The Charlie Kirk Show - Tyler Robinson Preliminary Hearing: Day 4

Episode Date: July 9, 2026

Tyler Robinson's preliminary hearing has reached its fourth day. Attorneys Wendy Patrick, Robert Barnes, and Jay Town help break down the blockbuster evidence of the day, which includes the long-await...ed video testimony from Lance Twiggs, text messages by Robinson confessing to the crime, 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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Starting point is 00:00:03 My name is Charlie Kirk. I run the largest pro-American student organization in the country fighting for the future of our republic. My call is to fight evil and to proclaim truth. If the most important thing for you is just feeling good, you're going to end up miserable. But if the most important thing is doing good, you will end up purposeful. College is a scam, everybody. You've got to stop sending your kids to college. You should get married as young as possible and have as many kids as possible. Go start a turning point USA college chapter. Go start a turning point you would say high school chapter.
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Starting point is 00:00:56 Noble Gold Investments is the official gold sponsor of the Charlie Kirk Show, a company that specializes in gold IRAs and physical delivery of precious metals. Learn how you could protect your wealth with noble gold investments at nobelgoldinvestments.com. That is noblegoldinvestments.com. All right, welcome back, everybody. We've been watching day four of the preliminary hearing, and there is a lot of back and forth going on about this video interview of Lance Twigs. Remember there was a lot of back and forth whether or not he should be subpoenaed to be in the courtroom. The judge ruled against that so they were allowed to use this video recording now there's redactions they're taking a
Starting point is 00:01:42 quick break and apparently i think when we get back we're going to see the video we're going to finally see some video and we're going to see i guess we're going to find out are there any text messages they got that aren't what was already actually seen by the public 10 months ago we saw a lot of trench warfare back and forth yes over this it feels remarkable to me andrew like i feel you could reduce all the arguments they make to a couple paragraphs and you can read it and then it takes hours of back and forth. I'm here to help us unpack some of the legal maneuvering here is Wendy Patrick attorney and partner Sam and Ash LLP. She has been all over the real America's voice airways covering this extensively. We're honored to have her here. Wendy, welcome to the show. What do you
Starting point is 00:02:27 make of this back and forth? I mean, we're getting there's this case Rodeau or whatever. You know, My French is terrible too, actually. So there's also, they're mentioning Estes, it looks like. So please unpack what the details are being argued about here. Definitely. I'll do so as a prosecutor and former defense attorney. I appreciate the promotion. I'd be making a lot more money if I were with a friend bird.
Starting point is 00:02:53 But, you know, your question is one that's on the minds of anybody who's watching. Why is it taking so long to show us the evidence? Here's the answer. You heard different cases being cited by different sides. But factual dissimilarity carries the day under facts like this. This is not a case where something came out of the prison. It's not a case that is detailing a confession under different circumstances that may be in one or both of those cases. This is factually distinct.
Starting point is 00:03:18 It's the logic and the rationale that that judge had to consider. I'll bet he was up all night thinking about this, but both lawyers probably were as well. But this is the result that at least most people hope for in terms of transparency. because we are going to get to see the video. Now, we're also going to have some redactions, but not nearly the extent that we were worried were going to be imposed yesterday. Remember, that was the big frustrating day
Starting point is 00:03:44 where everybody went home thinking, when are we going to get to actually see what Tyler Robinson said to the roommate, what he said on social media? And part of what the judge addressed today is how much have they already seen? Because if it's already out there to say, well, now we're not going to actually let
Starting point is 00:04:01 become evidence defeats the purpose. The purpose is to ensure the defendant gets a fair trial, making sure that when we get to trial, as we will, this is going to be a bindover. When we get to trial, the jury can only decide the defendant's guilt or innocence based on admissible evidence, not based on what they read online or heard commentators discussing. As soon as we get back, we're going to actually make this part of the public record so that everybody will be able to use it come time for trial. So what was actually agreed that it was going to be redacted here, Wendy. I got lost in the weeds trying to understand the arguments back and forth. But it seems like, as you mentioned, we're going to get more than
Starting point is 00:04:41 we thought we might, right? There was a, I think a portion yesterday as I was reading. It was extensive. It was like the lion's share. It was like about half of it. What did you hear from that final argument or that final ruling from the judge? The final ruling from the judge appeared to focus on private information of other people. When you redact something, and we've been doing this for 30 years in criminal law, you redact the personal information of people that were on the scene, victims, families. Sometimes we even redact the names of victims, or Jane Doe, John Doe. But in this particular document, apparently online, there was some reference to somebody else,
Starting point is 00:05:21 including personal identifying information. There is no problem with redacting that, and there didn't appear to be an argument about that. What I found stunning is that between today and yesterday, as you mentioned, there appears to be less redactions asked for. And that's going to satisfy everyone. Most importantly, Erica Kirk and the Kirk family, you know, one of the lawyers said just now in court, why are we here if we're not going to get to see the evidence? And it appears that the judge overnight did read his case law, did his due diligence, and is prepared to admit evidence. Remember, that must have been on his mind when he ruled these proceedings could not only be public, but live streamed. So this is in the vein of transparency.
