The Charlie Kirk Show - Tyler Robinson Preliminary Hearing: Day 2
Episode Date: July 7, 2026The long-awaited Tyler Robinson preliminary hearing has now entered its second day. Andrew and Blake react to a series of significant revelations in the hearing, including video footage of Tyler Robin...son on campus, testimony confirming Robinson turned himself in, and more. Watch every episode ad-free on members.charliekirk.com! Get new merch at charliekirkstore.com!Support the show: http://www.charliekirk.com/supportSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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We are here in studio. We're monitoring the second day of the preliminary hearing in the state
of Utah versus Tyler Robinson. A huge, huge moment just happened where the compilation video
of Tyler Robinson visiting UVU campus four times. Blake and I were watching.
watching it, our jaws dropped when you're looking at the time that you know Charlie was shot
and the time that this individual went up on campus and they track him, you know, in the parking
garage, across the different areas of campus, up under the roof. It was a really, really powerful
moment that the judge allowed that to be seen by the media. There was a back and forth between
the media and the defense and the prosecution of the defense.
We're finally getting evidence that we've heard for months exists.
And we're finally getting to see it.
So, and now the, there is a sort of John Madden style video where they're zooming in and putting circle marks where they want you to kind of see the suspect walking on campus and wherever else.
And so the judge now has not allowed the John Madden style video scene to be seen by the public, but he's reviewing it right now.
So we're going to throw back into the courtroom.
Again, a very, very powerful moment that just happened.
And when we hit breaks, we have guests standing by that are going to help us chime in.
We got Will Chamberlain, J-Town, both lawyers, and both going to help us break down what they've seen.
So stand by for that.
And we're going to just take the courtroom until the next break.
All right, welcome back, everybody.
Like I said briefly, when we started the hour, a really huge morning in court.
And just to kind of go back in time, why don't we bring in Will Chamberlain here?
here article three project and lawyer himself well welcome to the show thanks for being on standby
with us this morning that was a continuation this morning with that same witness and they had blocked
the judge had blocked the sort of john madden style video from being submitted as evidence and being
broadcast to the public the state the prosecution in this instance went back and got the raw
and showed a compilation of the raw video without any of these
Zuman's, the judge allowed that to be broadcast. What did you see when, what I believe is the most
powerful moment of evidence so far in the case? Well, I mean, it seems pretty clear they have him
dead to rights on the fact that he was there, you know, four times in a little over, you know,
well, I guess once a week before and the three times day of. And I mean, the fact that they have him
there, you know, in the morning and then they have him there right before the shooting. And then
you have the video obviously a little smaller with the person who's moving towards him.
But it's, I mean, it's pretty clearly Robinson, too.
This is, I mean, extremely compelling video evidence.
And obviously, this is not going to be the end of it, right?
You know, the video evidence alone is damning, but we've got all the, you know,
physical and forensic evidence, too.
So I think those who were, I think the big mistake that maybe those who were skeptical were
making was assuming that only the evidence that had been shown within 40,
hours of the shooting that was used to identify and apprehend Robinson, but that was going to be the
only evidence that the prosecution was able to present. And that's certainly clearly not the case
even after just this brief moment here. Yeah, and Blake, I was sitting next to Blake when this happened,
but there was also the moment when you see him coming down. He's changed clothes. It's obviously
the moments leading up to the actual shop being fired and he's got that he's got long pants now the
first video in that morning he was wearing shorts but the same shoes then he's got pants and he's got
he can't walk he's got he's basically limping along or shove whatever the term is he clearly
can't bend his right leg more than a few degrees he's sort of staggering up the steps and
they even say in one of the videos when this person gets on the roof they say he rolls over the
railing. He doesn't really clamor over it. He kind of has to roll himself over it to get onto the
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All right, welcome back, everybody. So much was made. And we've got Will Chamberlain, Article 3,
project joining us as well to help break this down. So I'm going to play this video, which again,
you know, we were all watching it together in the bullpen out here. And when you see Tyler
Robinson walking with this gate, this limp, I found it to be one of the most compelling
moments. And then the next piece in the compilation, you know, we all know, we have the time
stamp in our head, 1223. That's when Charlie was killed, 1223. And you're looking at,
at the timestamp on the video as he's going up onto the roof.
