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POLITICS

Secret Service failed White House event security on multiple fronts

Saturday, May 2, 2026 · from 4 podcasts, 5 episodes
  • Multiple witnesses reported zero ID checks or magnetometers at the presidential event.
  • The shooter, a Caltech graduate, bypassed security despite bringing multiple weapons.
  • Lawmakers are using the breach to justify a $400 million White House ballroom.

The third assassination attempt on Donald Trump exposed a security perimeter that wasn't there. Guests, including former Biden official Simone Sanders, walked past the presidential limousine and into the Washington Hilton without showing ID or a ticket. Congressman Mike Lawler confirmed there was no verified attendee list at the door. As Krystal Ball and Saagar Enjeti reported on Breaking Points, the Secret Service failed to secure the hotel or implement basic magnetometer checks.

"[Simone Sanders] said she drove up, they didn't stop the vehicle, she walked in, no one asked for a ticket, no one asked for ID."

- Saagar Enjeti, Breaking Points

The shooter, Cole Allen, exploited this laxity. A 31-year-old Caltech graduate and former NASA intern, he traveled by train from Los Angeles with a makeshift shotgun, a handgun, and knives. He booked a room at the hotel in early April. On The Daily, Devlin Barrett noted his detailed, premeditated writings established Trump as the specific target, providing the legal foundation for an assassination charge.

Officials offered contradictory assessments of their response. Deputy Attorney General Todd Blanche called it a “massive security success story” because Allen was tackled at an inner checkpoint. Saagar Enjeti dismissed that framing, citing his own experience with high-security events where perimeters are airtight for miles. The Secret Service agent shot was hit by return fire from his own colleagues.

Politically, the failure is accelerating a pre-existing project. Senator Lindsey Graham introduced a bill to authorize $400 million in taxpayer funds for a secure White House ballroom. Trump had previously framed it as a private venture. On The Intelligence from The Economist, John Prideau noted Trump immediately used the lapse to pitch a “drone-proof” and “bulletproof” facility, arguing he should never have to leave the White House perimeter.

"Lindsey Graham is reframing Donald Trump's White House ballroom - originally pitched as a privately funded venture - as a $400 million national security mandate."

- Breaking Points with Krystal and Saagar

The breach at the same hotel where Reagan was shot in 1981 signals a systemic collapse. With the agency lacking a permanent inspector general, past failures remain uninvestigated. The debate is no longer about a single checkpoint but whether public figures can be safely protected in any open venue.

Source Intelligence

- Deep dive into what was said in the episodes

4/28/26: Taxpayers To Pay For Ballroom, Congress Pushes Veteran Benefits For IDF, Hezbollah Drone Attacks, Ann Coulter On Trump And IranApr 28

  • Senator Lindsey Graham introduced a bill to authorize $400 million in taxpayer funds to build a secure ballroom for the President at the White House following an assassination attempt.
  • Krystal reported that the Trump administration secretly gave Clark Construction a no-bid contract to renovate fountains in Lafayette Park. The original $3.3 million estimate ballooned to a $17.4 million contract.
  • Legislation (HR 8445) has been introduced to extend U.S. veterans benefits like job re-employment rights and foreclosure protections to American citizens who serve in the Israeli Defense Forces.
  • Analyst Shiel Ben-Ephraim said Israeli opposition leaders Naftali Bennett and Yair Lapid have united against Netanyahu, but their views are now indistinguishable and both support continuing military campaigns.
  • Shiel Ben-Ephraim stated the IDF chief warned 2026 will be a year of fighting on all fronts, but this reflects the current geopolitical alignment under Netanyahu, who uses war to distract from his legal troubles and the October 7 investigation.
  • Shiel Ben-Ephraim reported Hezbollah is using IEDs and drones attached to Ethernet cables, tactics learned from Ukraine, which the IDF cannot intercept, killing and injuring Israeli soldiers in Lebanon despite a U.S.-ordered halt to advances.
  • Ann Coulter argued the Iran war is a larger betrayal than Trump's immigration failures, stating Trump's pre-election messaging promised no war and his campaign retweeted warnings that Kamala Harris would start a conflict.
  • Ann Coulter said immigration restriction remains a politically winning issue for Trump despite his unpopular war, contrasting with Marco Rubio whom she distrusts due to his past support for amnesty legislation.
Also from this episode: (3)

