A quiet student’s surprising violent turn
Washington, D.C., USAMon Apr 27 2026
Cole Allen wasn’t the kind of person people expected to make headlines for violence. The 31-year-old Torrance man had built a reputation as a polite, hardworking student who once designed an emergency brake for wheelchairs. His LinkedIn profile showed steady progress: a bachelor’s in mechanical engineering from Caltech in 2017, followed by a master’s in computer science last year. Friends and teachers described him as soft-spoken and studious, someone who sat at the front of the classroom and asked thoughtful questions.
But behind that quiet exterior, Allen had another side. Just hours before firing shots at the White House Correspondents’ Dinner, he sent his family a long manifesto calling himself the “Friendly Federal Assassin. ” In it, he claimed he was targeting Trump officials, though no one around him saw it coming. His former professor at Cal State Dominguez Hills said Allen was always engaged, rarely missing assignments, and quick to email questions about coursework.
Some of Allen’s past students also couldn’t believe he was capable of such an act. High school senior Max Harris, who worked with him at a tutoring company, called him an “average guy” who never raised red flags. Even Allen’s wheelchair brake project—highlighted in a 2017 news clip—showed creativity, not aggression. It’s a reminder that talent and intelligence don’t always reveal hidden motives.
Security footage showed Allen rushing past a checkpoint before being stopped by officers. His arrest left more questions than answers. How does someone go from designing life-saving tech to planning violence? The gap between his public image and private actions raises concerns about how well we really know the people around us.
https://localnews.ai/article/a-quiet-students-surprising-violent-turn-12b7f927
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