I mean, this is extraordinarily compelling.
Go ahead and play cut four.
This is a video of Mr. Robinson returning back to campus
the same way that he did previously on foot.
You believe this is Mr. Robinson returning to campus?
I do, yes.
And what do you believe is Mr. Robinson?
The shoes are the same,
and the images that we have are from,
From my viewing and seeing Mr. Robinson on the video, it's the same person.
He's noticeably wearing different clothing.
He is wearing different clothing, and he also is walking with a gate or a limp in this video.
With a gate or what?
A limp.
So it's Mr. Robinson coming up the stairs of the parking structure.
Again, he seems to be having issues walking.
And again, we were able to track Mr. Robinson
when he leaves this parking structure?
Yes, we were able to.
So that is presumably what's causing the gate
is that he has the weapon
or a portion of the weapon stuffed down his pant leg.
You can even see the outline, it seems.
Well, how compelling is that to you
if somebody's outside of our orbit?
I want to make sure I want to be totally dispassionate here
and just balls and strikes.
What is, how compelling of evidence is that?
It's extremely compelling, right?
They have video of him walking normally and running at like normally afterwards,
is my understanding.
You know, that doesn't make sense unless,
and especially the fact that the timing is happening right before the shooting.
Like, why is this person walking like that if he's not carrying a rifle?
Or, I'm sorry, the barrel of a rifle in his, in his pants.
And again, I mean, the fact, again, it's,
the timing and the combination of evidence here.
Like, obviously he's trying, you know, he's now wearing different clothing in sunglasses
and a baseball cap trying to hide and change the appearance of his identity.
And with this bizarre physical gait, you know, and it's like he's not, I mean, think about it.
Here's another way to think about it, right?
Like say he was, this was just some random person who was injured, you know, theoretically,
then why isn't he on crutches?
Why isn't he have something that'll assist in his mobility?
You know, one of those little leg scooters everybody has.
Like, no, this is, I mean, there's a lot of, none of this makes sense and is easily explicable, like, to a normal person.
Like, clearly there's something in his pants, and that is a gun.
And as he said there, they're saying, how do you know it's Tyler Robinson?
And first he says basically the same shape of person as they had earlier.
And he said they had the same shoes.
So changed his shirt, changed out of his shorts to get into his.
you know, basically long sleeve, long pants so you can hide stuff under your clothes,
but still has the same shoes, wearing sunglasses, otherwise the same-shaped person.
And of course, as we know, he then walks to the roof of that student center, gets onto it.
We have this, and I think this is the clip where you can see the timestamp.
Again, all of us know Charlie was killed at 1223.
We like, we'll never get that number out of our head.
All right.
And so to watch the timestamp of the video and you watch him get up there, it's very compelling.
Let's just say that.
SOT five.
And what time is this?
It's just afternoon, about 12.15.
On what day?
On December, sorry, December, September 10th, 2025.
What just happened or what did we just see happen?
The individual actually kind of rolls over the railing onto the roof of the Losey
building.
All right.
And again, in the top left corner, the individual is now seen running across the rooftop
of the Lossi building to what would be the southwest corner of the building,
crouching down and then crawling to the corner of the building.
Can you still see that individual?
Yes, you can, lame prone.
Lame prone.
and then
got another clip here
Will
but just to
highlight what you said
the roll over
because again
he's got the gate
something stuffed down
his pants
he's not walking
normal so he kind of
rolls over
can't stick his leg over
the normal way
to get onto the low C
building there
and then here's the next
clip in the sequence
of him then fleeing
the roof SOTSix
you believe this to be
Mr. Robinson
I'm sorry
You believe this to be Mr. Robinson?
I do, yes.
And how long is he out there on the edge of the building?
Just until the reported shot was fired at 12, 23 and 28,
the individual then stands up and then moves across the building to the north.
Is that what we're seeing happening right now?
It is, yes.
They move behind the atrium area on the rooftop,
at the northeast corner where the white triangle is.
Do you see Mr. Robinson now?
I do, yes. He's just arriving at the corner of the building, the almost top center of the image.
What are we seeing now?
