VERY CONCERNING: Legal Experts Reveal "Flaw" In Case That Could Set Tyler Robinson Free | WLT Report Skip to main content
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VERY CONCERNING: Legal Experts Reveal “Flaw” In Case That Could Set Tyler Robinson Free


This is concerning…

I have been on record that the official story we are being fed about Charlie Kirk’s assassination has many holes in it and things that just don’t add up, BUT…if Tyler Robinson is indeed the lone gunman, then a critical flaw in the case against him could set him free and that’s concerning.

Fox News explains how the timeline doesn’t seem to add up and it could completely unravel the case:

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One of the biggest vulnerabilities in the case against Charlie Kirk’s accused assassin, Tyler Robinson, could be the prosecution’s timeline, according to a prominent Utah defense attorney — and she expects the defense to drag discovery in the case on for up to a year before he finally gets a preliminary hearing.

Kirk, a 31-year-old father of two, was shot and killed around 12:20 p.m. on Sept. 10 while speaking at a Turning Point USA event at Utah Valley University. He was a founder of the conservative student group, which had a national footprint and is credited for a resurgence of youth support for the Republican Party.

“There’s just so much we don’t know yet as this case develops,” said Skye Lazaro, of the Salt Lake City firm, Ray Quinney & Nebeker.

The defense doesn’t know much yet, either. The discovery process began Monday with a five-day deadline for prosecutors to make their initial disclosures, and Robinson’s team already pushed his waiver hearing back by a month.

Some evidence has been made public already, at news briefings, in comments from authorities or in the charging documents filed last week. Prosecutors included damning text messages between Robinson and his roommate and romantic partner, Lance Twiggs, in which he allegedly took responsibility for Kirk’s murder. But they don’t include timestamps.

Robinson, 22, was arrested in his hometown in southern Utah 33 hours after the murder. Before that, he allegedly returned to the crime scene, where police found the suspected murder weapon, Fox News Digital was first to report — still, authorities have not made clear the timing of his encounter with a police officer stationed at the perimeter.

“If it doesn’t line up in a way that makes sense, it could definitely be bad for them,” Lazaro told Fox News Digital.

Robinson allegedly told the officer he wanted to get something he left near a parking garage in the area — which is also near where police found the rifle, according to a law enforcement source. That wasn’t immediately deemed suspicious because hundreds of people had dropped things as they fled for safety in the wake of Kirk’s shooting death in front of a crowd of roughly 3,000. But the officer did a routine check on Robinson’s license plate, which authorities linked to the encounter after he had been identified as a potential suspect, according to the source.

If the officer’s bodycam wasn’t turned on, that could be an opening for Robinson’s defense to attempt to poke holes in the investigation, Lazaro said.

Additional details about the texts could also be more damaging to Robinson’s defense, Lazaro said.

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“A lot of times what you can get when you subpoena cellphone records are where messages were sent from,” she said.

If the subpoenas show they were sent from Robinson’s phone in Orem and received by his partner’s phone in St. George, that would align with the prosecution’s allegations.

“The defense is going to want to get, going to wanna see, and probably spend a lot of time, whether they get their own forensic expert to analyze it or do it themselves, to really piece together a timeline,” she added.

Twiggs is cooperating with investigators, authorities have said. But the defense is expected to do their best to undermine the state’s case.

“It could come out that those aren’t as damaging as they sound,” Lazaro said. “You have to keep in mind, when the government writes a probable cause affidavit, it’s their greatest hits that they have in the moment.”

Gaps in what authorities have said publicly have also led to speculation online, much of which is unsubstantiated, and that won’t be of much use to the defense, Lazaro added.

“There are some conspiracy theories about…somebody else wrote the text messages or something was planted,” Lazaro said. “As a defense attorney, unless you absolutely know and can prove that something like that happened, that’s not the greatest defense, right? I think you tend to lose credibility unless you really can substantiate it.”

We will continue to monitor this study and bring you updates as we have them.

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