Politics (2)

  • Saagar argued that a normal Secret Service barricade, costing $10-20 thousand per event, would be sufficient for security instead of a permanent ballroom, shifting the focus to improving Secret Service competency.
  • New U.S. immigration guidance lists participation in pro-Palestinian protests and criticism of Israel as 'overwhelmingly negative' factors for green card applicants.

Media (1)

  • Krystal cited new reporting that the alleged assassin at the White House Correspondents' dinner may not have fired any shots, and that Secret Service gunfire may have accidentally hit one of their own.

4/26/26: WHAT WE KNOW: WHCD Shooter NAMED, Security FAILUREApr 26

Also from this episode: (9)

Politics (5)

  • A shooting occurred at the Washington Hilton during the White House Correspondents' Dinner, requiring the President, Vice President, and senior officials to be rushed off stage.
  • The Deputy Attorney General, Todd Blanche, controversially labeled the incident a "massive security success story," arguing the suspect barely breached the perimeter.
  • Multiple witnesses, including Simone Sanders, reported a significant lack of standard security protocols, such as un-barricaded driveways, absent ID checks, and an unsecured hotel lobby.
  • Congressman Mike Lawler criticized the security, noting no photo ID requirements, unverified attendee lists, and no magnetometers before the ballroom, despite Secret Service acting swiftly.
  • President Trump linked the shooting to the need for a large, secure ballroom on White House grounds, which he claims is under construction and faces a lawsuit from a dog walker.

Society (2)

  • The gunman, Cole Allen, used a makeshift shotgun and also possessed a handgun and knives. One Secret Service agent was hit in a bulletproof vest and transported to the hospital, remaining unharmed.
  • Allen traveled from Los Angeles to D.C. via train, passing through Chicago, and booked a room at the Washington Hilton in April, checking in with weapons in his luggage.

Education (1)

  • Cole Allen, 31, from Torrance, California, is a Caltech mechanical engineering graduate and former NASA JPL intern. He donated $25 to Act Blue in 2024 for "Harris for President."

History (1)

  • The Washington Hilton was also the site of President Reagan's 1981 assassination attempt, adding a surreal and shocking dimension to this recent security incident.

Assassination Attempt Suspect ChargedApr 28

  • Federal prosecutors charged suspect Cole Allen with attempting to assassinate the president, a crime carrying a potential life sentence, alongside charges for interstate firearm transportation and discharging a firearm during a crime of violence.
  • The suspect's handwritten note, which apologized to loved ones and framed his actions as a response to criticism, is central evidence for prosecutors to establish his intent to target President Trump.
  • Security camera footage shows the suspect sprinting through a checkpoint around 8:30 PM on Saturday with a shotgun. An agent fired five shots, missed, and was struck by a round in his protective vest before the suspect was tackled.
  • Security experts contrast this incident with the 2024 Butler, Pennsylvania assassination attempt, noting the perimeter here worked as designed by stopping the suspect before he reached the event floor.
  • A key unanswered security question is whether any law enforcement agency had prior intelligence identifying the suspect as a potential threat before the attack.
  • The Trump administration is using the incident to argue for the necessity of finishing construction on the White House ballroom, a project currently entangled in a legal fight over congressional approval.
Also from this episode: (4)

Society (1)

  • The 31-year-old suspect from Torrance, California held a master's in computer science from Caltech and worked as a tutor. People who knew him described him as nice and cheerful, expressing shock at his actions.

