King Charles’s security for US visit this week reviewed after Washington shooting
Buckingham Palace said the four-day state visit will continue as planned while security arrangements are reviewed after the Washington shooting.
- Security arrangements for King Charles III's state visit to the United States next week are under active review following an attempted attack at the White House Correspondents' Dinner on Saturday night.
- On Saturday night, President Donald Trump was rushed to safety after a gunman opened fire at the White House Correspondents' Dinner in the Washington Hilton hotel, with authorities identifying the suspect as 31-year-old Cole Tomas Allen.
- Deputy Director Matthew Quinn praised the Secret Service's 'layered security posture' for stopping the shooter at first contact, while Prime Minister Keir Starmer condemned the incident as an attack on democratic institutions.
- Acting Attorney General Todd Blanche indicated that additional federal charges will be filed against Allen, whose home in Torrance, California, is being searched by the FBI and local police.
- Marking the 250th anniversary of American independence, the state visit begins later this month, with King Charles III and Queen Camilla expected to participate in celebrations across the United States, including a block party.
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68 Articles
King Charles to visit despite DC shooting
LONDON — King Charles' state visit to the United States will go ahead as planned Monday despite a shooting at a White House dinner attended by President Donald Trump, Buckingham Palace said after discussions with U.S. officials.
Trump's Secret Service detail is fumbling so hard that King Charles is now having second thoughts about his planned US state visit
When the boss of the United States Secret Service stands in front of cameras to declare that their “multilayered protection works” mere hours after a man with a shotgun and multiple knives sprinted past his agents at a black-tie dinner the president was attending, you know things are going about as well as… well, as well as a Hegseth Signal chat. And now Buckingham Palace is publicly conceding (per Newsweek) that it might have to rethink its app…
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