The Headlines - Inside the Chaos at the Correspondents’ Dinner, and How the U.S. Mint Is Buying Drug Cartel Gold

Episode Date: April 27, 2026

Plus, marathon runners shatter a world record.  Here’s what we’re covering: ‘Shots Fired!’: Inside the Pandemonium at the Washington Hilton, by Luke Broadwater, Shawn McCreesh, Tyler Pager an...d Maggie Haberman Grievance Propelled Gala Attack Suspect Across Country, Authorities Say, by Amy Qin, Chelsia Rose Marcius and Shawn Hubler Iran and U.S. Sink Into Awkward Limbo of ‘No War, No Peace,’ by Erika Solomon U.S. Mint Buys Drug Cartel Gold and Sells It as ‘American,’ by Justin Scheck, Simón Posada and Federico Rios Sabastian Sawe Finishes London Marathon in Under Two Hours to Obliterate Men’s World Record, by Liam Tharme Tune in every weekday morning, and tell us what you think at: theheadlines@nytimes.com. Subscribe today at nytimes.com/podcasts or on Apple Podcasts and Spotify. You can also subscribe via your favorite podcast app here https://www.nytimes.com/activate-access/audio?source=podcatcher. For more podcasts and narrated articles, download The New York Times app at nytimes.com/app. Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.