Mr. Robinson lowering and jumping off of the roof of the low feet, low seat building onto the grass area,
and then moving away towards campus drive.
So the guy with the limp suddenly became a lot more mobile right there.
Right after 1223 and 28, which is, as we all,
all know the moment. So it's hard to watch, to be honest. So I don't know. Anybody else want to
chime in here? Yeah. I mean, I remember that footage, that footage, at least that little bit of
security footage, that was published pretty, I think that was published all the way back 48 hours
after the shooting by the FBI when they were looking for the guy and they were sort of presenting
the evidence of why they thought this was the guy. Maybe was it the apprehension. I'm not sure.
But I remember that that footage. And I thought it was, you know, perhaps one of those things where
once you understand that it's like, oh, yeah, clearly it's this person, right? Whoever, you know,
you have the timing in the background. You know that's when the shot just happened. And then you
have a guy scrambling across the roof and dropping himself down to, like, clearly escape. Like, if he was,
you know, a normal person, say just, again, like, let's try and construct sort of innocent
explanations, why is there a normal person on the roof? What would they do? Well, they wouldn't
run and try and drop down 10 feet. They would just go down, go back the way they came. They would
walk down the stairs if they're just a normal person going about their day and for whatever
reason decided to take a brief excursion at the roof for sightseeing or something.
But no, this is a person who's running.
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All right, welcome back, everybody. So that was an interesting back and forth. We kind of saw
some of the, I think from Kathy Nestor, the defense attorney's,
examination of that witness.
You know, she's obviously trying to poke holes in some of the ring camera footage,
which I think is fairly flimsy.
I mean, trying to remember what cars drove in front of a person's house would be extremely
difficult.
And then you actually do have the ring footage, which is what it is, right?
So I don't know what they would make of that or if that would be compelling evidence
to a judge or jury.
then you see the cross-examination by the state going back kind of in reacting to some of
Kathy Nestor's cross and it felt like there was he did a fairly thorough job of kind of
plugging in all those holes you know they keep talking about this bullet casing not
being found on the roof that has been sort of dealt with as well that if you have a bolt action
rifle and you only fire one shot it doesn't eject the casing that was found later the most
important thing i mean we we got that a little bit is that they established they basically asked
them did you have any suspects before tyler robinson turned himself in yeah that's a very
that's a very good point i think they might be setting up as in you didn't really deduce that it was
tyler robinson until this happened but the flip side of this is that's absolutely devastating
to people who were claiming, oh, he didn't get, turn himself in, the weirdest stuff that he was coerced into doing this.
Yeah.
And that was actually kind of the, I think a moment that we, you could skip over and kind of not hear it.
But the defense themselves is admitting that Tyler Robinson turned himself in.
So, you know, what would compel him to do that besides being guilty of the crime,
of the alleged crime here,
I don't know what you could surmise from that.
There was also this,
there was also this interesting moment where
talking about like some of the camera footage
that there were,
there were multiple angles or something,
SOT 12.
I want to talk now about the TPSA video that you got
that was the angle that was taken
from behind Mr. Kirk while he was talking,
looking out at the office.
audience during when the shot was fired. Do you remember that video?
The visual impulse videos? Yes. Yes. All right. Is it true that visual impulse provided four
videos? Yeah, I believe there were four total videos that encompassed everything that they provided to us, yes.
But the one that you showed, that's only one of the four that they provided to you?
That one that was shown had a Bates number. It was an item that was provided by Utah County Attorney's
Office.
Okay, but were there more that you haven't seen in this courtroom in this prelim that you got from?
There's the original footage.
Okay.
But were there other angles that are not shown here in this prelim?
Yes.
Okay, that's what I was trying to get to.
Thank you.
So I don't really know what she's getting at there.
All that that video was turned over to authorities, that's why they have it.
So I don't know if she's trying to get access to that or does it.
doesn't have access to that. I'm not sure what to make of that precisely.
It's always tough to see what they're going for. As we've established, they're really throwing every piece of spaghetti at the wall to see what sticks.
They are, they're bringing up every objection they can. They're asking questions that seem weird. We even heard them ask him, were you involved in the decision to repave over where it happened? And he said, no, I only heard about that later.
Same.
Through the news.