Politics (3)

  • Devlin Barrett notes a definitive increase in online threats against politicians, judges, schools, and hospitals, creating a larger sea of hostility for law enforcement to monitor.
  • President Trump and First Lady Melania Trump demanded ABC remove comedian Jimmy Kimmel following a joke made days before the shooting where Kimmel imagined himself emceeing the dinner.
  • Iran has rejected the latest U.S. proposal to reopen the Strait of Hormuz, which required ending the naval blockade but set aside issues regarding Iran's nuclear program and stockpile of enriched uranium.

Security banquet: queries over Trump protectionApr 27

  • Germany's Bundeswehr is undergoing a generational rearmament, known as the 'Zeitenwende,' significantly increasing public visibility for figures like General Karsten Breuer and leading to a new national military strategy.
  • Germany's defense budget exceeds 100 billion euros this year, with plans to reach 160 billion euros by 2029, and committed to NATO's 3.5% of GDP defense spending target six years ahead of schedule.
  • General Karsten Breuer acknowledges the need to replenish existing military systems after years of underfunding but seeks to adopt Ukraine's rapid innovation cycles for new weaponry and technology in Germany.
  • Germany faces challenges in military procurement efficiency and increasing active soldier numbers from just over 180,000 to a NATO-mandated 260,000 by 2035, likely requiring the reintroduction of conscription.
  • The German rearmament effort is partially driven by concerns that the US security guarantee, particularly under a potential Donald Trump presidency, cannot be relied upon, making Russia Europe's main adversary.
Also from this episode: (9)

Politics (4)

  • A gunman attempted to breach security at the White House Correspondents' Dinner, injuring a Secret Service agent and prompting Donald Trump and Vice President J.D. Vance to be rushed away.
  • John Priddo described the incident as a massive security failure, noting the gunman's manifesto boasted about lax security, but also highlighted the Secret Service's challenging role in a country with approximately half a billion civilian guns.
  • Donald Trump framed the assassination attempt, the third on his life, as justification for a new, highly secure White House ballroom, describing it as drone-proof and bulletproof.
  • Despite a common perception of rising political violence, John Priddo suggests actual political violence is lower than in the 1960s and 1970s, though media coverage makes it feel more pervasive.

Society (3)

  • The 'Passport Bros' movement involves Western men traveling abroad for dating, seeking women in countries where their money and social status provide an advantage, often desiring traditional gender roles.
  • Listeners suggest the Passport Bros phenomenon stems from socioeconomic challenges faced by young men in the West, with remote work enabling them to leverage higher earning currencies in lower-cost countries.
  • Historian Beth Bailey notes that people seeking to establish their own rules, as seen with Passport Bros, is a common trend during times of economic uncertainty.

Psychology (2)

  • Carla Subudana's reporting on Passport Bros found men seeking partners who facilitate traditional roles, sometimes specifying poorer women to more easily assert dominance within relationships.
  • While women also travel abroad for dating, Carla Subudana observes the Passport Bros movement is distinct in its unified social media narrative that frequently blames Western women for not being 'feminine' or 'accommodating' enough.
No Agenda Show
No Agenda Show

