Crime Stories with Nancy Grace - CONFESSIONS, DNA & GRANDPA’S RIFLE, EVIDENCE MOUNTS IN CHARLIE KIRK SHOOTING, JUDGE RULES
Episode Date: September 30, 2025Tyler Robinson's appearance in court, was via video from the Utah County Jail, not in person. Still, Robinson did not show his face during the proceeding. Robinson’s new... defense attorney, Kathryn Nester, has requested a preliminary hearing. In the meantime, social media platforms are swarming with theories of how Charlie Kirk died. Many claiming Robinson is innocent. Even conservative influencer, Candace Owens, claims a source close to the Robinson family tells her they believe Robinson is being framed. Now Utah County prepares for a high-profile trial expected to cost taxpayers a million dollars. Joining Nancy Grace today, Skye Lazaro - State and Federal Criminal Defense Attorney / Law Firm: Ray, Quinney & Nebeker, website: www.rqn.com, Facebook: SkyeBeth, Instagram: SkyeBeth1 Allison Paganelli - Forensic Psychology Expert website: parkdietzassociates.com Chris McDonough - Director at the Cold Case Foundation, Former Homicide Detective, worked over 300 Homicides in 25-year career, Trained the first Native American Homicide Task Force; & Host of YouTube channel, "The Interview Room" www.coldcasefoundation.org/chris-mcdonough Traci Brown - Body language expert, Author: “How to Detect Lies, Fraud and Identity Theft”, www.BodyLanguageTrainer.com, Twitter: @Tracibrown37 Dr. Priya Banerjee - Board Certified Forensic Pathologist and Anatomic Pathologist, Anchor Forensic Pathology Consulting Germania Rodriguez - Chief US Reporter, DailyMail.com Sydney Sumner - Crime Stories Investigative Reporter See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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This is an I-Heart podcast.
Crime Stories with Nancy Grace.
The Charlie Kirk shooting suspects million dollar defense, and we're paying for it.
This, as the defendant claims, no one was in danger.
Really?
His family insisting he's never set foot on the campus anyway, and that's
That it's not him caught on video.
Okay.
Who should I believe?
You are my lying eyes.
Does it all boil down to this?
Confessions, DNA, and Grandpa's rifle.
The evidence stacking up.
I'm Easy Grace.
This is crime stories.
I'm going to thank you for being with us.
It's about two minutes in when the shot was fired.
All witnesses are reporting that all they heard was a single shot that was fired.
that he reached up to his neck and blood was starting to gush out of his neck.
And it hit him in the carotid artery and that caused a bleed out almost immediately.
The Charlie Kirk shooting suspect court appearance yesterday.
He did not show his face.
This as we hear his roommate, his romantic partner apparently laying low even in a safe house.
You know, Charlie Kirk didn't have that operation.
did he this as the suspects family also laying low but tonight we are learning some
family members insisting what what he's never set foot on the campus before um okay i guess all
the cameras are lying so what does that mean it's not him we see on the video so much happening
straight out to sydney sumner crime stories investigated reporter how is how are certain family members
claiming that he, the suspect, never has been on that campus.
How is that happening?
Am I supposed to ignore what he said in the text to his romantic partner roommate?
According to Candace Owens, you are supposed to ignore those texts because they were authored by
SBI agents and not Tyler Robinson to land.
But stop.
Sorry, I'm sorry.
My earpiece must not be working correctly because I thought for sure, Sidney Sumner, I heard you
say that there is a theory that all the texts that the alleged shooter sent his romantic
partner roommate were actually written by the FBI. Did you say that? I didn't. Candice Owens did
on her stream yesterday afternoon. So she took the step further. We've already heard rumors that
Jen Ziers are saying, you know, I've never heard a 22 year old talk like that over text
message. This is really weird. And she came out and made that accusation yesterday that these
text messages are part of an FBI cover up. And an FBI agent without a modicum of intelligence
wrote those text messages. Okay. So the FBI agent was in on the whole thing that it was the
grandpa's long gun. And he couldn't, he the alleged shooter, couldn't retrieve it and was caught on
Kim and a dairy queen waiting to go back into the trees and bushes to get his gun.
So the FBI agent that this conservative influencer is talking about, what is
clairvoyant?
He was in on the whole thing or what?
Did he plant the gun too?
