April 25-26, 2026: Shooting at White House Correspondents’ Dinner

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Timeline of shooting incident at the White house Correspondents’ Dinner
2:56 • Source: CNN
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2:56
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Justice Department asks preservation group to abandon White House ballroom lawsuit

A crane being used to construct the new White House ballroom is seen above the White House, on April 19, in Washington DC.

The Justice Department asked the nation’s leading historic preservation group to drop its lawsuit seeking to stop the president from building a White House ballroom, saying the threat to Donald Trump on Saturday shows the space is needed “for the safety and security of the President.”

“Put simply, your lawsuit puts the lives of the President, his family, and his staff at grave risk,” the department’s civil division head, Brett Shumate, wrote in a letter to the National Trust for Historic Preservation.

He continued, “I hope yesterday’s narrow miss will help you finally realize the folly of a lawsuit that literally serves no purpose except to stop President Trump no matter the cost.”

Administrative officials have argued in court that the proposed ballroom “advances critical national-security objectives.” A federal judge, however, called the assertion “incredible, if not disingenuous.”

There are plans for a highly sophisticated bunker under the proposed ballroom. But the National Trust for Historic Preservation has repeatedly said Trump is erroneously conflating the bunker with the above-ground addition.

Acting Attorney General Todd Blanche wrote Sunday on X that the lawsuit was a “passing aesthetic gripe of a single person” that “cannot possibly justify delaying the construction of a secure facility for the President to do his job.”

Shumate said that if the National Trust for Historic Preservation did not drop its lawsuit by Monday morning, the administration would move to dismiss the case.

FBI seeking to clarify timeline of when family notified police of suspect's writings

Secret Service agents, National Guard members, FBI agents, and Metropolitan Police Department officers react to a shooting at the venue of the annual White House Correspondents' dinner, in Washington, DC, on Saturday.

The Trump administration is trying to clarify the timeline of when the suspected gunman’s family learned of his writings — and when they notified local police in Connecticut, multiple sources familiar with the matter told CNN.

The White House originally told CNN that suspected gunman Cole Tomas Allen’s brother notified the New London Police Department of an alleged “manifesto” Allen​ had sent to his family members minutes before the incident Saturday night. At that time, a White House official said the family notified police, and that contact also came minutes before the incident.

However, a White House and an administration official now say the timeline is in flux. While the suspect did send what some in the administration are calling a “manifesto” to his family roughly 10 minutes before the incident, one source said the family did not read or report the writings to local law enforcement until after the event.

Another source, though, said the FBI is still actively investigating the matter and was hesitant to confirm precisely both when the family learned of the writings and when they notified law enforcement.

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