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Fact Check: Was Cole Allen Seen With Usha Vance in Viral Video? Here's Truth Behind White House Dinner Shooting Claim

Fact Check: Was Cole Allen Seen With Usha Vance in Viral Video? Here's Truth Behind White House Dinner Shooting Claim

White House Shooting Update: In the aftermath of the White House Correspondents Dinner shooting scare, social media quickly turned to an old video featuring suspect Cole Tomas Allen within hours, users began claiming that Usha Vance, wife of Vice President JD Vance, could be seen in the footage.

The theory spread rapidly, but the facts tell a different story.

White House Shooting Update: Viral Clip Resurfaces Online

The video in question is not recent and it dates back to 2017 and was originally aired by a Los Angeles television station. It showed Allen as a student presenting a technology project at a public conference focused on innovation for senior citizens.

White House Shooting Update: What Cole Allen Was Doing in the Video

Allen, then described as a California Institute of Technology student, demonstrated a wheelchair emergency brake system. He explained how the device could prevent chairs from skidding and improve safety for elderly users and people with mobility challenges.

"The wheelchair brakes tend to lock the wheels, but don't lock the chair to the ground. But with this device, that will prevent the chair from skidding at all," he said in the interview.

White House Shooting Update: Why the Video Went Viral Again

After the Washington Hilton security incident, online users searched for Allen's background where as archived clips, school profiles and unverified social accounts began circulating. The 2017 segment gained traction because it showed a very different image of the suspect years before the alleged attack.

White House Shooting Update: Was Usha Vance in the Footage?

No verified evidence supports that claim. Social media users pointed to a woman visible in the background and speculated she resembled Usha Vance however, no official source has identified her as the Vice President's wife.

"The woman in the video is not Usha Vance. In February 2017, Vance was clerking for the Supreme Court in D.C., not presenting at this L.A. tech conference," the bot wrote.

"It's Awful, I Want to Throw Up": Alleged Manifesto of Trump Dinner Shooting Suspect Reveals Disturbing Inner Conflict

Law enforcement officials say the suspected White House dinner shooter, Cole Allen, sent a manifesto to family minutes before the attack and describing extreme distress. "It's awful. I want to throw up," he reportedly wrote, adding he felt "rage thinking about everything this administration has done." Officials say the document included anti-government grievances and references to targeting officials and though investigators stress the content is still under verification and subject to ongoing analysis.

White House Shooting Update: $25 Harris Donation by Suspect Resurfaces

Federal campaign finance records reportedly show that the accused attacker, Cole Allen, made a small political donation of $25 to a Democratic Party-linked committee supporting Kamala Harris in the 2024 presidential race. Authorities have not linked this contribution to any motive in the case and investigators caution that isolated donations do not necessarily indicate broader political alignment or intent behind the alleged incident.

White House Shooting Update: Fact Check Behind the Rumor

Timeline details also weaken the claim and in 2017, Usha Vance was working in Washington, D.C., in high-level legal roles rather than attending a local technology event in Los Angeles. There is no credible record linking her to the conference.

White House Shooting Update: What Happened at the WHCD Event?

Authorities said the suspect was taken into custody after gunfire and chaos near the White House Correspondents' Dinner venue. President Donald Trump, Melania Trump, JD Vance and senior officials were escorted to safety and witnesses reported hearing between five and eight shots.

White House Shooting Update: Security Concerns Intensify

The incident triggered fresh debate about venue security. Hundreds of journalists, officials and public figures were present while questions have emerged about outer perimeter screening, hotel access points and how an armed suspect moved near a high-profile gathering.

White House Shooting Update: Why Misinformation Spreads Fast

High-profile emergencies often generate false narratives while old videos, unrelated images and mistaken identities spread quickly when people seek instant answers. Experts say users should rely on verified reporting rather than viral clips with no sourcing.

The claim that Cole Allen was seen with Usha Vance in a chilling old video does not hold up under scrutiny and the footage is genuine, but the identification rumor is not supported by facts. In moments of public shock, speculation often moves faster than truth and this case is another reminder that context matters as much as content.

FAQ's

1. Was Usha Vance in Cole Allen's old video?

No verified evidence confirms that she appeared in the clip.

2. When was the video recorded?

The footage was originally broadcast in 2017.

3. What was Cole Allen showing in the clip?

He was presenting a wheelchair emergency brake prototype.

4. Why did the video go viral?

It resurfaced after the White House dinner shooting scare.

5. Is the social media claim confirmed?

No. The rumour remains unsupported by credible sources.

Disclaimer: This article is based on available reports and verified public information. Viral claims on social media may be misleading or unconfirmed.

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