This from Candace Owens.
Sidney, help me out.
What is she claiming?
Well, Nancy, so they're claiming, Owens is claiming, that these text messages include
every single detail that police had.
tracking Tyler Robinson up until the point that he was arrested.
So we're hearing reports now from law enforcement sources that Robinson actually had a run-in
with police near UVU campus the evening after the shooting.
And they believe he was trying to make a move to retrieve that rifle.
Now, law enforcement already had the rifle in their possession.
They already knew what model it was.
They already knew that it had a big $2,000 scope on it.
So Owens is pointing out that these text messages include every single detail of the planning, of the shooting, of the rifle that was used in the shooting.
And that feels a little bit suspicious.
She finds that odd that this 34 ACC4 will do that.
So now here we go.
The floodgates are open.
I haven't even gotten to the hearing that went down yesterday.
and what, if anything, it means to the defense and the state.
We are bombarded by these insane theories that the FBI
secretly wrote all the texts from Robinson,
the alleged shooter, to his roommate,
his romantic partner, Lance Twiggs.
Okay, Sky Lazaro joining me,
state and federal criminal defense attorney
with Ray Quinny and Nebecker.
Sky, just take off your defense.
hat, one moment, if that's possible.
I can do it.
This is fodder for the defense.
It's complete fodder.
Now, any defense attorney in their right mind would likely not claim that the texts were
sent by the FBI because there's just too much knowledge in those texts that nobody else
would know all those details other than the sender.
But that said, this is muddying the water for the state.
All these conspiracy theories have gone.
wild and basically the defense can sit back and pick and choose which crazy zany conspiracy
theory they're going to present to the jury they don't even have to come up with a trial
strategy the online sleuths are doing it for them i couldn't agree more i you know in this case
this is the best thing that can happen because if you got a jury pool is fighting with each other
about conspiracy theories or this happened or this didn't happen i mean that's the best thing
that can happen to you. Put her up. I want to actually see her face. Sky Lazaro has won a lot of
cases. But I want to see her face. Did you just say with apparently a straight face that the defense
could blame the government for Charlie Kirk's assassination? No, no, no. This is a rogue FBI agent really
did it. No defense attorney is going to do that. That's not going to happen. It's not going to happen in this
case. What my point was is when you have a jury pool who's out there, who's getting all of this
information and hearing this from different platforms and I think, you know, Candice Owen said
millions of viewers yesterday, people believe that stuff. And if you have, if you have a jury pool
that is divided on whether or not the government had a hand in this or covered it up or something
else, I mean, that's grounds for jury of nullification somewhere along the way. Chris McDonough.
Don't help me. Look, I know that some of these wild claims, which we're about to hear, are
zany. But when I'm sitting in the prosecutor's chair and I've got Charlie Kirk's widow
sitting behind me waiting for me to somehow wave a magic wand and make it all turn out right.
and you're confronted with theories like was being thrown out right now polluting the jury pool
it's overwhelming yes I'm angry I am angry all they make believe and pretend theories that are
out there as to who assassinated Charlie Kirk in cold blood now a rogue FBI agent did it
It's, it, you can't laugh it off, Chris, as tempting as it is.
McDonough is a former homicide investigator.
He worked vice.
He's worked every angle for the state.
He's now the star of the interview room on YouTube, director of the Cold Case Foundation.
Chris, this is not a joke.
This is real.
You get one nut juror.
Look, look at O.J. Simpson.
really people really believe the police could hold it together and create a conspiracy
it's total BS same thing here yeah absolutely Nancy I mean and you know more than
anybody being in that courtroom to hear craziness like this I mean this is just
irresponsible right now I mean the fact that you have this allegation that you know
some other dude I e law enforcement the government who
whoever, you know, had set this kid up and it's, you know, some gigantic conspiracy.
Put him up?
What kid are you talking about?
Well, Tyler Robinson.
Is there somehow a middle school shooter?
I mean, I don't know.
What kid are you talking about?
Well, you know, we're talking about Tyler Robinson, right?
I mean, and by the way, I interviewed the underserved.
He is no kid.
Well, well, I agree with you.
But, you know, he's also not the smartest tool in the shed, even though he has an IQ that's extremely high.
The fact that he's left all the evidence behind him and in front of him, by the way, this, I think this is part of the, the, a play somewhere from somebody.