Starting point is 00:06:03 Good. So the judge ruled more in our favor. What now? So, okay, I'm just trying to make sense of this, Wendy, here, because essentially the, as of today, the, like this morning, the redactions that the judge was suggesting were from timestamps 656 to 2027, 27. 27. 18 seconds to 27 and 25 seconds, 28 and 11 to 28 and 18, and then 3255 to 35.48. I know that's a lot of numbers, but there was big chunks that he was taking out. Am I understanding you, right, that he put a lot of that back in? That I don't know because I don't know the text of the document. That's why we're all here. We want to know, you know, what does it say? What is what is the footage show? What is it, what can we see? What can we hear? The problem is we don't understand. what's in those sections. If we understood what was in those sections, as opposed to the page with
Starting point is 00:06:57 the personal identifying information of the other person, would be in a lot better position to assess whether we think his ruling was right or wrong. But we don't know what's there. And that characterizes the frustration inherent in a criminal trial where you have friends, loved ones, people that were victimized, people that are being retramatized in the courtroom, honestly not having any idea what is redacted, because that's the point of a redaction. But another good point has been, raised in court this morning that lit up social media yesterday is what are they hiding now the answer the easy answer to that legally would not be so much it's being hidden but being excluded in order to protect the integrity of a conviction if you have a conviction that's based on evidence that a higher
Starting point is 00:07:39 court rule should not have come into evidence it gets reversed and you have to do the whole thing over again and that means victims supporters being retramatized all over again so we don't know exactly what's in all the portions that are going to be redacted, it does seem, and I like you, have been trying to follow numbers and pages. It does seem that perhaps there might be more of an inclination to show more of it after the extended case law discussion than yesterday. But I even want to watch and make sure that's true when this finally comes to light after the break. We've all been told to eat fruits and vegetables forever, but nobody really explained why. What if I told you that plants have their own nutrition and that it might be better for you than a lot of process stuff we've added?
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Starting point is 00:09:14 Join hundreds of thousands of customers in one simple routine that's changing, the world. You can get an additional 10% off your order just by using the discount code Charlie when you purchase at balance of nature.com. That's discount code Charlie for 10% off your order. Yeah, so it's a little bit unclear what we're actually going to see. It does sound like it's a lot of back and forth. He really emphasized the difference between the video which they obtained after the arrest had been made versus these text messages and notes and such. He's pointing, he pointed out, these are evidence they accumulated in the initial phase. Their supposed communications from the defendant himself rather than the testimony
Starting point is 00:09:59 against him. It sounds like there's literally Supreme Court cases distinguishing between video and text. It just seems like a nightmare. It makes me glad I'm not a lawyer. Yeah, on that note, I have a tweet from Richard Grunel here that I think is interesting. He goes, I'm proudly not a lawyer. No offense, Wendy. But it's a pathetic commentary on our justice system when a lawyer for a killer, alleged, can even make an argument to a judge to keep out text messages admitting to a killing because it, quote, prejudices my client. The judge should have said no immediately and then shame the phony lawyer for wasting the public's time and money. Justice should be swift. I can't say that as somebody that's personally connected to this, that I disagree, obviously.
Starting point is 00:10:44 I understand that this judge has to balance things. he's probably balancing a potential appeal. He's making sure that he doesn't trip up on any technicality that the defense is trying to throw in front of him. That Novak guy, by the way, apparently is some big hot shot from Southern California that they've brought in and is getting a lot of money for this, which is interesting.
Starting point is 00:11:06 I'm just finding this out this morning. That's what I've seen. I don't know much about him, but that's what I've been told. The defense, every person has a right to a trial and to hire an attorney. So I don't want to fuss that too much. But it does feel like a slow motion version. You ever see that, uh, Jim Carrey comedy, liar, liar? Yeah, yeah, yeah. I object, your honor, on what grounds? It's devastating to my case. Yeah, exactly. That's a difference.
Starting point is 00:11:31 It being prejudicial is the nature of evidence in a criminal case. It's all prejudicial. Right. Exactly. Here's the argument. Undue prejudice, unduly prejudicial. In other words, the enormous prejudice outweighs the probative value. That's, the legal standard, not is it prejudicial or we wouldn't have trials, nothing would be admitted. So that is why you had this back and forth, extended back and forth about case law, and under what circumstances and under what factual scenarios is that burden met. That's what they were arguing about. And that's, as you mentioned, something that the general public wouldn't know. There's no way you would know. That's evidence code. It's in the weeds. But you can understand why you'd have a legal
Starting point is 00:12:11 test like that. And that's what the judge was grappling with. I only wish he made a clearer record so that everybody watching would have a better understanding as to why he makes the decisions he did. Thank God we are going to get to see a lot of it today. I have no doubt on the other side we'll be breaking down what we wish we would have seen, but what we think about what was admissible. Now, also, this is not the end of the line. This is a probable cause hearing. Between now and trial, my guess is both sides will continue to litigate this.
