Suspect in White House Shooting Was Known to Secret Service, Had Active Warrant from Previous Incident

A man named Nasire Best, 21, had a prior history involving White House security and was reportedly warned to stay away last July. President Donald Trump said Best had a violent history and may have been obsessed with the White House. According to reported court filings, Best was arrested in july 2025 after trying to enter a restricted White House area and claiming he wanted to be arrested.The documents also say he previously walked around the complex asking how to gain access, and that he was involuntarily committed for a mental health evaluation in June 2025 after obstructing vehicle entry.

Subsequently, Best returned to the White House shortly after 6 p.m. Saturday,took a revolver from a bag,and fired at a Secret Service checkpoint. Officers returned fire, and Best was pronounced dead at a D.C. hospital. A bystander was wounded, though it was unclear who shot them. Secret Service leadership said officers responded heroically, noted that no agents were injured, and said the bystander was in serious but stable condition.




The gunman who fired on Secret Service agents Saturday had a history with White House security and had been warned to stay away last July.

President Donald Trump said on that the gunman had “a violent history and possible obsession” with the White House.

Nasire Best, 21, of Dundalk, Maryland, had been arrested last year after trying to gain access to the White House, according to CBS News.

In July 2025, a D.C. Superior Court filing cited by Fox News said Best entered a restricted area at a White House control post, would not stop, and “claimed he was Jesus Christ and that he wanted to get arrested.”

He was arrested on an unlawful entry charge in that incident.

The filing said Best had earlier walked around the White House complex and asked how to gain access.

Best had been involuntarily committed for a mental health exam in June 2025 after obstructing vehicle entry.

An August bench warrant accused Best of “noncompliance” because he did not show up for a hearing on the July charges, according to the New York Post.

At that time, a no-bond bench warrant that applied only to the District of Columbia was issued to allow police to arrest him, CBS News reported.

Best returned to the White House shortly after 6 p.m. Saturday, pulled a revolver from a bag and fired at a Secret Service checkpoint.

Multiple uniformed division officers, including at least one in a vehicle, returned fire. Best was pronounced dead at a D.C. hospital.

A bystander was wounded in the shooting, but it was uncertain who had shot him.

“Our officers continue to operate heroically in a heightened political threat environment,” Secret Service director Sean Curran remarked on Sunday in a statement, according to CBS News.

“We are grateful no officers were injured and appreciate the strong support from our federal and local partners. Our thoughts are also with the innocent bystander who was wounded during this incident. The Secret Service is hopeful he will make a full recovery,” he said.

The bystander who was shot was listed in serious but stable condition Sunday, according to the Associated Press.

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