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There are evenings when the pageantry of official Washington reveals itself as nothing more than silk draped over steel nerves. Last night at the Washington Hilton, amid tuxedos, gowns, champagne, camera flashes, and the annual self congratulation of the White House press corps, the illusion shattered in an eruption of gunfire, screams, and panic. What began as a glittering dinner became, in seconds, the third major assassination attempt or near assassination attempt involving President Donald Trump in under two years. The ballroom that expected laughter instead received terror.  

The setting itself carried a dark historical resonance. The Washington Hilton is forever linked with the attempted assassination of President Ronald Reagan in 1981. That a second modern presidential bloodletting nearly unfolded in the same complex is a fact too astonishing to ignore. Critics had long questioned why a commercial hotel with such history remained a venue for high level presidential appearances. Last night, those concerns were answered in the most violent manner possible.

The White House Correspondents’ Dinner was already underway. President Trump, First Lady Melania Trump, Vice President JD Vance, cabinet officials, lawmakers, journalists, celebrities, and invited guests had entered the ballroom only moments earlier. Dinner service had begun. Waiters moved through aisles. Glassware clinked. The familiar hum of elite conversation floated through the room. Then, between approximately 8:34 and 8:40 p.m. Eastern, the sound came.  

At first many attendees mistook it for balloons popping or audio equipment malfunctioning. That is how insulated privilege often hears danger. But the confusion lasted only a heartbeat. Agents began shouting warnings. Security personnel moved with sudden velocity. Then came the unmistakable truth. Shots had been fired just outside the secured ballroom perimeter.

Authorities say the gunman, identified as Cole Allen, charged the main magnetometer screening area outside the ballroom. Reports indicate he passed at least one checkpoint and may have breached two separate security layers before being stopped. Surveillance footage reportedly showed him sprinting through a corridor toward the protected event area. He did not reach the ballroom itself, but he got close enough to trigger one of the most alarming presidential security breaches in modern memory.  

He was heavily armed. Metropolitan Police said Allen possessed a shotgun, a handgun, and multiple knives. Investigators believe the combination reflected preparation for several forms of violence. A shotgun for mass casualties in a crowd. A handgun for movement through hallways and tighter spaces. Knives for close quarters brutality or as backup weapons if the firearms failed. Investigators are now examining whether any of those weapons were loaded or assembled inside the hotel itself.  

The shooting reportedly lasted twenty to twenty five seconds. That span is brief on a clock and eternal in a crisis. In those seconds, one Secret Service agent was struck in the chest area. Protective armor prevented what may have been a fatal wound. President Trump later remarked, “The vest did the job.” Officials later said the wounded agent is expected to recover.  

Inside the ballroom, chaos spread with primitive speed. Roughly 2,600 attendees were inside or connected to the event. Guests in formal wear dove beneath tables. Chairs toppled. Phones flew. Handbags were snatched from seats. Witnesses described repeated screams of “Get down!!” Armed agents rushed in with rifles drawn. Senior officials were reportedly pushed to the floor and physically shielded by protective details.  

And because satire writes itself in Washington, D.C. some members of the well-heeled White House press corps, while scrambling for safety, reportedly did not neglect to seize expensive bottles of wine and liquor from dinner tables on their way out. Even in a moment of mortal danger, the instinct for complimentary privilege remained fully intact.

President Trump was moved immediately. So were Melania Trump, Vice President Vance, cabinet officials, and other protectees. By all accounts the extraction was swift, disciplined, and professional. Whatever failures occurred in outer screening layers, the inner protective response appears to have functioned with precision once the threat materialized.  

The gunman was subdued alive. Officers and agents converged rapidly and tackled him before he could penetrate further into the secured event zone. He was not shot dead at the scene, a fact of immense investigative value. A living suspect leaves behind motive, communications, travel history, finances, writings, electronics, and the possibility of discovering whether he acted alone or with assistance. Authorities said he was initially not cooperating.  