Oh, wait.
The fact that the conspiracy theories are going to make a lot of hay out of what you said just then about leaving evidence out.
They're going to claim it was planted.
And I don't want to hear another word about.
too dumb to pull it off.
This guy won a $40,000, nearly $40,000 scholarship.
Control room, please pull that video up.
Do I have to convince McDonough again for Pete?
Listen.
To receive the resident presidential scholarship from Utah State University.
The value of this scholarship is approximately $32,000.
This scholarship is available for four years or eight semesters.
Yeah, well, the state saves a lot of money on that one.
Yeah.
All that opportunity.
All that advantage and what did he do?
What were you saying about the undersheriff?
Well, I interviewed the undersheriff and he confirmed that everything that is being said online is not true.
First of all, Tyler Robinson's father was not in law enforcement.
It was his friend and that's still being projected out there.
Second, he did turn himself into the jail with a friend of his who was retired law enforcement.
That's not a conspiracy.
That's facts.
Crime Stories with Nancy Grace.
You know what?
You're branching out into even more conspiracy theories
and normally I would chastise you for getting off the point.
But you're right.
Another conspiracy theory.
And let's take a look at the source of some of the conspiracy theories.
Any person with a modicum of intelligence is going to go,
I'm not going to put this down and write.
writing with every detail and apparently whoever offered those messages likely feds didn't
have a modicum of intelligence the family says that's the photo of the young man that is coming
up the stairs which was shared that blurry image is definitively not Tyler Robinson when I put
together when I'm being told by Lance's family and when I'm hearing from the Robinson family
through a third party,
I will say that it matches.
It kind of seems like they're agreeing.
One family's going, hey, Lance is kind of evil.
Why is he getting cleared?
And the other one's going,
Tyler's not this guy.
Okay, I really don't know where to start
with that big steaming, stinky crock of BS I just heard.
That is from Candace Owens.
Let's just break it down very quickly.
And then maybe we can actually get to the facts,
the real facts, the hard evidence about what is happening now.
first of all, any person with a modicum of intelligence is going to go, I'm not going to put
this all down in writing every detail. And whoever authored those messages like the feds, don't
have a modicum of intelligence. Okay, I was a Fed for three years before I became a felony
prosecutor in Superior Court. So as a former Fed, I don't appreciate that very much. But that
said, I'm very, very curious, straight back out to Sky Lazzaro joining us, veteran trial lawyer
in both the state and federal criminal systems. That is a really long stretch to claim,
hey, the defendant would never put so many details in his text. B.S., yes, they would because
they're not that smart, Sky. Why do you think the federal and the state jails are so full?
because they're idiots.
I wish none of my clients ever wrote anything down, but that is not the reality.
No, it's not.
And also, let's talk about this.
To Tracy Brown joining us, you guys know Tracy very well, body language expert and author of
how to detect lies, fraud, and identity theft.
She's body language trainer.com.
Tracy, please, when you think that you are texting with your romantic partner, you say a lot more than you would
say to other people, right?
I think you do, because there's a very deep trust there, I would say.
One of the things that concerned me when I saw this was the perfect punctuation and
capitalization.
And it didn't seem age appropriate to me.
So either he's so smart that he's not tuned into his generation or something else has taken
over.
It's very odd.
Put it up.
Just so you know, Tracy, both of my twins text nonstop to me and their punctuation is always
perfect.
Do they really?
Oh, wow.
Okay.
All right.
Yes, really.
Yeah.
So, reality check.
Another thing to Alison Paganelli joining us, forensic psychologist, esteemed forensic
psychologist, joining us out of the Atlanta jurisdiction.
Alison Paganelli, thank you for being with us.
Alison, when you are writing someone that you trust and that you love, that you're romantic with, very often,
and you lower your guard and you say things you wouldn't normally say to anybody else.
Isn't that true?
Yes.
I like that short and sweet.
Yes.
Another thing regarding this conspiracy theory that the FBI really wrote the text and not the defendant,
the FBI would have to be clairvoyant in some way to know all the details about Grandpa's long gun and how he was trying to go back and retrieve it.
and so much more contained in those texts from Tyler Robinson to his roommate.
Yes.
They would be overly involved if this were the conspiracy that Candace Owen says it is,
then that would mean that the FBI was, you know,
tracking Mr. Robinson knew of weapons that he had.