He said, I heard about that through news reports, yeah, which was the same for us.
Yeah, there's a bunch there.
It does seem just initial reaction, kind of the way she's going through everything.
It does feel like they're just kind of trying to, I don't know, sort of poke holes, blur the vision.
I think it's important then to kind of go through some of these different moments that we have here, right?
So just to recap for the audience, we've got the medical examiner's report says cause of death was a gunshot wound to the neck.
Right. So no exploding mic theory.
TPSA turned over HD video footage of a visual impulse turned over the video footage from their camera shooting.
So nobody tampered with that evidence. It was turned over.
The lead investigator testified that the tip came when a person, Tyler Robinson, turned himself into the Washington County police.
so he did turn himself in.
That's another sort of thing that's been unclear.
Access to the rooftop.
We heard from that testimony that when he was walking with a limp,
he kind of rolled over the railing.
So it was the open to the public,
a small guardrail that can be hopped over to gain,
enter in this case, rollover.
So you don't need to be super tall.
You don't need to be super,
you don't need to have like a huge vertical jump
or anything like that. He rolled over it.
That video has been presented of that
moment happening.
So there's just
the bullet casing. We talked about that.
Bolt actions doesn't eject
the casing if one shot's firing.
Go ahead. You were... I'm just thinking some of the
I'm re-looking because we're getting these videos coming in. Some of the
stranger objections, they go after the
autopsy. They ask, were you personally present there?
And he says no. So you're only getting this
secondhand, yes, that is what we're allowed to do in this preliminary hearing. We will see,
you know, the medical examiner will almost presumably come in or give some kind of, make some sort
of appearance in the actual trial, but for now it is enough for the police officer to say,
I have seen the report and this is what it says. They're really making a lot of objections,
and I know some people are freaking out about them. Remember, Tyler Robinson is constitutionally
entitled to a defense and you and I both believe they have a pretty tough job to do honestly it would
be a tough job I in and kind of just hearing Nestor repeatedly say Tyler Robinson turned himself in
and it's sort of that alone would be a really uphill battle at that point ask yourself what would
you do if you were required professionally to do this yeah and so you're you're basically casting
any doubt you can, any skepticism in any different piece of the pie and the puzzle that they've put
together to try and, I don't know, just inject any sort of doubt in the mind of the judge in this
case because it's kind of he's an audience of one right here. But, you know, it's a preview of what
the defense tactics are going to be. But yeah, just him admitting alone. So it basically, I'll read
the quote here and I think we're getting the video as well. It says, isn't it fair to
say that as of, this is from Nestor, the defense, isn't it fair to say that as of the moment that
Tyler Robinson voluntarily surrendered to authorities in Washington County? As of that moment,
you all did not know who the shooter was. Is that right? Even the framing of that,
you didn't know who the shooter was. That's interesting. Are you admitting that this,
that Tyler Robinson is a shoot? One thing is, we had identified a person of interest. They didn't
really explore that, I don't think. No. Was it Tyler Robinson or was it somebody else?
You mean the investigators?
When he says, yeah, we had a person of interest.
We identified a person of interest, but we did not specifically know who the shooter was at that time.
I think I read that as just, I read that as just sort of him saying that we identified that person, the suspect in the video.
That makes sense, yes.
Yeah.
Because he's saying we don't know who, we didn't know who specifically know who the shooter was at that time.
So, so Nester.
They knew who they were looking for.
Yeah, exactly.
They knew the person in the videos they'd seen who they thought was the person of.
interest. And then Nestor says you became aware that Mr. Robinson was voluntarily
surrendering. How did you become aware of that? And Hull says that information came originally,
I believe, from the Washington County Sheriff to the administration at the control center
at the university on the evening of the investigation or the second evening.
And just to help people have this map in their head, Washington County is down in St. George.
That's actually many hours drive away. This is in Utah County. That's where Provo and Orham.
and then Washington County is down in the southwest corner of the state close to Nevada and Arizona.
That's where Tyler Robinson is from. That's where he turned himself in.
And so I just want to emphasize that point that this is a completely separate police department sheriff's office that is bringing in this information to them.
