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White House dinner shooting suspect seeks end of suicide precautions | Collector
White House dinner shooting suspect seeks end of suicide precautions
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White House dinner shooting suspect seeks end of suicide precautions

BOSTON: Attorneys for the man accused of attempting to assassinate President Donald Trump at a black-tie press gala ​last weekend asked a judge on Saturday to remove ‌him from suicide precautions while in jail in Washington. Cole Tomas Allen allegedly stormed a security checkpoint and fired a shotgun outside the White ​House Correspondents’ Dinner on April 25. When he was initially ​booked into the jail facility on April 27, ⁠Allen was assigned a “safe cell,” described as a padded room ​with 24-hour lockdown procedures and a requirement to wear “a vest ​akin to a strait jacket,” according to a filing by his lawyers in the US District Court for the District of Columbia. Trump safe after shooting at White House correspondents dinner, suspect in custody He was then ​downgraded to “suicide precautions,” which means Allen could still not ​make phone calls, receive visits from anyone aside from his legal team, ‌or ⁠spend time outside his cell except for legal visits or showers, with an escort, the filing states. A nurse on Friday recommended those precautions be ended, but they remained in place ​as of ​a visit by ⁠one of his public defense lawyers that day, the filing states. Allen’s status “amounts to punishment” and ​denies him resources such as the use of ​a ⁠jail tablet, “which would permit him to communicate with loved ones outside of the jail,” the filing states. Melania Trump says she never had a connection to Epstein Allen is charged with attempted ⁠assassination, ​discharging a firearm during a crime ​of violence and illegally transporting guns and ammunition across state lines. He has ​not yet entered a plea.

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