Fact check: Viral photos of White House dinner shooter's alleged Indian wife and her passport are fake
PHOTO: SCREENGRAB
Multiple accounts on social media platform X have been sharing images since Sunday, allegedly showing White House dinner shooter Cole Tomas Allen with his Indian wife and her Indian passport. However, both images are AI-generated.
A lone gunman fired shots in the hotel hosting the White House Correspondents’ Association dinner on Saturday, causing United States President Donald Trump and his cabinet to be rushed out before the suspect was taken into custody.
The suspect arrested in the shooting was identified by a law enforcement official as Cole Tomas Allen, a Los Angeles-area man who appears from social media sites to be a Caltech graduate working as a part-time teacher and game developer. The official said Allen, approximately 31 years of age, was a resident of Torrance, California.
How it started
On Sunday, a person, who appeared to be sharing anti-India content in the past, shared two images on X showing the shooter with his alleged Indian wife, Priyanka Rao, and her Indian passport. The post was captioned: “The perpetrator of the shooting at the White House Correspondents’ Dinner, 31-year-old Cole Tomas Allen, with his Indian wife, Priyanka Rao,” and gained 1.2 million views.
Another person shared the same alleged images in a similar context without mentioning that she was Indian. The post attracted 406,000 views. Another person shared the image of an alleged couple on X in a similar context, garnering 175,000 views.
The same visuals were shared in a similar context by several other users on X, as can be seen here, here, here, here, here, here, here, here, and here; collectively accumulating 151,000 views.
Methodology
A fact-check was initiated to determine the veracity of the claim due to its high virality and keen public interest in the shooting incident.
A keyword search was conducted to verify whether any credible American or international media outlets had reported that the perpetrator had an Indian wife named Priyanka Rao. However, no such reports were found and neither has any information been provided in this regard by US authorities.
Instead, according to multiple US news outlets, such as NBC, Allen lived with his parents. The reports did not mention or indicate that he was married or in a serious relationship.
According to the Los Angeles Times and News Tribune, Cole’s manifesto didn’t mention a relationship or marriage. It did, however, contain threats against Trump administration officials.
A reverse image search for the woman in the image also did not yield any results or older photographs confirming her identity.
A visual analysis of the viral photo also revealed several discrepancies between Allen’s portrait and an image from his arrest that showed a mole under his right eye, absent in the viral image.
Secondly, the structure of the nose is also different between the two images — narrow and long in the image of the arrest, whereas the viral image shows a button nose structure.
Conducting an AI forensic analysis on the viral image showed that Hive Detect flagged it as 99.9% likely to be AI-generated.
Truth Scan also flagged the image as probably being 97% AI-generated.
As for the passport, visual inspection similarly revealed several inconsistencies indicative of fabrication.
The “Nationality” field incorrectly contains a person’s name, “Cole Thomas Allen”, instead of a country. The same name is again listed under “Name of Father/Legal Guardian”, which would imply that a person is being identified as both a nationality and a parent, suggesting the document has been fabricated or altered.
The spelling of the name is also incorrect, as the shooter’s name contains “Tomas”, not “Thomas”.
Additionally, the “Name of Spouse” field lists “Priyanka Rao”, which matches the passport holder’s name rather than a spouse’s name.
The Hindi text accompanying the date of issue does not accurately translate to “Date of Issue” and is gibberish, a sign of AI-generated visuals.
Additionally, the Machine Readable Zone (MRZ) contains multiple anomalies: the numeric strings do not correctly align with the listed date of birth or other encoded details. In the viral image, the date of birth appears near the end of the MRZ line alongside ‘slash keys’, whereas in the sample passport, it is positioned within the central block of check digits and appears inverted.
The birth year is also incorrectly formatted as “995” instead of “1995.” Moreover, the country code in the MRZ is listed as “IN” in the viral image, while the sample Indian passports used the three-letter code “IND”.
Further anomalies were identified in the passport’s design and structure. The “ghost image,” a standard security feature in genuine passports, appears poorly defined and lacks the precise detailing expected in authentic documents. There is also an absence of integrated security elements such as holograms and microprinting, which typically overlap the primary photograph and the overall text in legitimate passports.
Such internal inconsistencies further indicate that the document has been manipulated and is not authentic.
The image was also analysed using AI detection tools with SynthID, indicating that the image was likely edited or generated using Google AI.
Hive Moderation also flagged the image as 98.9% likely to be AI-generated.
IsThisAI also assessed it as 97% likely to be AI-generated.
Collectively, the visual inconsistencies, absence of credible reporting and strong AI-generation indicators confirm that the viral images are AI-generated.
Fact-check status: False
The claim that viral visuals show White House dinner shooter Cole Tomas Allen with his alleged Indian wife and her Indian passport is false.
The visuals are doctored through AI tools and there is no evidence of him having a wife.
This fact check was originally published by iVerify Pakistan — a project of CEJ-IBA and UNDP.