Allison, hold on this a moment.
Tracking Mr. Robinson, more like setting him up because they,
If the FBI is responsible, then they would have been responsible for the shooting and for setting it up and for framing him.
I mean, this goes a lot deeper than faking a few texts.
So you would have to believe that the FBI was in on this from the get-go.
Do you really believe that because I find it to be a fantastical farce?
Do I believe that that's what happened?
No, I don't.
to me, it would be far-fetched for the FBI to pick Tyler Robinson out of many, many males and females who are online talking about various political things.
He's a 22-year-old, allegedly really intelligent. He got the scholarship.
It would seem to me, yeah, like I said, pretty far-fetched for them to just pick him out and decide we're going to frame this guy.
and we're going to send all these texts with all the details.
It's just it would have had to have been pre-planned for a long period of time.
And I just don't think that's a plausible theory.
It's not plausible.
Hermania Rodriguez now joining us,
Chief U.S. reporter withdailymail.com.
Hermania, thank you for being with us.
So, you know, now that we're hashing out,
this is just one conspiracy theory that the FBI really wrote the text.
I haven't even gotten to what happened in court.
Hermania, where is this coming from, this theory?
And another thing I heard Owen's claim is that the families are saying the defendant is innocent.
Of course they are.
They always say that.
How often do you see the mother of, and by the way, these are, this is the family that convinced him to turn himself in, all right?
Now, claiming, yeah, that's not him in the picture.
It's just, where's this coming from?
This case has been completely riddled by conspiracy theories that have really emerged on social media,
particularly on X.
A lot, you talked about people saying that the text messages do not sound how a Gen Zier would speak.
We saw a lot of memes being done about this.
Put her out, please.
Hermania, have you noticed that everybody talking about how a Gen Zier would speak is not,
a Gen Zier? Okay, so consider the source on that. Go ahead, please. Correct. This was all speculation
based on nothing specific. But then we start seeing this same conspiracies emerge from Candace
Owens show. Now, it's important to remember that Candace Owens is not a typical journalist. She
claims that she's been speaking to the family of Tyler Robinson, who allegedly claims that
that's not their son involved. However, we don't really have evidence about this. She's not
saying which people she's speaking to.
She actually mentioned the clip that you showed
that she's talking to them
through a third person.
So a lot of what Candace Owens is saying
on her show seems to lead to other
of the conspiracy theories that she has been
peddling about Charlie Kirk
and who would have wanted to have him gone
according to her.
You know, another issue to Sky Lazzaro
joining as veteran trial lawyer
out of the Utah jurisdiction.
sky so much of it is fantastical but when you see the 12 in the box you don't know what they're
really thinking i mean i would try to get as up close and personal to each juror as i could
without getting reprimanded by the judge and i mean physically close to them right up
to the jury rail if i could to look them in the eye and
watch them the way I'm watching you right now is they answered each question and the questions
you know after the typical uh where do you work how long have you been there do you have a family
do you know the defendant do you know anybody in his family blah blah blah I would look right at them
and hold their gaze to see if they looked away if they blinked rapidly if they had mannerisms
that suggested they had to think about their answers were they concealing something you never
know, Sky, what they're really thinking. And we've seen so many jurors recently that have gone
online and investigated the case themselves, which is prohibited during a trial. You've got to be
really careful that one of these jurors haven't gotten sucked down the conspiracy drain.
That's 100% correct. I think our biggest fear is trial lawyers are the people who really want
to be there. You almost want jurors who don't want to be there because
They're probably less involved in the case, but you're absolutely right.
It doesn't matter how much you do in Bordyre, how close you get to them.
You never know really what those people are thinking deep down or if they have any affiliations
or have gone down these conspiracy theory rat holes and just want to be a part of this case.
And the other thing is, unless you sequester them, it's almost impossible to keep them offline during a trial.
And, of course, this is a defense team's fantasy.
It's the juror fantasy game that they're playing right now, largely fueled by sleuths.
Tonight, we are dealing with the facts as we know them now.
Not he said, she said, the third cousin twice removed, told the gas station attendant this,
and then they called me blah, blah, blah, blah.
But here are just a few of the conspiracy theories that are spinning out right now.
And trust me, believe you me, the defense is writing everyone down.
Listen.
