TacticalShots Fired Ep. 194 - How an Ordinary Math...

Shots Fired Ep. 194 – How an Ordinary Math Tutor Nearly Changed History & More

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In this EP, Sig and Dynadeath Milberg give us their shots on the most recent Presidential shooting attempts, as well as some crazy stories coming outta Florida!

In a year already packed with tense moments around President Trump, one story stands out for its sheer unpredictability: a seemingly mild-mannered math tutor from California turning up at a glitzy Washington, D.C. event with deadly intent. Episode 194 of the Shots Fired podcast breaks it down with the kind of no-BS analysis you’d expect from hosts who live and breathe tactics and firearms.

The Washington Hilton Incident: From Tutor to Alleged Assassin

Cole Tomas Allen, 31, a part-time tutor at C2 Education (even named Teacher of the Month in late 2024) and game developer with a Caltech background, allegedly crossed the country by train, checked into the Washington Hilton a day early, and staged his gear in a nearby gym.

On the night of the White House Correspondents’ Association dinner, he reportedly ducked into that room, geared up with a California-compliant pump shotgun (Mossberg Maverick 88 style), a Rock Island 1911 in .38 Super, and multiple knives, then sprinted through metal detectors blasting away.

One Secret Service agent took a point-blank 12-gauge hit to the chest but still returned fire—firing five rounds while the suspect closed distance at full sprint. Other agents and officers tackled the threat amid the chaos near a crowded ballroom. Miraculously, the agent survived thanks to armor, but the podcast hosts didn’t hold back on critiques: missed shots under stress, positioning issues, and questions about training standards and “DEI” influences in the Service.

Key detail that hits hard: This wasn’t some elite operator. Allen was described by students and colleagues as intelligent, quiet, and “completely average”—proficient in bio, math, and science, tutoring high schoolers right up until mid-April. Yet he allegedly planned this, reserving the room weeks in advance under the event’s known tight security.

The podcast crew highlights how his mobility (sprinting in gear) made him a tougher immediate threat than a less athletic “Bubba” type would have been. They also note the weapons were all CA-legal compliant—pump shotgun, no “scary features.”

Another Close Call: Body Armor Near Trump National Golf Course

The episode also touches on a separate incident involving Sean Steiner, arrested near Trump National Golf Course in Rancho Palos Verdes, CA. This guy was spotted hiking trails in rifle-rated body armor, carrying a Joker-themed short-barreled semi-auto rifle (green/purple with “HA HA HA” and “Why so serious?” markings), handguns, high-cap mags, and even a step stool.

He reportedly fired a shot and ran through traffic before deputies took him in. While not a direct shooting at the President, it adds to the pattern of armed individuals probing high-profile Trump locations.

Firearm Talk and Broader Takeaways

The hosts geek out on the gear spotted:

  • Secret Service: Knight’s Armament SR-16s with modern suppressors, optics, and Surefire lights; Glock 43X MOS variants; Sig P320 mentions.
  • Suspect: Basic but functional CA-legal setup plus blades (including a Benchmade SOCP-style).

They discuss uncommanded discharges (Sig P320 issues, including a Canadian soldier lawsuit) and stress the importance of training, gear familiarity, and realistic standards. There’s banter about hazing in military/police culture building resilience—controversial, but framed as old-school mindset talk.

Why This Matters

These incidents underscore vulnerabilities at public events, even with layers of protection. An “ordinary” guy nearly breached the inner cordon because a hotel gym wasn’t swept or restricted tightly enough. Secret Service agents showed bravery (that chest-shot return fire is no joke), but the podcast rightly calls for harder training and better threat anticipation.

As gun owners and tacticians, the Shots Fired crew reminds us: mobility, staging, and determination can close gaps faster than most expect. For the rest of us, it’s a sober reminder of rising political tensions and the need for strong, merit-based security.

Listen Here!

Apple Podcast

Stitcher

 

Wondering where the other episodes went?  Here’s a link:

https://tacticalshit.libsyn.com

 

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Hosts:

Hosts: Tj Kirgin @Sig_Glockincolt, Alex @dynadeathmilberg,  & @notoriousfde

Thank You to All Our Sponsors That Made This podcast possible, and shitheads like YOU

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