Shocking latest video footage shows the moment shots rang out on the White House Correspondents’ Dinner last weekend.
Jeanine Pirro, america Attorney for the District of Columbia, posted what appears to be security camera footage of the shooting incident via X on Thursday, April 30. Shooting suspect Cole Tomas Allen can allegedly be seen scouting the Washington Hilton someday before President Donald Trump, first lady Melania Trump, Vice President JD Vance and lots of other government officials attended the annual dinner on Saturday, April 25.
The safety footage then cuts from Friday, April 24, to the night of the White House Correspondents’ Dinner.
Officials will be seen seemingly dismantling a security checkpoint through the dinner when Allen, 31, allegedly rushes past the magnetometer with a weapon in hand. He then allegedly exchanges gunfire with at the very least one security agent.
The wounded agent was struck in his protective vest and later hospitalized. President Trump, 79, told reporters at a White House press briefing late Saturday that the agent was “saved by the indisputable fact that he was wearing, obviously, a excellent bulletproof vest.”
“The vest did the job,” Donald briefed the media. “I just spoke to the officer and he was doing great, he’s in great shape, in very high spirits and I told him we love him and respect him and he’s a really proud guy, he’s very happy with what he does, the Secret Service agent.”
On Thursday, Pirro, 74, claimed that she was releasing this stunning latest footage to debunk theories that the Secret Service agent was wounded by friendly fire within the midst of the chaos.
“Today, we’re releasing video already provided to U.S. District Court showing Cole Allen shoot a U.S. Secret Service officer during his try and assassinate the President on the White House Correspondents’ Dinner,” Pirro tweeted. “There isn’t a evidence the shooting was the results of friendly fire. The video also shows Allen casing the realm within the Hilton Hotel the day before the attack. My office together with the @FBI will proceed this extensive investigation to bring Cole Allen to justice.”
Allen was apprehended through the armed altercation and was subsequently charged with one count of attempting to assassinate the President of america, transportation of a firearm and ammunition in interstate commerce with intent to commit a felony, and discharge of a firearm during a criminal offense of violence, per the Justice Department. He has not yet entered a plea.
As shots were fired outside of the Washington Hilton ballroom, Vice President Vance, 41, was quickly evacuated from the fundamental stage. It took around 20 seconds before the Trumps were rushed to safety by Secret Service agents.
Asked in regards to the delay in his evacuation by reporters, the president told 60 Minutes on Sunday, April 26, “What happened is, it was just a little bit me. I desired to see what was happening, and I wasn’t making it that easy for [the shooter].”
Cole Tomas Allen allegedly exchanges fire with security agent. Courtesy X/Jeanine Pirro
“I desired to see what was occurring. And by that point, we began to understand possibly it was a nasty problem, different sort of an issue, bad one, and different than what can be normal noise from a ballroom, which you hear on a regular basis,” he added. “I used to be surrounded by great people, and I probably made them act just a little bit more slowly. I said, ‘Wait a minute. Let me see.’”
Vance opened as much as Fox News about his experience on Wednesday, April 29, explaining that he was more concerned for his pregnant wife, Usha Vance, watching from home. (The Vances announced in January that they predict their fourth child.)
“I’m sitting up there on the dais with some journalists and clearly the President of america just a few seats to my right. There’s numerous commotion. You hear some loud noises. I had no idea what it was,” he recalled.
The vp continued, “Before I had any idea what was occurring, I began seeing people duck under their tables or reply to what was occurring far behind the ballroom. An agent comes and whispers in my ear, says principally, ‘Sir, we now have to go away.’ … The agent kind of lifts me to my feet and I walk off stage and go to my hold room and wait and see what’s occurring.”
Vance acknowledged that the frightening ordeal gave him latest appreciation for the Secret Service agents who put their lives on the road every single day.
“As you learn this information, the thing that I actually gained an appreciation for, is what a tremendous job the agents of the Secret Service do,” he told Fox News.
Allen stays behind bars ahead of his trial.




