Congress had raised about the performance of an agency that has been repeatedly called on to improve after previous attempts on Trumpโ€™s life. At a 2024 campaign rally in Butler, Pa., a gunman fired a bullet that grazed Trumpโ€™s ear, and that same year, another assailant prepared to shoot him from the unsecured perimeter of a Florida golf course.

Robert Dโ€™Amico, a former FBI deputy chief of operations for hostage rescue teams who is now a security consultant, said the security failures he saw in the Secret Serviceโ€™s preparation for Saturdayโ€™s dinner โ€” including its failure to set up basic barriers to prevent people from sprinting into the secured area โ€” were stunning, especially given the past threats and the fact the nation is at war with Iran.

โ€œItโ€™s for a person like Trump, whoโ€™s had two assassination attempts before and is at war with Iran, which has terrorist training and proxies up, and you still donโ€™t have the basics?โ€ Dโ€™Amico said. โ€œItโ€™s unfathomable.โ€

Other concerns have been voiced by members of Congress, including Republicans.

The House Oversight Committee has requested a briefing from the Secret Service, and Sen. Josh Hawley (R-Mo.) has called for a hearing before the Senate Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs Committee, which also investigated the Butler incident.

In a letter urging the hearing, Hawley said the latest incident โ€œraises questions about presidential security arrangements, potential resource needs, and the degree to which reforms previously proposed by Congress have been adopted.โ€

House Speaker Mike Johnson (R-La.) told Fox News that from โ€œa laymanโ€™s perspective,โ€ event security โ€œlooked a little lax in terms of getting into the building,โ€ and that it โ€œdoesnโ€™t sound like it was sufficient.โ€

Sean M. Curran, director of the Secret Service, has been on Capitol Hill in recent days briefing lawmakers.

He told CBS News that agents did a โ€œgreat job,โ€ but also that the incident remains under review. White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt has said that White House Chief of Staff Susie Wiles would be leading discussions on potential updates to Secret Service plans for securing the president.

Fear of graver threats

Blanche has argued that proof of the Secret Serviceโ€™s effectiveness at the press gala was in the result: Allen was stopped, Trump and other officials were unharmed and no one was killed, despite Allenโ€™s alleged intent.

However, the concerns being raised have to do with the vulnerabilities that were exposed as much as those that were exploited.

Because the dinner was not designated a major โ€œnational special security eventโ€ โ€” such as a political convention โ€” there were no trained counterassault agents on standby to prevent a breach or to take down a person with a weapon, officials have said.

Law enforcement experts said that was clearly a mistake given so many top officials โ€” Trump, Johnson, Vice President JD Vance, Secretary of State Marco Rubio, Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent and Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth, among others โ€” were in the room.

Such a gathering could have been targeted by foreign adversaries or others with far more experience, less regard for human life and much greater firepower than Allen, experts said.

โ€œMost of my military friends are all saying the same thing,โ€ said Dโ€™Amico, who is also a former infantry platoon commander in the U.S. Marines. โ€œIf you had had a team of three or four [gunmen], they would have gotten to [Trump].โ€™โ€

In the initial criminal complaint against Allen, prosecutors included the text of an email Allen sent to family just as he was preparing to rush the security perimeter, in which he allegedly wrote that he had chosen to use buckshot in order to โ€œminimize casualtiesโ€ and prevent bystanders from being wounded by more powerful bullets penetrating walls.

He also allegedly wrote that he was willing to โ€œgo through most everyoneโ€ at the event to get to top administration officials, but that guests and hotel staff were โ€œnot targets at all.โ€

In Wednesdayโ€™s filing, prosecutors describe Allenโ€™s actions as โ€œpremeditated, violent, and calculated to cause death,โ€ and say he was โ€œladen with weaponsโ€ as he breached security. But none of those weapons included assault-style rifles that can fire bullets rapidly and have been used to kill civilians in mass shootings across the country for years.

The filing described Allen โ€” a Caltech graduate and high school tutor โ€” not as some trained tactical expert, but as an ideologue who spent part of his Amtrak journey from California to Washington waxing poetic about the landscape around him, describing Pennsylvaniaโ€™s woods as โ€œvast fairy lands filled with tiny trickling creeks in spring.โ€

Could have been worse

Dโ€™Amico said he and other Marines learned early on in Iraq that entrances to secured locations have to be designed in a โ€œserpentineโ€ fashion, forcing anyone approaching to move more slowly through the area and giving security officers more time to assess their intentions. And at an event the size of the correspondentsโ€™ dinner, with so many top officials gathered in a public hotel, you would want to make entrances โ€œeven more difficult.โ€

And yet no barriers seemed to be in place at the event, he said โ€” something anyone trained more than Allen could have capitalized on.

โ€œIf they just had come through in a team of three or four who were coordinated and trained, there absolutely would have been penetration into the ballroom,โ€ Dโ€™Amico said. โ€œIt would have been a gunfight.โ€

Allen himself questioned the security at the event, according to court records, allegedly writing that he had walked into the Washington Hilton with multiple weapons and no one considered โ€œthe possibility that I could be a threat.โ€

He wrote that if he โ€œwas an Iranian agent, instead of an American citizen,โ€ he โ€œcould have brought a damn Ma Deuce in here and no one would have noticedโ€ โ€” referring to a powerful machine gun.

โ€œIt is fortunate he was only armed with what he had,โ€ said Ed Obayashi, a California law enforcement expert on use of force.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *