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'Trump administration officials' were targets of White House Correspondents' Dinner shooter, AG says

Donald Trump speaks from the White House
President Donald Trump spoke from the White House after a shooting at the White House Correspondents' Dinner.

Mandel Ngan/AFP/Getty Images

  • The suspect traveled from Los Angeles to Washington by train with two guns, an official said.
  • President Donald Trump and Vice President JD Vance were evacuated and are safe.
  • The accused man will be formally charged in federal court on Monday.

The suspect in the shooting at the White House Correspondents' Dinner traveled from Los Angeles to Washington by train and checked into the hotel where the event was held — with two guns and a plan to target Trump administration officials, the nation's top prosecutor said on Sunday.

"We know that there were some writings, and we've already spoken with several witnesses who knew him," Todd Blanche, the acting US attorney general, said on NBC News' "Meet the Press."

Blanche stressed several times during the interview that the information about the suspect, widely identified by media citing law enforcement officials as Cole Allen, was "very preliminary."

Blanche said the suspect will be formally charged in federal court on Monday morning and faces at least two felonies — assault on a federal officer and discharging a firearm during that assault — that relate to a Secret Service agent who was shot at but protected by his armored vest.

No one else was injured during the chaotic incident at the Washington Hilton, where hundreds of journalists and government officials — including Trump, the first lady, Vice President JD Vance, and House Speaker Mike Johnson — were gathered for the annual celebration of a free press.

Workers and attendees run after a shooting during the White House Correspondents' Dinner.
Workers and attendees run after a shooting during the White House Correspondents' Dinner.

WHCA

The shooting has raised questions about the level of security at the event, which Trump boycotted in his first term and last year. He was quickly hustled off stage and evacuated to the White House after the shots rang out.

A security video posted by Trump on Truth Social hours after the shooting showed an individual running past security officers outside the main doors of the event. Officers in the video could be seen trying to grab the man, then drawing their weapons and pointing their guns at him.

In a press conference following the incident, Trump said a Secret Service agent was shot in his bulletproof vest and said that "he's in great shape."

What we know about the suspect

Photos of the shooter posted online by Trump on Saturday night appear to match the LinkedIn profile and other photos of Allen. Authorities have not publicly named him, and Business Insider has not independently confirmed his identity.

Allen, 31, of Torrance, describes himself on his LinkedIn as a "mechanical engineer and computer scientist by degree, independent game developer by experience, teacher by birth."

His current job is listed as part-time tutor at C2 Education, which provides "personalized support designed to improve test scores, strengthen academic skills, and help students reach their full potential." He graduated from CalTech in 2017 and earned his master's in computer science from California State University, Dominguez Hills in 2025.

Jeffrey Carroll, the interim chief of the Metropolitan Police Department, said in a press conference following the president's remarks that the suspect was armed with a shotgun, handgun, and knives when he tried to bypass a security checkpoint at the event.

The suspect was not struck by gunfire and was transported to a hospital for evaluation, Carroll said.

In remarks after the incident, Trump described the suspect as a "sick person" who had been "totally subdued and under control."

Inside the room when the shooting occurred

The incident occurred after 8:30 p.m. Friday night, shortly after Trump took his seat.

There was suddenly shouting in front of the stage, according to Tim Röhn, the senior editor of the Axel Springer Global Reporters Network, who attended the event. Business Insider is part of the network.

A photo of the scene after Trump was evacuated
The event was attended by hundreds of reporters and many officials from the Trump administration.

Tim Röhn

Röhn reported that pushing and chaos broke out, people started running, guests threw themselves to the floor, and hid under tables. From behind the curtains onstage, heavily armed officers emerged and pointed their rifles at the crowd.

Guests needed a screenshot of an invitation to gain access to the premises and the building, Röhn reported. Photo ID wasn't required. Inside, Secret Service agents patrolled in some areas with dogs, and there was an airport-style security checkpoint in front of the ballroom. Jackets did not need to be removed for security checks.

CBS senior White House correspondent Weijia Jiang, the president of the White House Correspondents' Association, said law enforcement had requested that everyone leave the premises "consistent with protocol," and that Trump "insists" the event be rescheduled within 30 days.

