NEED TO KNOW

  • Acting AG Blanche acknowledged Monday it's unclear whose round struck the agent
  • Law enforcement fired roughly five shots; suspect Cole Allen also discharged a shotgun
  • Affidavit and Blanche's own remarks already diverge on key sequence details

WASHINGTON, DC (TDR) — Federal investigators cannot yet confirm whose bullet struck the Secret Service officer wounded outside Saturday's White House Correspondents' Dinner.

The big picture: The basic forensic question in the case remains open 48 hours in — and the officials answering for it were themselves inside the ballroom.

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Why it matters: The unresolved ballistics question determines whether the officer was shot by the suspect or hit by friendly fire.

  • Friendly-fire findings would complicate Blanche's "law enforcement did not fail" defense
  • A suspect-fired round buttresses the administration's preferred clean-stop narrative

Driving the news: Blanche fielded the ballistics question Monday and declined to answer it.

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  • He confirmed law enforcement fired roughly five rounds at the scene
  • He confirmed suspect Cole Allen discharged his shotgun after breaching the magnetometer
  • Shell casings and weapons were sent to the FBI's Quantico lab for analysis
  • Todd Blanche, Acting Attorney General — "It wasn't clear whether the Secret Service agent who was hit in a protective vest was shot by the alleged attacker."

What they're saying: The political and law-enforcement reactions split sharply along expected lines, with one notable cross-pressure.

  • Todd Blanche, Acting Attorney General — "We will ensure that accountability is swift and certain. But we should also recognize what did not happen: Law enforcement did not fail."
  • Allen now faces three federal counts including attempted assassination of the president
  • Jonathan Gilliam, former FBI special agent — "Although it may look like a success because no one got killed, it's a failure. A total failure."
  • Sen. Dick Durbin, Senate Judiciary ranking Democrat, said after a Secret Service briefing he "saw no indication" of a security lapse

Yes, but: Blanche's own statements have already diverged from the sworn record in this case.

  • Blanche said agents "promptly tackled" Allen; the affidavit says Allen "fell to the ground" when an officer began firing at him
  • Asked about the contradiction, Blanche told reporters to "rely on the complaint, because that was sworn to by an agent and not by the words out of the acting attorney general"

Between the lines: The officials who could most benefit from a clean ballistics finding are the ones controlling the timeline of its release.

  • Blanche, Patel and Pirro were all named or implied targets in Allen's pre-attack note
  • A friendly-fire conclusion would invite a second round of Secret Service scrutiny less than two years after the Butler review
  • Trump is already using the incident to push his contentious White House ballroom project

What's next:

  • Quantico ballistics analysis pending; no public timeline given
  • White House chief of staff Susie Wiles to convene a security-protocol review this week
  • Allen's next court appearance and additional charges expected in coming days
  • Senate Judiciary briefings continuing on Capitol Hill

If the bullet that hit the agent turns out to have come from a fellow officer, does "law enforcement did not fail" still hold — and would either tribe accept that answer if their own administration were delivering it?

Sources

This report was compiled using information from CNN, CBS News, NBC News, NewsNation, and the federal criminal complaint filed in U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia.

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