Any person with a modicum of intelligence is going to go, I'm not going to put this down in writing with every detail.
And apparently whoever offered those messages, likely feds, didn't have a modicum of intelligence.
the family says that the photo of the young man that is coming up the stairs, which was shared
that blurry image, is definitively not Tyler Robinson.
And when I put together when I'm being told by Lance's family and when I'm hearing from
the Robinson family through a third party, I will say that it matches.
It kind of seems like they're agreeing.
One family's going, hey, Lance is kind of evil.
Why is he getting cleared?
The other one's going, Tyler's not.
this guy from candace owens this is a father of two had a little girl little boy wife erika like him or
or hating he's a media figure he was magnetic charlie kirk is one of these people that is a firebrand they know he is
one of these guys who has he stood up for what he believes in candace owens claims a source close to
the robinson family believe robinson is being framed has never been to uvU campus robinson's parents know
blurry photos distributed by law enforcement are not their son. Robinson never confessed to his father
and he did not write the messages to Lance Twiggs on September 10th. Why are you playing that?
I just said we're going to be dealing with facts tonight, not zany conspiracy theories that are
handing over wild ideas for the defense to pursue in front of a jury. No, let's go to the courtroom.
to what the judge just said.
As this case moves forward,
Mr. Robinson's constitutional rights
will be protected at every stage.
He sits before this court presumed innocent,
and that presumption remains unless and until
each element of every offense charged against him
is proved beyond a reasonable doubt.
At the same time and as applicable,
victims are entitled under our Constitution
to be treated with fairness, respect,
and dignity free from harassment or abuse.
Justice demands that both of these principles,
the rights of the accused, and the rights of victims,
be honored without compromise.
City, son-room, we're hearing the judge right there,
Judge Torrey Graff speaking,
talking about being fair,
not just to the defendant, but to the victims,
the state as well.
Why did everybody go berserk when the judge said he was going to be fair?
I don't get it.
What's wrong with that?
I found nothing wrong with it.
I think the judge made the decision to speak on this issue and speak on keeping things fair because this is such a charged case.
Going forward, they really want to protect the defendant, the victim, the future jury.
At this latest hearing attendees who came in person were not allowed to have bags.
They were not allowed to wear any kind of face.
covering that could possibly conceal their identity, there are serious security concerns
with this upcoming trial, with all of the hearings up until the trial, and they want to make
sure everyone feels safe and secure in that courtroom.
You know, to Hermione Rodriguez joining as Chief U.S. reporter with Daily Mail, I respect the
judge because the judge is standing up to people, the baying mob that is demanding one thing
or all the conspiracy theorists who are demanding another thing.
And he is saying he's going to be fair and they can all go straight to HE.E.
double L.
Of course, I'm paraphrasing right there, that he is going to do the right thing.
Tell me, Sidney was just talking about the security measures taken for this is just the hearing.
And the defendant didn't even show his face.
Profound security measures taken.
Explain, Hermania.
That's right. This was a hearing that was open to the public. So officials had to take extra steps to protect those that were there and also make sure that the influx of people into the courtroom that everyone was saved. And that is why the judge made these statements. This case has caused so much commotion around the world and the country. And people wanted to show up to this hearing, even though, as you mentioned, we didn't even see Tyler Robinson on the video. So the judge made.
made sure to say under these circumstances, where we have all this extra security, where the
president of the United States is talking about, I will not put my finger on the scale of justice.
And it was a message, I think, that needed to be said in this case.
You know, the fact that he kept the hearing open to the public as is ordered by the U.S.
Constitution in the face of what many consider to be a copycat shooting.
to me shows great bravery on the part of the judge. Listen to this. A 29-year-old Texas man
opens fire on an ice facility in Dallas. Joshua John fired indiscriminately at the building,
killing one detainee and injuring two more. Bullet casings recovered at the scene were
inscribed with, quote, anti-ice. John's brother said he did not know John to be very politically
motivated. The brothers grew up in nearby Allen, Texas as Boy Scouts. One of John's Boy Scout friends
remembered a conversation about immigration with John, in which he was upset that no one seemed to
understand how desperate families are to get away from dangerous situations.
And there you hear a guy who is seemingly not concerned with politics before being led to
a blind shooting. And this is not whether you agree with ICE or don't agree with ICE.