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slash California and start building the future you deserve. All right, welcome back. It appears that
the preliminary hearing is still taking a break here. We have J-Town career prosecutor, former U.S.
attorney. You can find him on exit. J-Town, Alabama.
Jay, there was this obviously back and forth between the prosecution and the defense.
Ultimately, the Judge Tony Graff agreed to take the non-edited compilations.
So he took the raw footage kind of piece by piece.
We see that Tyler Robinson was on campus four times.
And by the way, we're looking at the timestamps of that individual that is presumed to be Tyler Robinson up on the rooftop,
prone right there at 1223 when Charlie was assassinated and then immediately runs off.
And, you know, we see the video with the limp.
How compelling, you've argued these cases, you've been a prosecutor, how compelling is
that evidence?
And what do you make of the defense's cross examination as well?
Yeah, so, I mean, these are big pieces.
I would say that the entire puzzle is what gets you beyond reasonable.
reasonable doubt. And so when you take the, you know, what juries want to do is they want to be certain,
especially in a death penalty case. If death is to be awarded, they, beyond a reasonable doubt
is the legal standard, but they want to be absolutely certain, which is not the legal standard.
But to be able to timestamp him, to be able to have his parents recognize him in those videos,
that there he is walking, coming in, going out.
Those videos, juries love that stuff,
and I'm not talking about the judge.
We're way past probable cause already.
But the jury will be able to be, you know,
they will be able to trust the prosecution
that this is an absolute certainty
that this is the man who murdered Charlie Kirk.
Now, any defense cross, look,
and we talked about this,
yesterday, when there's not a real defense, you're going to try to poke holes in every little
word that is used.
You know, for instance, the officer yesterday said that he saw an empty holster.
He thought the gunshot came from the eastern direction, but then they saw a man was detained
by the stage, so he just assumed that the police got it.
Well, that's human frailty.
People think they could have got it wrong.
It's in an echo chamber, essentially.
So, you know, that's why he might have thought that.
People are like, oh, that was an amazing cross-examination because now he didn't really know
which way he thought that he wasn't certain which way the gunshot came from.
Well, it turns out there's other forensic evidence that suggests exactly where it came
from, right, to include the entry wound and the penetration of the spine of Charlie Kirk.
Tells you exactly what direction that bullet came from.
Happens to be the same direction of that rooftop where that prone position was, right?
So, hey, Jay, I'm just getting told in my ear that they're just coming back.
But I have so many questions for you.
You know, so we ran out of time here.
But we got to take back the trial here.
Thank you, Jay.
Yep.
Thank you.
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All right, welcome back.
We're going to take the last part of this hour to kind of summarize what just happened as
we're getting at real time.
That whole proceeding, I'm sure people were.
I was weird.
Yeah, we're sort of wondering what it was, okay.
That was in regards to a statement.
from David Englehart, who, yes, is a pastor and a lawyer, and he's also a board member,
Turning Point. I believe he was asked to sort of provide that kind of as a statement of,
what does Turning Point do? What does it believe? What did Charlie believe?
Talking about Christian beliefs, conservative values. They're doing that because there's something
called enhancements. And again, apologies if I get any of the slightly wrong, just simply because
I'm not a lawyer, but there are something called enhancements necessary for a death penalty case.
So you have to prove that it was done.
The motive was done out of a political or religious motive.
Basically, the Supreme Court, when they briefly banned the death penalty and then brought it back in the
70s, when they brought it back, they said, you can't have the death penalty just be the default
punishment for first degree murder.
you need some sort of aggravating factor.
And so states that have the death penalty, such as Utah, have these aggravating factors.
Common ones is if you've committed murder before, if you killed the law enforcement officer,
if you killed children, if you killed several people.
And so what they're going for here, you could see this actually when they did the charging document.
They looked for a few different reasons.
This is one reason, for example, they, I remember in the original charging document,
they mentioned like other people were in the area
so that they could claim he was endangering
the lives of
minors or other people. But the one that
seems to be the strongest is that
he was shooting Kirk because
shooting Charlie because of his
political beliefs and
that is an aggravating factor basically
makes it a form of hate crime.
Right. And let's, we have
the, we have a
I'm going to try and pull it up here.
Team, can you pull up the text message
exchange, the highlighted one?
where it talks about some hate can't be negotiated out.