Röhn reported that, following Jiang's remarks, attendees started leaving the venue.

Suspect to be arraigned on Monday

Blanche said law enforcement had worked through the night to piece together information about the suspect and had obtained warrants to examine his devices in their search for a motive.

"We believe he was targeting administration officials in this attack," Blanche told "Meet the Press," adding, "Obviously, President Trump is a member of the administration."

He added, "It does appear he did in fact set out to target folks who work in the administration, likely including the president, but I want to wait and not get ahead of us on that."

Shirtless suspect restrained on floor
The suspect was tackled by law enforcement and photographed shirtless on the floor.

US President Trump via Truth Social/Anadolu via Getty Images

Jeanine Pirro, the US attorney for the District of Columbia, who was at the dinner, said at a press conference that her office would consider terrorism charges if the investigation revealed evidence sufficient to sustain them.

Responding to reporters' questions during his press conference, Trump advocated for the man to be sentenced to life in prison.

'Praying for our country tonight'

Until the start of the event, it was unclear when Trump would appear and how long he would stay.

Though Trump appeared as a private citizen and media personality in 2011 and 2015, he boycotted the White House Correspondents' Dinner during his first term.

The Washington Hilton hotel, long the site of the annual dinner, is where President Ronald Reagan was shot and wounded in a 1981 assassination attempt, just steps outside the hotel after addressing a labor gathering.

Trump was the target of two assassination attempts during his 2024 campaign, including a shooting at a rally in Butler, Pennsylvania, that left him injured, and a separate incident at one of his Florida golf courses in which a suspect was apprehended and later sentenced to life in prison.

Read the original article on Business Insider

Trump's signature to appear on US currency, a first for a sitting president

Donald Trump walks in the White House
Donald Trump will be the first sitting president in US history to have his signature on the nation's currency.

BRENDAN SMIALOWSKI/AFP via Getty Images

  • President Trump will be the first sitting US president to have his signature on the nation's currency.
  • The move is symbolic of the nation's "fiscal strength" under Trump, the Treasury announced Thursday.
  • Since Trump took office, the dollar has fallen amid sweeping tariffs and global conflict.

The US Treasury Department announced Thursday that President Donald Trump's signature will appear on future US paper currency, marking the first time a sitting president's name will be printed on American bills.

Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent, in a press release, framed the move as symbolic, saying US currency should reflect the country's economic standing under Trump's leadership and serve as a marker of the nation's "fiscal strength and stability."

The decision breaks with long-standing precedent. For more than a century, US banknotes have carried the signatures of Treasury officials — not the president.

The Treasury said the move was to commemorate the coming 250th anniversary of American independence, as the administration pursues a broader effort to mark the milestone through currency and coin redesigns.

New bills bearing Trump's signature, along with that of the Treasury Secretary, will begin being issued at the semiquincentennial, the Treasury said. It's unclear which bills will bear Trump's signature or how long the initiative is expected to last.

"The decision for Trump to end years of precedent of Treasury Secretaries signing bills is another piece of evidence that Trump is trying to brand everything in his name, even though it is unusual and in the mold of what more undemocratic leaders typically do in other countries," Christian Grose, a professor of political science and public policy at the University of Southern California, told Business Insider.

Grose said the move risks making using cash a partisan act, potentially making Trump's supporters more enthusiastic about cash payments, and Democrats more likely to use electronic payments.

The US dollar has faced downward pressure in recent months, driven in part by sweeping tariffs that have rattled global trade and increased import costs, as well as the ongoing war in Iran, which has heightened geopolitical risk and unsettled currency markets.

Economists have warned that both factors can weaken demand for the dollar by slowing growth and increasing uncertainty.

Read the original article on Business Insider

Lazy bartending has gone mainstream as canned spirits and 'mix-it-yourself' kits disrupt bars

A display of ready-to-drink cocktails on a grocery store shelf.
Ready-to-drink cocktails continue to surge in popularity, both in the US and worldwide.

John Keeble/Getty Images

  • Americans are visiting bars less often and spending more when they do, due to rising costs.
  • That leaves plenty of room for products that promise bar-quality results at home.
  • As a result, ready-to-drink cocktails and mix-it-yourself kits are surging in popularity.

If you can crack a can or pour from a jar, you're halfway to a cocktail.

Across the drinks industry, "lazy bartending" has gone mainstream. Ready-to-drink cocktails, canned spirits, and DIY infusion kits promise bar-quality drinks without the shaker, the garnish station, or even a bartender. And increasingly, consumers seem happy to trade mixology theater for convenience.

From canned margaritas to dehydrated fruit infusion kits, companies are racing to make cocktails easier to prepare and more portable. The trend reflects a broader shift in how younger consumers approach alcohol: they want high-quality drinks but without the effort, the bar tab, or the late-night outing traditionally associated with cocktails.

The rise of canned cocktails and mix-at-home kits also comes as bar habits shift. Industry data from NielsenIQ shows that Americans are visiting bars less often and spending more when they do, due to rising costs — leaving room for products that deliver bar-style cocktails with minimal effort.

That demand is fueling a fast-growing ready-to-drink category. Grand View Research estimated the global RTD cocktail market at about $3.7 billion in 2025 and projected it to reach more than $10 billion by 2033, driven largely by younger consumers prioritizing convenience and on-the-go drinks. In the US, the Distilled Spirits Council found that spirits-based RTDs posted 16.4% sales growth last year, making them the fastest-growing spirits category even as the broader alcohol market softened.

For brands like On The Rocks, convenience is the point. The company built its business on what Daniel May, senior brand director at On The Rocks, calls "high quality, crafted experiences" delivered in bottles or cans — cocktails developed with a mixologist but designed to be "pop it or crack the can, pour it over ice or drink."

The approach reflects how people are drinking today. On The Rocks says many cocktail occasions now happen outside traditional bars — casual gatherings, game nights, or smaller social events where consumers still want a premium drink but not the hassle of building a full home bar.

Smaller companies are leaning into the same logic from another angle. Infuse & Booze sells cocktail infusion jars filled with dried fruit, herbs, and sugar that customers add alcohol to at home. The founders told Business Insider that the idea started during camping trips when they realized mixing drinks outdoors was tedious.

The jars can make eight to 10 cocktails and are designed to sit in a refrigerator until guests want a drink — another nod to the industry's shift toward low-effort entertaining.

Even major spirits companies are adjusting to this mindset, with ready-to-drink mixes from brands like Malibu, Bacardi, and Absolut spreading across shelves nationwide. Caroline Begley, US VP of Marketing for Absolut Vodka, previously told Business Insider that younger drinkers are "drinking differently" and are increasingly "intentional about what they want to drink," with the occasion and vibe shaping their beverage choices.

That intentionality doesn't mean consumers are abandoning alcohol. Instead, they're redefining how cocktails fit into their lives — favoring drinks that are portable, flexible, and easy to prepare, whether they're hosting friends, heading to a festival, or opening something quick at home.

In other words, the modern cocktail hour might still involve premium spirits and creative flavors. It just might not involve a bartender.

Read the original article on Business Insider

Where TSA wait times are the longest, and how to check if your airport is impacted

Passengers wait in a check-in line at Ronald Reagan Washington National Airport.
Passengers wait in a check-in line at Ronald Reagan Washington National Airport.

REUTERS/Kylie Cooper/File Photo

  • Delays persist at TSA checkpoints across US airports due to the partial government shutdown.
  • As of Monday morning, Hartsfield-Jackson Atlanta Airport is advising travelers to show up 4 hours early.
  • Here's the latest on TSA delays, and how to check wait times before you travel.

If you're flying in the US, get ready to stand in line.

Airports across the US are continuing to see lengthy waits at security checkpoints as scores of TSA workers call out due to missed paychecks.

A partial government shutdown has left the Department of Homeland Security and its Transportation Security Administration unfunded and their agents unpaid at the height of the spring break travel season.

As many as 10% of all TSA agents called out on several days last week, DHS updates showed, with absence rates averaging as much as 20% in some airports. A DHS spokesperson told Business Insider that some airports, such as William P. Hobby Airport in Houston, had seen absence rates as high at 40.8%.

Security lines in affected airports are spiking unpredictably from day to day, and sometimes even from hour to hour.

"The current unpredictability is being driven by unpredictable staffing levels, basically, how many TSA officers are showing up for work on any given day," Sheldon H. Jacobson, the founder professor of engineering at the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign and an expert on aviation security and airport security screening, told Business Insider.

"TSA officers have historically been cross-trained to do many different tasks, so the number that show up is the key factor," Jacobson said.

How long are the TSA delays?

Delays at TSA checkpoints across the US have been unpredictable, and some airports are changing how they're communicating with travelers.

As of Monday morning, Hartsfield-Jackson Atlanta International Airport, the world's busiest by passenger numbers, now displays the following message on its website: "Due to current federal conditions, passengers are advised to allow at least 4 hours or more for domestic and international screenings."

Atlanta has been among the worst-affected airports since the shutdown began, with over a third of TSA staff not showing up on some days.

The airport said there had been congestion at the international checkpoint as domestic travelers try to bypass long lines in the domestic terminal. The airport said domestic travelers should use the domestic checkpoints.

Passengers in line at Fort Lauderdale airport.
Passengers faced lengthy lines at Fort Lauderdale-Hollywood International Airport on Thursday, March 19.

Taylor Rains/Business Insider

At Houston's George Bush Intercontinental Airport, lines stretched over three hours on Sunday evening. As of Monday morning, the average wait time is 28 minutes.

Lines at checkpoints at JFK, the New York area's biggest airport, are running at 45 minutes on Monday.

JFK said it has "deployed additional customer care staff into terminals to help manage queues, assist passengers, and keep people moving as efficiently as possible."

As of Monday, Newark Liberty International Airport displays a message on its website that says security wait times may be "significantly longer than normal."

"Please allow for significantly more time and check with your airline for the current status of your flight," the message says.

Separate from TSA issues, LaGuardia Airport was closed early Monday after a plane collided with a vehicle. It will remain closed until at least 2 p.m. ET.

Denver, home of the fourth-busiest airport in the US, is experiencing wait times of 45 minutes on Monday. Dallas-Fort Worth lines are at 46 minutes.

At Los Angeles International Airport, the nation's fifth-busiest travel hub, waits were listed as "0" minutes.

Some airports have so far avoided the hourslong lines. Business Insider's Taylor Rains flew out of Las Vegas last week and saw minimal TSA lines.

The empty TSA line at Las Vegas airport.
The general and TSA PreCheck lines at Las Vegas airport were empty on Monday night.

Taylor Rains/Business Insider

The maximum wait time at Philadelphia International Airport was listed as 30 minutes on Monday, although some terminals were quicker.

How to check TSA wait times

The unpredictable delays mean travelers should plan for long waits even if their airport hasn't yet experienced problems.

The easiest way to avoid the stress of missing your flight is to give yourself extra time in the airport. Many airports are advising travelers this week to arrive up to three hours before their flight, even for domestic flights.

Many airports, including major hubs like Atlanta, Houston, JFK, Newark, Philadelphia, Dallas-Fort Worth, and Denver, have been posting TSA wait times live on their websites.

Long security lines at Houston Hobby Airport.
Flying this month? Budget extra time at the airport and consider investing in expedited security lanes.

Brett Coomer/Houston Chronicle via Getty Images

These can also provide more specific insights. For example, DFW's website shows the wait times at each checkpoint.

You can also use the MyTSA mobile app. It provides estimated wait times in 15-minute intervals based on average checkpoint data. The app, however, will use historical data if the live data cannot be retrieved. The TSA also says it is not "actively" managing its sites during the partial shutdown, and so the app may not always be updated.

How long will the TSA delays persist?

Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy said airport delays could get worse.

"As we get into next week and they're about to miss another payment, this is going to look like child's play, what's happening right now," Duffy said on CNBC.

Some airports could be forced to close, both Duffy and Adam Stahl, the TSA's acting deputy administrator, said.

Airports like Denver and Seattle have asked the public for food, gift cards, and basic supplies to support TSA staff working without pay.

Read the original article on Business Insider

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