Public reporting described Allen as thirty one years old and a resident of Torrance, California. Reports further state that he was a registered guest at the hotel. That detail may prove central to the entire case. Hotel guest status could have allowed freer movement inside portions of the complex and reduced suspicion from staff or security observers. Investigators believe he traveled by train from Southern California, reportedly routing through Chicago before arriving in Washington. That has raised obvious questions about whether rail travel was selected to avoid airport screening procedures.  

Reports also describe Allen as highly educated, with a background linked to the California Institute of Technology and experience as a tutor, programmer, or independent video game developer. Such details only deepen the public fascination with the case. America has seen before that technical competence and psychological instability can coexist in catastrophic form.  

Acting Attorney General (AG) Todd Blanche said investigators believe the suspect targeted administration officials and likely included President Trump among intended targets. Blanche further stated that Allen was not cooperating. Metropolitan Police Interim Chief Jeffery Carroll said that, at this stage, it appears the suspect was a lone actor. Secret Service spokesman Anthony Guglielmi said the president and first lady were safe, one individual was in custody, and the situation remained under active law enforcement assessment.  

Potential charges are severe. Officials said they include assault on a federal officer, attempting to kill a federal officer, firearms offenses tied to violent crime, and discharging a firearm during a crime of violence. Additional counts could include attempted assassination, terrorism related charges, or conspiracy if evidence emerges of accomplices.

The agencies involved include the United States Secret Service, the Federal Bureau of Investigation, the Metropolitan Police Department of Washington, the Department of Justice, and federal prosecutors in the District of Columbia. Other federal agencies may also be assisting with forensic and intelligence support.  

President Trump later said he believed he was likely the target. He praised the agents and officers who responded. He also displayed the mordant humor that has often marked his reactions under fire, joking afterward, “Nobody told me this was such a dangerous profession.” He reportedly criticized the hotel as an imperfect secure venue and renewed calls for a permanent White House ballroom capable of hosting large events under hardened security conditions.  

That argument will now gain force. How did a heavily armed suspect get this close to the president after Butler and after the Mar a Lago perimeter breach? How did hotel guest status permit internal movement? Were warning signs missed? Did anyone help him? Why was a commercial venue again entrusted with an event involving the president of the United States? Those questions now dominate the aftermath.  

The dinner itself was halted. Portions were canceled or suspended. What had been planned as an evening of vanity and ceremony ended instead as a national security crisis. Crystal stemware, linen napkins, and media smugness proved no match for the crack of gunfire.

Three major attacks or close calls in under two years is not normal. It is not random background noise. It is a warning. Last night, under the chandeliers of the Washington Hilton, America heard it loud and clear.

There are moments in history when coincidence ceases to be coincidence and becomes a pattern written in blood. Last night, April 24, 2026 at the Washington, D.C. Hilton for the third known time, President Trump narrowly escaped assassination. The annual White House Correspondents Dinner (WHCD), held in the same Washington Hilton where President Ronald Reagan was nearly murdered in 1981, another armed madman allegedly surged toward the security perimeter with firearms and knives while the President, the First Lady, and senior officials, were rushed to safety the pampered press corps feasted below in black tie luxury.

The symbolism is impossible to ignore. The same hotel. Another Republican president. Another man hated with a pathological intensity by the left. Another would be killer seeking to turn politics into execution. In 1981, Reagan stepped outside the Hilton and was met by gunfire. A bullet ricocheted into his chest. He nearly died. America watched in horror as a president fought for his life. Reagan survived because of courage, speed, and providence. Now, forty five years later, the Washington Hilton again became the stage upon which a president was hunted.

The media class, of course, will prattle endlessly about “heated rhetoric” while pretending they themselves have not spent years marinating the public in venom. They have called Trump a dictator, a fascist, a threat to democracy, a monster, a tyrant, and every other hysterical slander in the lexicon of political psychosis. They have fantasized openly about his imprisonment, his ruin, his humiliation, and yes, his death. When one sows dragon’s teeth, one should not be shocked when armed lunatics spring from the soil.