I know we have that.
While we're trying to get that clip,
let's go ahead and play SOT 24.
This is defense attorney Novak arguing.
There's no relevant information in Exhibit 5.1,
which is this letter submitted by David Englehart 24.
What I'm going to do is I'm going to point out that this proposed exhibit,
which is the 1102 statement of Mr. Englehart,
is basically four paragraphs.
The fourth paragraph identifies Mr. Englehart,
although I say in the third person,
as a pastor and as an attorney,
who was a friend and a counselor to Mr. Kirk,
and was involved in leadership of Turning Point USA.
Beyond that, it's not really relevant to any of the issues
before this court.
Paragraphs 1, 2, and 3 talks about Turning Point USA's status with the Internal Revenue Service,
the purposes of Turning Point USA, and what I'll just refer to generically as the goals and objectives of Turning Point USA.
And it also then talks about Mr. Kirk's relationship with TPSA.
None of this is unknown information that he was a founder, that he was the chief executive officer,
that he was the president of the board until his death.
So I'm still not sure what the relevance is,
and I guess actually what I should say is,
I don't believe there is any relevance of any of this information.
All right, so that's Novak.
And by the way, I will just say I observed that the judge, Tony Graf,
looked for the first time, just from my eyes,
and just what I observed, looked irritated.
He looked sort of frustrated with just this,
constant, you know, objection, objection, objection, objection. And I would say that that was kind of
the first time, I believe, fact check me on this, that Novak has been heard audibly in the courtroom
during this preliminary hearing. And his tone is very gruff. It's very sort of commanding,
almost like he's trying to dictate the terms to the judge. So I can imagine that would sort of be
a little exhausting. So throw this up. We have this.
And, you know, by the way, this text message exchange between Tyler Robinson and Lance Twigs that the state has presented, I had enough of his hatred. Some hate can't be negotiated out. Now, that is Tyler Robinson, who is a, you know, I guess former LDS, right? He was raised Mormon. Obviously, was not living that way at the time of the shooting because he was living with his boyfriend. So he had a guy. So he had a.
gay relationship with Twigs. Twigs was a trans-identified guy. So all of this is very pertinent
because I had enough of his hatred. Some hate can't be negotiated out. So these things are
relevant in many ways. There was then a discussion about should the letter be submitted as
evidence in a closed hearing. So here's SOT 25. This is Judge Graff rules on objections on
this closed hearing, SOT 25.
Under count one, aggravated murder, which is a capital offense, victim targeting enhancement
in violation of Utah Code annotated 76-3-203.103.14 sub-2, Tyler James Robinson,
intentionally selected Charlie Kirk because of Tyler James Robinson belief or perception
regarding Charlie Kirk's political expression. If that was not here, this, this,
enhancement, and it also goes to count two felony discharge of a firearm causing serious bodily injury.
And then finally, count seven violent offense committed in the presence of a child,
where the victim targeting enhancement also is in play.
Because that is part of the information that's squarely before the court, this becomes relevant.
Now, trying to determine what is political expression versus religious expression,
that goes into different grounds.
But at this point, the court finds it is relevant for consideration.
And for the very least for argument, the need for a closed hearing is not been met at this point.
So it's not been met at this point with a closed hearing.
Then he goes on, Judge Graff explains what, so he kind of splits the baby here.
Now, again, my interpretation of this, and I think a lot of people,
agree with me because I've got like I said I got all these lawyers and prosecutors that kind of
the woodwork I didn't even know that I you know that they they were paying attention but they you know
it's sort of signaling that the judge kind of hasn't I'm sure he's thinking that there's enough
evidence here right even just from the charging documents to take this thing to trial he's trying
not to step on any procedural trip wires here that could
cause a mistrial, could cause this thing to get overturned upon appeal, all these things.
So he's being very deliberate. It kind of splits the baby. See how he addresses this objection
from the defense here, SOT 26. And so the ruling of the court is previously I sustained Mr.
