Cole Allen, the 31-year-old Torrance, California man charged with attempting to assassinate President Trump at the White House Correspondents’ Dinner, walked into a Washington federal courtroom on Monday and walked out with something unusual: an apology from the bench.
U.S. Magistrate Judge Zia M. Faruqui told Allen directly that he was sorry for what the defendant had endured during his first week in custody. A mental health evaluation had found Allen posed no risk of self-harm, yet he was placed on suicide watch regardless and kept in conditions his legal team described as among the most restrictive in the facility. The judge was unambiguous about where he stood, telling Allen personally that whatever he had been through over the prior week, the court owed him an apology.
Allen’s confinement becomes a case of its own
Allen’s attorney, Eugene Jeen-Young Kim Ohm, laid out the details of his client’s detention for the court. Allen had been held in a padded cell on what amounted to around-the-clock lockdown. He was denied phone access, barred from reviewing any court documents and was not permitted to keep a Bible in his cell. Each time he left or returned to the cell, he was strip searched and required to wear a padded vest.
Judge Faruqui said the arrangement did not hold up to scrutiny. He noted that defendants convicted of more serious offenses were being held in far less restrictive conditions elsewhere in the same facility. The discrepancy, he said, suggested Allen was being singled out. The judge told the courtroom the situation made no sense, and said plainly that Allen had no business being in solitary confinement.
The judge ordered federal authorities to report back by Tuesday morning with an update on where Allen would be housed and a justification for any restrictions that remained in place.
The government’s position
Prosecutors offered a specific rationale for the heightened precautions. After His was arrested on April 25, he told FBI agents he had not expected to survive the attack he allegedly carried out at the Washington Hilton. That statement, the government argued, warranted a stricter approach to his detention.
Tony Towns, a lawyer for the DC jail, told the court that Allen had been kept in an isolated cell because of ongoing psychological evaluations and that the decision rested with medical staff at the facility, not correctional officers acting on their own.
Judge Faruqui pushed back on the interpretation of Allen’s statement. He said he did not read his remark about not expecting to survive as an indication of suicidal intent. The more plausible reading, the judge suggested, was that Allen had anticipated being shot during the assault on the black-tie event, not that he planned to harm himself afterward.
Pirro fires back
The hearing prompted a sharp response from U.S. Attorney for the District of Columbia Jeanine Pirro. She took to social media to argue that a defendant who arrived at the event armed and allegedly intent on killing the president was being given more favorable treatment in confinement than other defendants in the system warranted.
The pushback put into plain view a tension that runs through politically charged federal cases: the point at which security precautions stop being reasonable and start looking like punishment before any verdict has been reached.
Judge Faruqui referenced that tension directly. He pointed out that the facility had housed dozens of defendants connected to the January 6, 2021 Capitol riot and had navigated that caseload without resorting to the same level of restriction imposed on Allen. He noted it was not the jail’s first experience managing defendants accused of politically motivated violence.
What Allen is charged with
Allen has not entered a plea. He faces three federal charges: attempted assassination of the president, transporting a firearm and ammunition across state lines with intent to commit a felony, and discharge of a firearm during a crime of violence. A conviction on those charges carries a sentence of up to life in prison.
Allen’s lawyers had requested Monday’s hearing but tried to cancel it Sunday after learning their client had been removed from suicide watch. Faruqui declined to scrap the proceedings, citing serious concerns about Allen’s treatment that he felt warranted a public airing regardless.
The broader implication
When a federal magistrate judge apologizes to a man accused of plotting to kill the president, it means something. It means the court has looked at the conditions of that man’s detention and decided they fall outside what the law permits, irrespective of how alarming the underlying charges may be.
That distinction, between what a person is alleged to have done and what the government may do to them before guilt is established, is one of the more durable tensions in American criminal law. The Allen case has put it front and center at an early stage, and the proceedings are just beginning.

