White House says conspiracy theories about shooting are 'crazy nonsense'
Sentiment Mix
Geography
Expert Signals
NBC News - Top Stories
source • 1 mention
Politics - NBC News
source • 1 mention
AI-Generated Claims
Generated from linked receipts; click sources for full context.
White House says conspiracy theories about shooting are 'crazy nonsense'.
Supported by 1 story
White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt was asked about how the administration plans to combat the conspiracy theories about the White House Correspondents' Association dinner shooting from spreading.
Supported by 1 story
Related Events
Correspondents' dinner conspiracy theories spread so fast that even Trump was alarmed
Uncategorized • 4/28/2026
Meet the Press NOW — April 27
Uncategorized • 4/28/2026
Shooting suspect charged with attempting to assassinate Trump
Uncategorized • 4/28/2026
Trump officials point finger at Democrats and the media for political violence in wake of correspondents' dinner shooting
Uncategorized • 4/28/2026
Correspondents’ dinner attack will ‘significantly’ change WH protection: Fmr. Secret Service agent
Security • 4/28/2026