

A growing number of high-profile White House Correspondents’ Dinner attendees are now exposing that they experienced embarrassingly relaxed security at the event.
Guests, including Kari Lake, have noted that basic identification, ticket inspection, and screening measures were skipped or minimized at an event attended by the President, his top officials, and hundreds of media figures.
I can’t believe how lax the security was at the White House correspondents dinner tonight. Upon entering nobody asked to visibly INSPECT my ticket nor asked for my photo identification. All one had to do was flash what appeared to be a ticket and they were fine with that. When… pic.twitter.com/w79Z3MnSjK
— Kari Lake (@KariLake) April 26, 2026
In a post shortly after the shooting, Lake wrote:
I can’t believe how lax the security was at the White House correspondents dinner tonight. Upon entering nobody asked to visibly INSPECT my ticket nor asked for my photo identification. All one had to do was flash what appeared to be a ticket and they were fine with that.
When you consider you are entering a roomful of fake news media —90% of whom hate the President you would think they would have better security. This is what happened when what sounded like gunfire erupted.
On the way out, I called-out a bunch of the disgusting Media who have been pushing hatred toward President Trump for years. They are a big part of the discord in this country.
Lake included video from inside the ballroom showing guests ducking for cover as security rushed in, along with photos from the chaotic scene.
Her account matches what other attendees reported: minimal checks, no visible ID verification, and a “flash your ticket and walk” system.
Conservative influencer and attendee Mads Campbell went even further in a now-viral thread that has been viewed over 1 million times.
Campbell wrote that she and her best friend left early because “something felt off” from the moment they arrived.
my best friend and i went to the WHCD, and we ended up leaving early because something felt off
it started the second we got there. every event we’ve ever been to, especially at this level, there are layers of security. bags checked, IDs checked, actual process
this time,…
— mads campbell (@martyrdison) April 26, 2026
The post read in full:
my best friend and i went to the WHCD, and we ended up leaving early because something felt off
it started the second we got there. every event we’ve ever been to, especially at this level, there are layers of security. bags checked, IDs checked, actual process
this time, nothing. we were just asked if we had tickets, said yes, and got waved through
no bag check. no real screening. no line. just thousands of people packed together, being pushed through the doors as fast as possible
it felt wrong immediately. like, viscerally wrong. my bestfriend literally turns to me and says “i think something is going to happen”
and then it did
this cannot happen. not here, not at something like this
praying for everyone, but there needs to be accountability because this should never happen again
Another person posted a sign with other events that were taking place in the same building on Saturday night, noting, “These were the events being hosted in same building as WHCD. Low security, people being shoved inside”
These were the events being hosted in same building as WHCD. Low security, people being shoved inside pic.twitter.com/kdVmx17QYP
— Raq (@raqisright) April 26, 2026
She also wrote that there were “no bag checks, no metal detectors, thousands of people and simply not enough security.”
The biggest red flag walking into the WHCD was the fact that I was allowed to keep my vape
Usually, any event where there is Secret Service (Trump rallies, RNC) they confiscate vapes etc
No bag checks, no metal detectors, thousands of people and simply not enough security.
— Raq (@raqisright) April 26, 2026
Bethany Miller, editor of The Conservateur, who attended pre-dinner receptions at the Hilton, wrote, “All confirmed. I was at the Washington Hilton for WHCD receptions and never was screened or went through any type of security. Just showed door checkers my emailed ticket that I could’ve easily forwarded to others. The dinner was the only point where mags were and tickets were checked.”
All confirmed. I was at the Washington Hilton for WHCD receptions and never was screened or went through any type of security. Just showed door checkers my emailed ticket that I could’ve easily forwarded to others. The dinner was the only point where mags were and tickets were… https://t.co/gWuEfi1h8R
— Bethany Miller (@bethanyymmiller) April 26, 2026
Former FCC Chairman Ajit Pai and others noted bare-bones detectors with minimal scanning.
Pai wrote, “As I walked into the ballroom with a friend this evening, I mentioned how surprised I was at the lax security. I was admitted to the hotel’s circular driveway by showing my WHCD ticket, came into the hotel, showed my ticket again to go down an escalator, did so yet again for a second escalator, and then walked through a bare-bones metal detector where devices, wallets, etc. were placed on a side table—and not scanned. Then straight into the ballroom. Didn’t seem optimal, to say the least.”
As I walked into the ballroom with a friend this evening, I mentioned how surprised I was at the lax security. I was admitted to the hotel’s circular driveway by showing my WHCD ticket, came into the hotel, showed my ticket again to go down an escalator, did so yet again for a… https://t.co/WoB9RKb919
— Ajit Pai (@AjitPai) April 26, 2026
This comes after two prior assassination attempts on President Donald Trump.
Yet at the so-called “Nerd Prom,” an event featuring the President, Vice President, Cabinet, and the media elite who have relentlessly demonized him, basic protective layers were reportedly treated as optional.
The Secret Service stopped the immediate threat, but the pre-event failures now being exposed demand full transparency.
The scene from the red carpet at the #WHCD moments after multiple shots fired on the other side of the doors to the ballroom. pic.twitter.com/oDpopfwxSg
— Kevin Walling (@KevinPWalling) April 26, 2026
Who signed off on these lax protocols? Why were standard ID, ticket, and bag checks seemingly deprioritized? How did this happen in a building with the most high-profile targets in America present?
U.S. Attorney for the District of Columbia Jeanine Pirro has announced that the suspected White House Correspondents’ Dinner gunman, 31-year-old Cole Tomas Allen of Torrance, California, will appear in federal court Monday for arraignment, and he is already facing serious felony charges with “many” more expected.
Pirro confirmed the suspect has been charged with at least two counts so far, using a firearm during a crime of violence and assault on a federal officer using a dangerous weapon.
“This individual was intent on doing as much harm and as much damage as he could,” Pirro said.
As The Gateway Pundit previously reported, Allen allegedly checked into the Washington Hilton as a registered hotel guest, assembled a long weapon in an unsecured back area, and opened fire near the security magnetometers during the high-profile event attended by President Donald Trump, Vice President JD Vance, and many other top administration officials.
One Secret Service agent was struck point-blank by a bullet, but survived thanks to his bulletproof vest.
No motive has been revealed at this time.
The Gateway Pundit will continue following this developing story.
The post Kari Lake, Ajit Pai, and Other Attendees Expose Shockingly Relaxed Security at White House Correspondents’ Dinner: ‘No Bag Check. No Real Screening. Just Waved Through.’ appeared first on The Gateway Pundit.