This was not the first attempt. In Butler, Pennsylvania, an assassin’s bullet tore through the crowd and murdered Cory Comperatore, a father and fireman whose only crime was supporting the man he believed could save the country. He died shielding his family. His blood is on the hands of every demagogue who transformed political disagreement into moral permission for violence.

There have now been three active shooting assassination attempts aimed at President Trump. Think about that. Three times the leading political figure in the United States has faced gunfire or armed attack. Three times millions of Americans have watched the republic tremble. Three times the same sanctimonious class that lectures the nation about “norms” has responded with shrugs, excuses, or grotesque silence.

Reports indicate the latest attacker, Cole Thomas Allen age 31, reached the security checkpoint area near the ballroom entrance before being stopped. A United States Secret Service (USSS) officer was struck in body armor and survived. The President and First Lady were evacuated unharmed as were the other attendees. Once again, brave men ran toward danger while others ducked beneath tables.

And what of the assembled journalists, those powdered courtiers of the regime? Accounts indicate that as confusion spread and people fled, some in the ballroom made certain to grab expensive bottles of wine on the way out. There, in one absurd image, is the modern press in full portrait.

A president targeted. Gunfire in the air. Panic in the room. And the self appointed guardians of democracy clutching vintage bottles as they scurried for safety. Nero had his fiddle. Washington has its Chardonnay.

The left has spent a decade cultivating death fantasies which I have written about in the past on several occasions. They fantasize about handcuffs, prison cells, exile, bankruptcy, and martyrdom by bullet. They cheer every indictment, every raid, every humiliation, every threat. They dehumanize not merely Trump, but the millions who support him. They call ordinary Americans extremists for wanting borders, jobs, safety, and sovereignty. Then they act bewildered when deranged men decide to become executioners. No serious nation can survive if one side treats elections as optional and assassination as understandable.

President Reagan survived because America still possessed a moral center strong enough to recoil in unison from violence. Today the country is more fractured, more poisoned, more corrupted by partisan hatred than at any point in modern memory. Yet President Trump still stands. He has endured fabricated scandals, impeachments, prosecutions, censorship, bankrupt attempts at ruin, and now repeated assassination attempts.

They have thrown everything at him except honesty. And still he rises. This third brush with death should sober the nation, though many are too intoxicated by hatred to be sobered by anything. If the political class continues to treat Trump as something less than human, unstable men will continue to hear the invitation hidden inside the rhetoric.

The Washington Hilton has now twice witnessed attempts to alter history by gunfire. The first failed. The second failed. The third failed. And every time they miss, the resolve of the American people only hardens.

Washington didn’t legalize marijuana—but what it did may prove far more important. By rescheduling certain cannabis activities into Schedule III, the federal government has quietly created something the industry has lacked for decades: a legitimate, structured pathway forward. This isn’t the end of prohibition, but it is the beginning of integration. And for those paying attention, it opens the door to a new kind of market—one that blends state medical programs, federal oversight, and emerging pharmaceutical potential into a hybrid system unlike anything we’ve seen before. President Trump must the credit for this vital policy change. I have advocated for this decision since he was elelcted in 2016 when I formed the United States Cannabis Coalition.

At its core, this decision recognizes a reality that has existed for years: cannabis already operates as a medical system in dozens of states. By allowing state-licensed operators to pursue DEA registration, the federal government is no longer standing entirely outside that system—it is beginning to interface with it. That shift alone is transformative. It gives compliant operators a path to legitimacy, access to standard business deductions, and the ability to participate in a federally recognized supply chain. For an industry long constrained by legal uncertainty and punitive tax treatment, this is a foundational upgrade.

