
President Donald Trump and other high-ranking administration officials were evacuated from the White House Correspondents’ Association annual dinner Saturday night following a “shooting incident” near a security screening area.
The agency later said all of its protectees, including the president and first lady, were safe, and the person involved in the incident was in custody.
The president later told reporters the suspect was a man armed with multiple weapons who attempted to enter the ballroom where the dinner was taking place. He said law enforcement officers quickly intercepted the man.
At a White House press conference after the incident, the president said the suspect was from California and called him a “sick person.”
NBC News learned the 31-year-old suspect was being treated for injuries. The president said one officer was injured but was in “great shape.”
The president, vice president, top cabinet officials and members of Congress were gathered together at the Washington Hilton Hotel with members of the press for the annual event, the president’s first time attending while in office.
He was expected to speak during the event, which he has regularly abstained from in previous years, complaining of his treatment by the press.
Soon after the event began Secret Service agents swarmed the ballroom, where some reporters, administration officials and dignitaries ducked under their tables amid the confusion.
Security stopped the event and ushered Trump and other officials out of the room. Other attendees, including most of the journalists in attendance, remained in the ballroom.
In the press conference at the White House after the event, Trump described the dinner prior to the incident as an evening of unity between the press and both sides of the political aisle.
“I saw a room that was just totally unified,” he said.
He also praised the Secret Service and other first responders for their response to the situation.
The president said that he heard a noise but believed it was a service tray going down, but that he thought the first lady more quickly realized the gravity of the situation. He also said that the situation was personally “shocking,” even though he has previously faced assassination attempts or suspected attempts.
The Washington Hilton was notably the location of a 1981 assassination attempt on then-President Ronald Reagan.
FBI Director Kash Patel said in his remarks that his agency has “rapidly deployed” onto the scene and took over the evidence response unit “examining all the ballistics.”
Patel said that this includes a “long gun and the shell casings.”
“We are conducting witness interviews as we speak,” said Patel, who called on anyone with information to submit tips to the FBI.
“No piece of information is too small, no piece of information is inadequate. We will evaluate it all. We will also be conducting interviews of those that were there, and if any of those individuals have information,” he said.
Despite initial indications the event would continue, the White House Correspondents Association president later shared that the event would be postponed so that law enforcement could continue its investigation. The president shared on Truth Social that he would work with organizers to reschedule in the next 30 days.
This is a developing story. Refresh for updates.
