Al Jazeera56%
Secret Service fatally shoots gunman who fired at White House checkpoint 8%
By Al Jazeera Staff58%
5/23/2026, 10:52:43 PM
Keywords: United States, US And Canada
BS Summary: This article contains 15 faulty reasoning types, including Post Hoc (False Cause), Negativity Bias, and Recency Bias, with Appeal to Authority as the most egregious example at 15.9% saturation with 75 hits. Analysis detected 529 faulty-reasoning hits from 472 analyzed words, generating a BS Score of 24.8% and a BS Rank of 8% (15,515 of 16,813 articles). This article is better (less manipulative) than 92.30% of the article peer group.
A man has been shot dead by Secret Service officers after opening fire on a security checkpoint near the White House, with a bystander also wounded in the gunfire.
Shortly after 6pm on Saturday, the suspect approached a Secret Service checkpoint at the intersection of 17th Street and Pennsylvania Avenue in Washington, DC, pulled a weapon from his bag and began shooting at officers posted there.
The Secret Service, the federal agency responsible for protecting the president, confirmed the sequence of events in an official statement, saying a preliminary investigation indicated the suspect had concealed his weapon in a bag before drawing it at the checkpoint.
The agents returned fire, striking the man, who was later pronounced dead at a nearby hospital.
A bystander was also hit during the shooting, though authorities said it remained unclear whether they were struck by the suspect’s initial gunfire or during the exchange that followed.
US President Donald Trump was inside the White House at the time and was not harmed.
The White House was immediately placed under lockdown.
No Secret Service personnel were injured.
House Republicans posted on X to confirm Trump was safe, while the White House itself issued no immediate statement on the president’s condition.
Steve Scalise, the Republican House Majority Leader, posted on X, expressing his thoughts for the president and adding: “We live in dangerous times.”
More than 30 shots were heard from the White House North Lawn, according to Al Jazeera’s Kimberly Halkett, reporting from the scene.
Journalists on the lawn were ordered to run and take shelter inside the press briefing room.
Police cordoned off access to the surrounding area, and National Guard troops blocked reporters from approaching.
Halkett said the suspect had recently been issued a stay-away order, which he ignored.
He approached the area anyway, at which point the Secret Service returned fire when he started shooting.
The suspect was later transferred to George Washington Hospital, Halkett said.
FBI Director Kash Patel confirmed his agency was on the scene supporting the Secret Service, saying on social media he would “update the public as we’re able.”
White House communications director Steven Cheung sought to project calm, posting on X that Trump was “working at 8pm.
Can’t stop, won’t stop.”
Saturday’s shooting comes less than a month after what law enforcement authorities described as an attempted assassination of Trump on April 25, when a suspect was arrested at the Washington hotel hosting the annual White House Correspondents’ Association Dinner, a gathering of journalists and public figures.
“These incidents are happening with increasing frequency,” Halkett said.
That incident raised fresh questions about the security arrangements around the president.
The identity of the suspect and his motive have not been publicly released.
The Secret Service said the investigation is ongoing.
Analysis
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