Transcript
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Starting point is 00:00:02 From the New York Times, it's the headlines. I'm Tracy Mumford. Today's Monday, April 27th, here's what we're covering. Suddenly, we heard all this yelling, all this commotion. We were crouched low, and then cabinet members just started emerging from around the corner, and they were with their guards. You know, first came RFK Jr. and Cheryl Hines. Then came Janine Piro.
Starting point is 00:00:29 My colleague, Sean McRish, was at the White House Correspondence dinner Saturday night at a hotel in D.C., when an armed man tried to storm. through security. It happened right as the dinner was getting started. Shots were fired, and Sean was out in the hallway as members of the administration were evacuated from the ballroom. They were walking, you know, very in a panicked way, stricken faces being ushered into hallways and elevators. There were teary reporters. It was just total pandemonium. We had no idea what was happening. People were shouting, wondering, where is the president, where's the president? Inside the ballroom, President Trump was pulled off stage by his security deal.
Starting point is 00:01:06 detail and guests hid under their tables. When it became clear, the suspect had been apprehended, Trump insisted the night should go on. He was due to give a speech. But security officials ultimately decided they needed to get the president away from the scene. We pulled out behind him. We drove to the White House. We were the first reporters there. And everybody was just rushing to get to the White House because the president had called a press conference. And what happened next was a pretty surreal scene. There were reporters in evening gowns and tuxed. and then suddenly the president emerged. He held forth for a while and gave a sort of very extraordinary press conference.
Starting point is 00:01:44 Well, thank you very much. And that was very unexpected, but incredibly acted upon by Secret Service and law enforcement. Speaking to reporters, the president announced that the suspect had rushed a checkpoint with multiple weapons and that a Secret Service officer had been shot but was protected by bulletproof vest. In light of this evening's events, I ask that all Americans recommit with their hearts and resolving our difference peacefully. Trump called for an end to political violence, though he also said the night was an example of why his ballroom renovation is necessary, saying it would be much more secure. The president then took a few questions from the press. I asked respectfully, why do you think this keeps happening to you?
Starting point is 00:02:33 Including about how this was the third time a gunman has gotten parents. perilously close to him following previous assassination attempts. And now we're the hottest country anywhere in the world. We've changed his country. And there are a lot of people that are not happy about that. So I think that's the answer, Peter. The investigation into the suspect is still ongoing, but here's what we know so far. Two law enforcement officials identified the man to the Times as 31-year-old Cole Thomas Allen of Torrance, California, a suburb of L.A. He studied mechanical engineering at Caltech and was involved in a Christian Fellowship on campus. According to his LinkedIn account, he spent several years working as an
Starting point is 00:03:12 engineer, a self-employed video game developer, and as a college test prep tutor. In recent days, he took the train from California out to D.C., and according to writings, authorities say he left behind, he gave different people different stories, telling his parents that he had an interview and telling others he had a personal emergency. The writings express outrage at policies put in place by the White House. They also allude to allegations of sexual misconduct, and he wrote that he is no longer willing to allow a, quote, traitor to coat my hands with his crimes, an apparent reference to Trump, though the president is not explicitly named. Alan is expected to be charged with multiple crimes in a court appearance set for today. In the Middle East, peace talks between the U.S. and Iran
Starting point is 00:04:06 hit more hurdles this weekend. Top Iranian officials have said they will not negotiate directly while President Trump keeps up a blockade on Iranian ports and ships, and President Trump canceled plans to send his special envoy, Steve Whitkoff, and son-in-law Jared Kushner, to talks in Pakistan right before they were supposed to leave. In a statement, Trump said the U.S. was, quote, not going to be making any more 18-hour flights to sit around talking about nothing. He suggested that Iran has not offered to make enough concessions and complained that the officials scheduled to meet with the U.S. representatives were not high enough in rank.
Starting point is 00:04:43 The two sides now seem to be caught in limbo. The ceasefire has left them in a state of no war but also no peace. In terms of how long that can last, analysts say it's a question of how much pain each side can take. Iranian officials seem certain they can withstand the economic upheaval longer than President Trump, and Trump seems to be equally confident. He's brushed off the effect of higher energy prices on Americans and said in his statement, quote, We have all the cards. Tracing gold is complicated because each middleman melts it down and mixes it with other supplies of gold.
Starting point is 00:05:25 But we trace one source of the gold that the mint gets to the place where the gold is mined in a part of Colombia controlled by a drug cartel. Justin Sheck is an investigative reporter at the Times. He says that under federal law, the U.S. Mint, which sells more than a billion dollars of investment-grade gold coins every year, is required to make sure that gold is 100% American. But he found that it's not, and that the mint has become part of a system that's laundering foreign gold, much of which is illegally mined.
Starting point is 00:05:58 The mine we visited is called La Mendeinga. It's illegal in multiple ways. It's on government land where it's illegal to mine. The miners there are using heavy equipment, which is prohibited, and they're using mercury, which is illegal to use in Colombia because it's toxic. The mercury is used to separate the gold from the ore and has polluted the entire area. Justin says that once the gold is extracted, it begins its journey to the U.S. mint.
Starting point is 00:06:24 In Colombia, it's passed off as legal, even if some of the local buyers know it's not. And once it reaches the U.S., it's melted down along with other gold and poured into new bars that are, according to the industry's logic, technically American. Well, Mandinga is just one of many similar criminally run mines in Colombia that's pumping gold into the legitimate supply chain. But we found all sorts of other, maybe not illegal, but certainly not American sources of gold that are getting to the mint. And they include pawn shops in Mexico, a mine in Honduras where the mining company dug up an indigenous graveyard to get to the gold. And even gold that comes from Congo, which is getting into the mint supply chain, which is very far from America. at a time when the gold price has gotten so high that people in places like Colombia
Starting point is 00:07:13 have a huge incentive to mine destructive and criminal ways that mint is supposed to be a bulwark against that kind of gold entering legitimate markets and instead it's facilitating it. Justin says that according to an internal government audit conducted in 2024, the U.S. Mint had not asked its suppliers where they got their gold from for at least two decades, even as the prices for the precious metal had gone through the roof. When the Times first approached the Mint to ask questions about its supply chain, a spokesman claimed its gold came entirely from the U.S. But after my colleagues shared their findings, the Mint said American Gold was its, quote, primary source and that it was taking better steps to track its origins.
Starting point is 00:07:58 In a statement, the Treasury Secretary Scott Besson, who oversees the Mint, said he's launching an investigation into the government's procurement practices. And finally. History in the making. Under two hours, nobody's ever done this. They said it couldn't be done. In London yesterday, a runner shattered the world record for fastest marathon time ever in an official race. Absolutely incredible. I've never seen anything like that.
Starting point is 00:08:29 Sebastian Sawway of Kenya crossed the finish line after just one hour, 59 minutes, and 30 seconds, beating the previous record by more than a minute. Amazingly, the runner-up, who was making his marathon. debut also came in under two hours, a milestone that had never been reached in a competition like this. Some of it might have been the weather, mid-50s to 60s, not much wind, great conditions for a race, but marathon times have also been improving for a few years now, in part because of the runners' shoes. About a decade ago, the so-called super-shoe era began, when runners started wearing shoes with ultra-light chunky foam soles embedded with carbon plates.
Starting point is 00:09:13 The soles protect runners' joints and muscles and help them lose less energy with each stride. The rise of that design kicked off what's become a streak of record-breaking runs. Of course, you can't forget that breakfast is important, too. Saway said that before he broke the two-hour mark, he had two slices of bread, ham, and tea. Those are the headlines. I'm Tracy Mumford. We'll be back tomorrow.

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