There will, of course, be winners and losers. The winners are those prepared to operate within a structured, compliant framework: state-licensed medical cannabis companies, research-driven operators, and organizations capable of meeting DEA standards. They now have a pathway to evolve beyond the limitations of state-only markets. The losers are those who remain outside that framework—particularly segments of the hemp-derived cannabinoid market that have thrived in regulatory gray zones. As federal policy becomes more defined, ambiguity becomes risk, and informality becomes harder to sustain.

But focusing only on winners and losers misses the larger point. What this order really creates is opportunity—specifically, the opportunity to build a new category of regulated cannabis products that sits somewhere between traditional state dispensary models and fully FDA-approved pharmaceuticals. For the first time, a cannabis operator could, in theory, obtain DEA registration, produce standardized products, and distribute them within a controlled medical framework. These products may not carry FDA-approved indications, but they exist within a federally recognized scheduling system and can be prescribed, tracked, and dispensed under Schedule III rules.

This is where the real inflection point lies. The President Trump is effectively allowing the emergence of a hybrid system—one that does not replace the FDA, but operates alongside it. FDA-approved cannabis drugs will continue to represent the highest standard for national pharmaceutical distribution, with full clinical validation and broad market access. But beneath that layer, a secondary system can develop: one grounded in state medical programs, enabled by DEA registration, and governed by controlled substance rules rather than full FDA drug approval. It is a model that resembles compounded pharmaceuticals or other physician-directed therapies, where medical judgment and regulatory oversight coexist without requiring full premarket approval for every formulation.

For state medical programs, this is a profound shift in power. They are no longer isolated experiments operating in tension with federal law. Instead, they become the foundation of a federally recognized supply chain. States with robust licensing systems, established operators, and research capabilities are now positioned to lead—not just locally, but nationally. They can become centers of production, research, and clinical development, feeding into a broader ecosystem that includes both traditional healthcare and emerging cannabis therapeutics.

International obligations and compliance requirements will ensure that this system is tightly controlled. DEA registration, quota systems, anti-diversion measures, and reporting requirements will shape how the market develops. But those controls should not be mistaken for limitations alone—they are also what enable legitimacy. They provide the structure necessary for capital formation, institutional participation, and long-term stability. In short, they transform cannabis from a fragmented industry into a regulated sector capable of scaling responsibly.

The strategic implications are significant. Cannabis is no longer confined to a binary choice between prohibition and full FDA pharmaceutical approval. Instead, it now occupies a middle ground—a regulated, medically oriented category with room for innovation, physician involvement, and product development. This hybrid model could accelerate research, expand patient access, and allow operators to develop therapies in a more iterative, real-world environment.

The cannabis industry hasn’t just been rescheduled—it has been repositioned. The federal government has moved from opposition to engagement, from exclusion to structured participation. For operators willing to meet the moment, this is more than a regulatory change. It is the beginning of a new phase—one defined not by uncertainty, but by the opportunity to build something durable, credible, and deeply integrated into the future of American healthcare.

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WHO IS ROGER STONE?

Roger Stone is a seasoned political operative, speaker, pundit, and New York Times Bestselling Author featured in the Netflix documentary Get Me Roger Stone.

Richard Nixon, Ronald Reagan, and Donald Trump—all of these Presidents relied on Roger Stone to secure their seat in the Oval Office. In a 45-year career in American politics, Stone has worked on over 700 campaigns for public office.

“Roger’s a good guy. He is a patriot and believes in a strong nation, and a lot of other things I believes in.”

– President Donald J. Trump
Stone’s bestselling books include The Man Who Killed Kennedy: The Case Against LBJThe Bush Crime FamilyThe Clintons’ War on WomenThe Making of The President—How Donald Trump Orchestrated a Revolution, and Stone’s Rules with a forward by Tucker Carlson.
For the last 15 years, Roger Stone has published his International Best & Worst Dressed List. Stone is considered an authority on political and corporate strategy, branding, marketing, messaging, and advertising.
Stone is the host of The StoneZONE on Rumble and is also the host of The Roger Stone Show on WABC Radio.

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