Novak's objection, and the court will expound upon that, that Mr. McBrideen's argument
cannot read the entirety of states exhibit 5.1. Can he reference points of
of it and specifically quote certain points of the court rules that he can there is grounds for that
to occur in for an order for the court to consider the argument fully and making the determination
whether it is relevant and should be admissible therefore the court rules that mr mcbride can
continue in his arguments in order that the court can can make its determination whether states
exhibit 5.1 is admissible or not okay so then so he splits
the baby, Mr. McBride of the state, the prosecution, then is able to sort of paraphrase and
pull out aspects of the letter, which I'm sure was honestly frustrating for him, not just to be
able to kind of read verbatim or frame it up. And you can see that kind of frustration between
Mr. McBride and Mr. Novak on the defense. So it's just, again, technical back and forth,
very interesting but ultimately
it is the judge essentially ruled
that a we don't need to go to a closed hearing for this
and b he can extrapolate
the main takeaways of the letter from David Englehart
to make the case that this was an enhancement
that warrants the death penalty in this case
so that's what all of that was about
it took about 40 minutes 50 minutes
so you wonder how long this stuff gets dragged out
yesterday we had that with
with with with with whole where he they had about 45 minutes of back and forth and they had a
closed door break for discussion on whether he's allowed to identify the defendant in the
courtroom and they they build it up they build it up and then they finally are allowed to get to
the point okay can you identify yeah it's the guy between the two defense attorneys yeah yeah
exactly um it's like watching if you if you're familiar with the the tea ceremony in japan
hand, just something that could be done in 10 seconds and it's going to take all day.
Yeah. Well, that was a fascinating back and forth in a, in a, I think, you know, just to sum it up,
I think the big, the big piece of evidence that was submitted was that video compilation
of Tyler Robinson, the man that the investigators identified as Tyler Robinson.
They repeatedly stated that it was Tyler Robinson from the stand, Officer Hole,
and they have him there multiple times that day.
They have him walking with a limp with presumably a weapon in his pant leg.
They have him getting up on the rooftop of the Losey Center.
And they have him jumping off.
They have him immediately jumping off after 1223 when we know Charlie was shot.
And they runs off the rooftop and throws something down on the ground.
I believe.
That video is now public record, and it's more video than we'd seen before.
And we're still waiting.
We basically have, I think, we'll have who's the guy's going now, and at least one witness after that.
Yeah.
And we still haven't got to.
We're still waiting on Lance Twigs.
We're still waiting on forensic testing to get entered in.
I assume there'll probably be some further description of the turning in,
process in Washington County.
Right.
I'm not sure how much we'll get out of that.
When he was turned in.
But we're waiting on all of that.
We'll have about three and a half hours of continued testimony today.
Once they get back at 140, their time, they're going until five.
Then tomorrow, they'll be starting after lunch.
It'll be a half day on Wednesday.
I guess we'll see how long it takes.
Some people have said they think the prosecution's half of this will be done by Wednesday.
Yep.
But they found a way to elongate every single aspect of this.
Yeah, so we'll see.
We're going to just a note about how we're going to handle tomorrow.
So when the live show is tomorrow, there shouldn't,
I don't think there's going to be a hearing anything because it's going to be scheduled
for the afternoon as we understand it.
So presumably that'll be the schedule.
If that's the case, then we will do a normal live show.
We'll probably have an opportunity to cover some of the other news like Mitch McConnell's health.
what's going on in the Strait of Hormuz, Grand Platner.
There's a lot going on right now.
Bernie Sanders has actually called for Grand Platner to step down,
but there's a lot of news going on,
and we're going to cover that.
Maybe we'll address some stuff from the trial,
but again, we always have the,
after the preliminary hearing wraps tonight,
we will do a day two recap.
Tomorrow we'll do a day three recap,
all focused on this trial.
So stay tuned.
right here to the Charlie Kirk show as we cover the state of Utah versus Tyler Robinson.
We want justice for Charlie.
That is what we want more than anything.
We want to see the justice system play out.
We want to see, you know, he is presumed innocent until proven guilty.
That's the way our justice system works.
And we love that.
We love that.
And I think it's a great heritage that we have.
And so we're going to follow us beat by beat day by day evidence exhibit by exhibit.
So stay tuned right here.
Just the facts, and we appreciate you guys tuning in, and we'll talk to you soon.
For more on many of these stories and news you can trust, go to charliecirk.com.