This is a shooter, politically motivated, killing people.
The fact that the judge had an open courtroom is very impressive and standing up to both sides, both very powerful sides, wanting one outcome or the next.
Now, you just heard Hermania Rodriguez mention the judge referring to the scales of justice.
Listen.
I will carry out my duty.
with fidelity, transparency, and impartiality, treating every person who appears before me with the
dignity and respect they are inherently due because they are human beings. Let me be clear. I will not
put my finger on the scale of justice. These proceedings will be open to the public, conducted in
accordance with the law, and handled with diligence and competence to ensure that justice is never
compromised. What he means by that is, as you all know, Lady Justice carries a shield and a sword.
She also holds the scales of justice in her hands. And when the judge says, I'm not putting my finger
on the scale, which would tip the scales of justice, basically calling for one outcome guilty or the
other not guilty by tipping the scales of justice. Is it true, Hermania Rodriguez, that the defense
has already been giving carte blanche a million dollar defense? They've already been given
a million dollars out of my wallet. That's correct. This case is going to be really expensive
for the state. And because it's a death penalty case, the state can attribute lots and lots of money for
the defendant to get the best defense possible. And it doesn't have to be a public defender from the
county. It can be a prominent fancy lawyer like the one they have obtained. Her name is Catherine
Nestor. And yes, reports are saying that this case is, I believe it's both in the defense will
cost the state of Utah as much as a million dollars. As Utah County prepares for a high profile
trial, they're awarded a million dollars of taxpayer money to fund Robinson's defense. The county
He hires three attorneys on Robinson's behalf.
The team led by Catherine Nestor of Nestor Lewis in Salt Lake City.
Nestor earned her law degree at the University of Texas and has more than 33 years of defense experience working in both Salt Lake and San Diego as a public defender.
Crime Stories with Nancy Grace.
I heard the gunshot go off.
And that was when I started hearing a bunch of people for crying and screaming.
To get down, I was terrified.
The man who allegedly shot Charlie Kirk, 22-year-old Utah resident Tyler Robinson.
I'm getting bombarded right now with conspiracy theories.
Okay.
So I say stop the conspiracy theories and now they're pouring in like mad.
I want to take a look at the shooting suspect, the Charlie Kirk shooting suspect Robinson,
on body cam.
Let's see what we can learn.
Watch this.
You guys have a couple different versions
about what happened.
So we had a third party witness
that watched the entire thing.
I'm just trying to clarify
your guys' story a little bit.
So you're heading?
From that bright most through lane
through the intersection.
Maybe a second or so
before I reached the intersection,
the light changed yellow.
Okay, you remember looking at the light?
Yeah,
talking about the light just before getting there.
The main thing I see right there is it looks just like he did in the video after the shooting
and before the shooting where he's wearing the sunglasses and the hat.
Here's some more body cameras watch.
So people on the side of you were slowing down to a stop.
I had seen someone slowing down and I wondered why they had slowed so much.
Okay.
Why do you think that they were slowing down?
I'm not sure.
Okay.
Maybe because the light was turning red?
Well, I was close enough to the light that I would be, like, I would end up in the intersection to quite have tried to break from that speed.
Okay.
Okay.
Let's go straight out to Tracy Brown, joining us, body language expert and author of How to Detect Lies.
Tracy, I'm just looking at his body language and his demeanor with the L.E.
Law enforcement.
What do you make of it, if anything?
I watched the whole video, the whole video.
hour-long footage. And here's what's different between him and everyone else there. Because you
got to ask yourself, what do you see and what's missing? And what's missing is two things.
One, nervousness. So he may not have a response to trauma. And that can indicate like that,
that can lead someone to think that, you know, what he allegedly did was okay. Everyone else,
his brother, his mom, the guy in the car that he hit,
what showed signs of anxiety, fidgeting,
wiping or touching your face, touching your neck,
playing with your hair.
He doesn't show anything.
He keeps his hands in his pockets.
Actually, he puts his thumbs in his pockets,
which is framing his manhood there.
And it's different than everyone else.
Put her up, please.
Tracy Brown, what do you mean by putting his thumbs in his pockets is, quote, framing his
manhood? I feel like I'm reading a 1969 romance novel framing his manhood. Who said that?
