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The Monexus
Vol. I · No. 169
Thursday, 18 June 2026
Saturday Ed.
Updated 06:45 UTC
  • UTC06:45
  • EDT02:45
  • GMT07:45
  • CET08:45
  • JST15:45
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← The MonexusLetters

Trump Releases Surveillance Footage of Washington Hilton Shooting — and Calls the Building Unsafe

The president posted CCTV footage of the attempt on his life to social media, called the Hilton an unsafe venue, and confirmed the suspect is alive in hospital — a sequence of moves that raises more questions than it answers about how this administration handles threats to its own security.

The president posted CCTV footage of the attempt on his life to social media, called the Hilton an unsafe venue, and confirmed the suspect is alive in hospital — a sequence of moves that raises more questions than it answers about how this… @france24_en · Telegram

President Donald Trump posted closed-circuit television footage on 25 April 2026 showing the initial moments of a shooting at his dinner party with reporters at the Washington Hilton Hotel — an act that instantly fused a national security incident into the machinery of political performance. The video, which the president shared directly to social media, captures the first seconds of what appears to be an attempted assassination. Within hours, Trump had also publicly described the Hilton as "not a particularly safe building" before pivoting to promote his own ballroom facilities. The suspect, according to a US official cited by The Washington Post, is alive and receiving hospital treatment.

The decision to release the footage — rather than allow law enforcement and Secret Service to control its disclosure through standard evidentiary channels — is the defining editorial choice of this episode. Surveillance footage from an active crime scene involving a head of state carries legal, diplomatic, and psychological weight that routine transparency frameworks are not designed to manage. That a president would bypass those frameworks and post the material himself tells its own story about how this administration approaches the intersection of personal security and public communication.

What the footage shows — and who decides what the public sees

The CCTV clip, released by Trump via social media on 25 April 2026, depicts the initial moments after the shooting began at the Washington Hilton. The precise sequence of events — the number of shots fired, the location of the suspect relative to the president at the time, the response time of protective personnel — is not yet fully documented in public sources. What is documented is that Trump chose to release the material himself, rather than allowing investigators to manage the evidence chain.

This is not a trivial distinction. Crime scene footage involving an assassination attempt on a sitting president falls under multiple jurisdictions simultaneously: Secret Service protective intelligence, Metropolitan Police Department, and federal prosecutors. Each of those institutions has protocols governing what evidence enters public circulation and when. Bypassing those protocols — even by a head of state — is unusual enough that it warrants scrutiny independent of any partisan read of the moment.

The White House has not explained the legal basis for the release, nor has any administration official addressed whether the footage was cleared by the relevant investigative bodies before posting. The sources reviewed do not indicate that any such clearance was obtained or sought.

The venue framing: political theatre dressed as security analysis

Trump's subsequent comment — that the Washington Hilton Hotel is "not a particularly safe building" — arrived in a context that the sources describe as a segue into promotional remarks about his own ballroom. The combination is revealing. A head of state, speaking from the aftermath of an attempt on his life, pivoting within minutes to plug private event facilities, is a communication pattern that resists innocent interpretation.

The Hilton has hosted presidential events for decades. The building's security profile is determined by the Secret Service in coordination with the US Secret Service and local law enforcement — not by the venue's own infrastructure choices. Framing the incident as a failure of the hotel's physical plant, rather than as a law enforcement and intelligence failure, shifts the burden of explanation away from the institutions charged with protecting the president and onto a commercial operator.

That reframe serves a specific narrative interest. It positions the administration as a victim of venue inadequacy rather than a participant in a system that, for reasons not yet explained, failed to prevent an armed individual from reaching a dinner attended by the president.

The suspect: what is known and what is not

The Washington Post, citing a US official speaking on condition of anonymity, reported that the shooting suspect is alive and being treated at a hospital. The official provided no further identification, motive, or affiliation. No other major US wire outlet in the source review had confirmed those details as of 26 April 2026.

The decision by the official to brief the Post — rather than allow law enforcement or the Justice Department to make an official statement — is itself an act of information management. Anonymous official briefings are a standard tool of executive communication, particularly in cases involving national security. The fact that the information reached the public through a newspaper rather than through a formal press conference or official release suggests the administration is choosing its disclosure moments carefully.

The suspect's survival is, for now, the only solid fact in a picture dominated by video and commentary. Whether that survival reflects effective Secret Service response, luck, or the suspect's own choices is not yet established.

The structural pattern: when personal security becomes political content

Presidents have always managed the optics of threats to their safety. What distinguishes the current moment is the directness with which surveillance footage — a document that belongs, by convention and law, to investigative and prosecutorial processes — is converted into a social media post and a basis for venue criticism.

The pattern fits a broader logic: when institutions are portrayed as ineffective or corrupt, bypassing them becomes a rhetorical resource. The Secret Service did not release this footage. The Justice Department has not issued a formal statement. The Metropolitan Police Department has not briefed on the case. The president posted the footage himself, framing the narrative in real time.

This is not transparency. It is information release on the president's terms, at the moment of his choosing, calibrated to precede or preempt official accounts. The distinction matters because it determines who controls the evidentiary record — and, by extension, who controls the story when the full facts eventually emerge.

What remains unknown — the suspect's identity and motive, the security failures that allowed the shooting to occur, the legal status of the footage's release — is substantial enough that the political framing currently on display should be treated with appropriate caution. The president has a stake in how this story is told. That stake is not the same as the public's.

This publication covered the incident from initial Telegram wire reports on the night of 25 April 2026. Unlike the administration's own social media posts, this article does not include the surveillance footage — because the decision to publish crime-scene video from an assassination attempt on a head of state is a journalistic choice that requires editorial deliberation, not a reflexive response to a presidential share.

Wire provenance

This editorial synthesis draws on the following public wire/social posts:

  • https://t.me/DDGeopolitics
  • https://t.me/JahanTasnim
  • https://t.me/tasnimnews_en
  • https://t.me/alalamfa
  • https://t.me/presstv
© 2026 Monexus Media · reported from the wire