Adam Curry

1863 - "Nekkidly"Apr 26

  • Adam Curry and John C. DeVorex hosted "No Agenda" Episode 1863 on Sunday, April 26, 2026. John C. DeVorex noted widespread "false flag" claims regarding an unspecified event.
  • Over 200 journalists signed a letter demanding that Donald Trump be challenged on press freedom at the White House Correspondents' Dinner, which also featured a mentalist instead of a comedian during his last attendance.
  • Margaret Brennan linked an alleged shooting at the dinner to the Second Amendment, citing 564 threats against judges and nearly 15,000 against lawmakers last year.
  • A 31-year-old alleged shooter, identified as Allen, traveled by train from Southern California with multiple weapons, including a shotgun, handgun, and knives, and shot a Secret Service officer in body armor.
  • Chris Cuomo defended the SPLC, noting its historical cooperation with federal law enforcement against hate groups, a relationship he claimed the Justice Department recently terminated.
  • Pfizer's post-marketing report noted over 1,200 suspected deaths within two months of Comirnaty's approval; a Paul Ehrlich Institute report identified 2,133, suggesting an actual 60,000 deaths in Germany with a 30x underreporting factor.
  • The Pfizer toxicologist stated that Comirnaty was not tested for preventing severe illness or death, invalidating the courts' assumption of a "positive risk-benefit ratio." Mortality in Germany rose significantly from 2021 to 2022.
  • Dr. Eric Berg highlighted that a 2007 law mandating drug study results be posted, with a $13,000 daily fine for non-compliance, has led to zero FDA fines in 19 years, totaling $19 billion owed by pharma.
  • British commentators viewed King Charles's U.S. visit as an "embarrassment" due to Donald Trump's past insults towards British troops, NATO, and the Royal Navy, despite its purpose as a "soft power" diplomatic effort.
  • A leaked Pentagon memo reportedly considered sanctions against NATO allies, including reviewing Britain's ownership of the Falklands, for not supporting the U.S. in the Iran war.
  • Argentina is rearming with F-16 jets from Denmark, supported by U.S. missiles, raising concerns for the UK's ability to defend the Falklands, given its limited military footprint there.
  • A 1974 Mike Wallace interview with the Shah of Iran suggested the 1970s oil crisis was a "fraud" orchestrated by oil companies diverting supply for profit, rather than a genuine shortage.
  • The book "The Men Who Run the World" describes commodity traders like Mark Rich who profited immensely from the Suez Canal closure and engaged in secretive oil flows, later being indicted for tax fraud and pardoned by President Clinton.
  • Shadowy traders operating from Dubai are rebranding sanctioned Russian, Iranian, and Venezuelan oil as Malaysian to bypass sanctions, a tactic that political scientists cite as a reason for sanctions' failure.
  • Manosphere podcasters are turning on Donald Trump, criticizing his unfulfilled promises on deportations, Epstein files, and gasoline prices, a shift CNN and MSNBC suggest could undermine his public image.
Also from this episode: (11)

Media (2)

  • During an interview about a reported false flag at the White House Correspondents' Dinner, Fox News allegedly cut off Aisha Hasni as she was about to reveal critical information.
  • Adam Curry emphasized that "No Agenda" provides analysis, not support, aiming to offer alternative perspectives by questioning mainstream narratives, a strategy he believes strengthens listener's beliefs or prompts questioning.

Politics (3)

  • The shooter's LinkedIn manifesto targeted "pedophile rapist and traitor" Trump administration officials, specifically excluding a "Mr. Patel." His brother had previously alerted local police to alarming writings.
  • Dame Rhonda described how an SPLC lawsuit, *Ricky Wyatt v. Alabama Department of Mental Health*, led to such high standards that Alabama and other states defunded mental health care.
  • John Stossel's 2017 report on the SPLC criticized its practice of labeling critics of radical Islam as "anti-Muslim extremists" and highlighted its growing endowment, then over $320 million.

AI & Tech (4)

  • Alex Jones claimed "globalist mad scientists" created an "intergalactic communication system," a term J.C.R. Licklider used in the 1960s to envision the internet as a nuclear-attack-resilient, distributed network.
  • John C. DeVorex is optimistic Apple's integrated chips and universal memory in devices like the Mac Mini and Mac Studio position them well for local AI model inference, unlike competitors who cram phones with "AI garbage."
  • Anthropic has substantially increased Claude AI service costs, with monthly subscriptions reaching $200 and additional credits costing $2 every 30 seconds of usage, suggesting an IPO strategy.
  • Florida's Attorney General, James Uthmeyer, opened a criminal investigation into OpenAI after an FSU shooter allegedly consulted ChatGPT over 200 times for planning advice.

Business (1)

  • John C. DeVorex asserted that Enron, during its bandwidth trading, undermined the internet's original peering system by introducing charges, contributing to its eventual centralization.

Science (1)

  • A former Pfizer Europe chief toxicologist testified in Germany that the Comirnaty vaccine's carcinogenicity and reproductive effects were not adequately tested before fast-track approval.