Well, yeah, I'm trying to be, I'm trying to be kind. It's the same moves that I've seen
when I've done reads on Justin Bieber. It's showing how powerful he is. And it's, it's, it's
a loop. You mean by pointing to his crotch?
To put it mildly.
That's what I mean.
Okay.
All right.
Like those guys that are always grabbing themselves?
I didn't know that meant anything.
Okay.
Go ahead.
Yeah.
It's a power play is what it is.
And so he's different.
I just thought it was awkward.
Well, okay.
So let's put him in the situation.
Standing on the corner, when your car is sitting in front of you wrecked and the police have
showed up and you don't know how you're getting a ride home is awkward.
So we got to give him that.
He doesn't show the same level of effect that everyone else involved does.
And he also shows a bit of a lack of awareness of the situation and what really happened.
That last part is a little more understandable.
But this shows, I think it indicates how he is with law enforcement and concern for those around him and affect at a very, very intense situation.
You know, it's really interesting that you interpret his behavior in that manner because, believe it or not, Tracy, that is what other experts are saying regarding his behavior right after the shooting.
You're in lockstep.
You're dovetailing with what other experts have said about his demeanor right after the shooting.
Listen.
Experts say Robinson's behavior.
after the shooting indicates he did not have a solid plan to avoid capture.
Former FBI agent Michael Tabman believes Robinson likely struggled with the gravity of his actions
leading to disorientation and confusion after the shooting.
Dadman says Robinson had likely come to terms of being caught and did not plan for what
happened after taking the shot. Robinson waited in Orem for hours trying to recover his
grandfather's Mouser and reportedly had a run-in with police on UVU campus that evening as he made a move
to get to the gun.
Okay, I'm not really buying into everything, our investigative reporter just said,
such as he had confusion because he left the scene, he changed clothes,
he lay in wait, trying to get his grandpa's long gun back.
That doesn't sound confused at all to me because he knew that that gun would be traced
right back to his grandpa and had been gifted to him.
In fact, isn't it true Hermione Rodriguez's Daily Mail that his,
Biodad, his father, Robinson's father, kept saying, send me a picture of your grandpa's gun.
Send me a picture.
And he couldn't because it was confiscated by police.
So he knew that gun would connect directly to him.
That's not confused.
That's kind of smart.
That's right.
And that's a very important part of his conversations with his romantic partner and roommate,
where he seems the most thinking about the rifle.
and trying to get it back.
So he does mention that he's unsure
whether the rifle will have a serial number
and be traced back to him
because it's an old weapon.
It is his grandfather's 1,000%
in those messages that we have seen
with his romantic interest,
Tyler Robinson was hyper-focused
in getting that rifle,
and he knew it was the major thing
tying him to the crime,
and that's why he remained in the area
trying to retrieve it.
Well, I guess, you know, it's the sneaky FBI, according to Candace Owens again.
They knew not only that the murder weapon belonged to Tyler Robinson had been gifted to him by his grandpa,
but also in those texts, this, you know, completely belies any claim that he was confused.
He says to the roommate in text, hey, drop what you're doing.
His words are not mine.
go under my keyboard to my computer and get rid of this piece of paper that says,
hey, I'm going to have a chance to shoot Charlie Kirk, and I'm going to take it.
So I guess the FBI either planted that under his computer and then texted about it.
My point, which is total, complete BS, but my point is here that he is by far from confused.
Would you agree, Hermione Rodriguez?
is yeah that's another way that we know he planned this attack because after he did it he had
we know that he had left something in the apartment for the roommate to find right right after
shooting they contact the roommate and say hey check under the keyboard so there's more premeditation
planning obvious and speaking of the long gun Tracy brown and any you're saying he didn't seem to
understand the gravity or he couldn't take in the gravity of the car crash and he was acting
really cavalier and casual guy in front of the police that responded to the crash but here
and after the shooting we actually see him and this is thanks to candace owens she came up with
this dq dairy queen photo of him hanging around in the area you know he wanted to leave the area
but he wanted to go and retrieve the long gun.
It's like he doesn't understand.
He was more worried, you know, that his dad was going to get mad about the long gun.
That's what he was upset about.
He didn't seem to understand the gravity that he just murdered someone, according to police,
is shot from Candace Owens.
What about it, Tracy?
Well, the way you do anything is the way you do everything.
So I am not surprised that he was aloof.
about the situation that he had just created, like in killing someone.
It's the same way that he handled the car wreck.
So 100% not surprised.
And yeah, this is how he does things.
Yeah.
But Tracy Brown, I hear what you're saying.
And I want to follow up on that with our shrink forensic psychologist, Alison Paganelli,
joining us in the Atlanta jurisdiction, disconnected to what you've done.
I see that all the time in killers because people aren't real to them.
They're objects.
They don't feel human empathy toward their victim or the victim's family.
So being disconnected does not rise to legal insanity that you don't know right from wrong at the time of the incident.
Does it?
It does not.
In fact, any sort of mental condition that is just based on.
a pattern of criminal behavior or antisocial traits, lack of empathy would not qualify for even the
first step of an insanity defense. Just released, dispatch audio has only poured fuel on the flame. Listen.
Can you just add a stuff to the case documenting that there was no autopsy in 2018.
I need an officer return to Noggin's hospital to come state.
in the emergency room bay.
This from at HustleBitch on X.
Straight out to Sidney Sumner,
joining us Crime Stories Investigator reporter.
Apparently, the original death certificate
was signed by a doctor at the hospital.
Remember, Kirk was taken straight to the hospital.
And so that is where the death certificate came from.
The death certificate, isn't that right so far, Sydney Sumner?
Yes, absolutely.
straight out to special guests joining us now. Dr. Priya Banerjee, board certified forensic pathologist,
anatomic pathologist with anchor forensic pathology consulting. Dr. Priya, thank you so much for being with us.
Dr. Priya, while the death certificate may have been issued at the hospital,
that does not preclude Kirk's body being sent for autopsy, does it? Oh, not at all. Not at all. First of all,
I would say that any time there's trauma involved, a regular doctor, even an ER doctor, he can't sign the death certificate.
So that death certificate is null and void.
They're not legally allowed to do that.
So what will happen is that you'll go for an autopsy, even if the cause of death is somewhat obvious.
But we really need to document what was injured, you know, do it systematically, and then issue a death certificate.
it. Hermione Rodriguez joining us, chief U.S. reporter daily mill.com. As of tonight, has the autopsy
report, the official COD, cause of death been released. No, we have not seen an autopsy report,
and that has, as to you said, fueled further speculation. Back to Dr. Priya Banerjee,
joining us, a forensic pathologist. Dr. Priya, a slowdown in the release of an autopsy report,
could be due to any number of things.
You've got to wait on toxicology, with all of the conspiracy theories floating around out there.
I think many of them will be put to rest once we get the official autopsy report.
What do you think is the hold of?
Why no report yet?
Well, I think you're absolutely right in that, you know, even if the autopsy has completed, the exam, the report.
the report is very detailed.
There's other studies that need to be done like toxicology.
That does not happen overnight.
And obviously in any case, but a high profile case,
we want to dot our eyes cross our teeth.
So I don't know if there's any special analysis being done,
but there's also like different rules state to state.
I mean, you know, there could be legal issues
where you would, you know, be able to chime in more than I
as to why the report may not even be released,
especially with an ongoing investigation.
Yeah, it could be any number of reasons,
but now the conspiracy theorists are claiming
the government will use their own doctors
to affect a cover-up.
The theories even go as far as attacking Charlie Kirk's widow.
The mother of his children is not immune
from conspiracy theorists, as you will recall,
at his memorial, Erica Kirk raised up an I love you sign. Now that is being twisted around
to claim that she is actually putting up the devil's horns. The video you're seeing right there
is from Turning Point, but anyone familiar with sign language knows, hi, I love you. That's what she's
doing. I love you, abbreviated. They won't.
even leave his widow alone.
We are
also learning that
speaking of Erica Kirk
to Sydney Sumner,
are there also theories
that Prime Minister
Benjamin Netanyahu
ordered the hit
and that Erica is actually an Israeli
spy named Honeypot?
Yes. Unfortunately,
that is a rumor that is going around
that just gets a, whoa, really reaction from me personally.
So the rumor is that Charlie Kirk, who has been vocal in his support of Israel,
was kind of coming to a point that he was no longer going to be offering them his support in this conflict.
Okay, you know what? I'm just going to stop you right there.
I'm just going to stop you right there.
I don't want to add fuel to the flame.
Nancy Gray, signing off.
Goodbye, friend.