Starting point is 00:12:39 Maybe even more will be admissible in trial. It's difficult to exactly. I mean, we just kind of don't know. And that's how much we're going to get. Let's go ahead and play some clips here, Wendy, and just make sure we're all on the same page here. First, I'm going to put Kirk family representative, Jeffrey Nyman. He's asking for transparency.
Starting point is 00:13:04 I thought it was well said. Sop three. Good morning, Your Honor. Jeffrey Nyman on behalf of the Kirk family. And we appreciate the court is trying to balance here. But the Kirk family's waited 10 months for this hearing. and they have a right to be here, and they have a right to hear the evidence. They have a right to see and feel what's going on in this courtroom,
Starting point is 00:13:26 just like, and they want to understand, Judge, what you were viewing. They want to see the evidence. And we understand you have to balance, but at a minimum, this courtroom needs to be open for the evidence to be displayed openly in this courtroom, for them to see it. The Utah Constitution gives them the right to be here, and to be here and not to see the evidence, what's the point of being here? We ask you to let the evidence be seen in the courtroom, please. Thank you for your time.
Starting point is 00:13:57 Thank you, Counsel. It really is an important statement he's giving there, and it's good to remind ourselves. We're in a particularly important case. It feels unprecedented to me. There have been high-profile criminal cases. There have been criminal cases where there's debates about, guilt or innocence, but I don't think I've ever seen a case
Starting point is 00:14:20 that has this much injection of conspiracy theory fervor before it even goes to trial. First big assassination since RFK 50 years ago. And as a result, we also saw that in the text pleading that they also filed with the court
Starting point is 00:14:40 overnight, they're just saying we actually have a desperate need for transparency in this case that goes beyond almost any other case we've seen because the ways they're running wild with stuff that it turned out is totally groundless. We've got, we had all those claims. Tyler's wasn't even on campus and so they have to trot out. Actually, here's all this footage where he is on campus. Yeah. They're trotting out. Actually, he never turned himself in. So we need them to trot out. Yes, actually, he was in custody. 9 p.m. We sent this police officer down. Stuff that you would never feel
Starting point is 00:15:13 needed to be emphasized in most criminal cases really needs to be put on display for the public early. It's such a good point. Couldn't you make the argument, Wendy, that it's prejudicial not to sort of fill these voids, these vacuums that have been created by this 10 month waiting process. Isn't it prejudicial to a potential jury pool to not give them the facts of why he's being, you know, charged and why they're seeking the death penalty in this case? Yeah, and that's what freedoms are for. And that's what a trial. is going to be about. It's going to be about the evidence, not conspiracy theories. All of this would have been shrouded out anyway because all of it is relevant to prove the case. And it's interesting, I've read the same theories you have. Sometimes people email them to me. There's no evidence backing those theories. What happens in court is evidence, unlike the court of public opinion. So you had
Starting point is 00:16:02 yesterday and even the beginning of the week, we had ballistics, we had DNA, we had video footage, we had, you know, him turning himself in in the same clothes he was wearing in one of the pieces of video footage. We have a very calm presentation, although we just saw it from behind, of what it was like when he was arrested. There wasn't any bullying. There wasn't a, you know, a flickering light. All of that is geared towards establishing that he committed this crime. And that's going to be what today is about as well. And as far as the conspiracy theories, one of the things that judge is going to do in voir dire when we get to trial is ensure that anybody that is selected for the jury can be fair. That means this is going to be asked about that he's not going to publish
Starting point is 00:16:40 the theories. But he's going to ask those jurors, you know, what have you seen? What have you heard? Do you have any preconceived notions about this case designed to get to exactly what both of you are pointing out? That this case cannot be tried by what's happening and what's being stated in the court in public opinion only was introduced in a court of law. That's what we're doing in this probable cause hearing. That's what we'll be doing at trial. Those are great points.
Starting point is 00:17:05 Yeah. And I just go back to the fact that by refusing to admit certain evidence, which the defense is pushing for, for, even in a preliminary hearing, you could make the argument that that is prejudicial against the victim's rights here, because, again, the conspiracies and the internet are filling all the voids when the court refuses to fill them. So this is a portion from the brief that was filed by, I believe, Jeffrey Nyman, who we just saw on that. It said the victim's family's position is simple. At a minimum, every exhibit entered into evidence during the preliminary hearing must be visible to every person lawfully present in the courtroom.
Starting point is 00:17:44 To receive evidence in a matter shielded from those seated in the courtroom has happened today is not transparency. And in the absence of transparency, speculation and conspiracy theories related to the tragic assassination of Mr. Kirk will continue to proliferate in the public domain, breeding doubt and distrust in the judicial system. This is not what anyone should want. So Jeffrey Nyman is hitting that point exactly, right? Especially this, you know, You know, and the absence of transparency, speculation and conspiracies will proliferate. That's the key. And it sounds like the judge has been persuaded, at least in part.
Starting point is 00:18:20 You can't argue with that. It is true. Anytime we say, well, you know, in this very charged environment, this emotionally charged environment where we have all these theories out there to say that we're not going to release evidence is necessarily and definitely going to feel those theories. You know, and it is also true that victims have a significant amount of rights. And it's true emotionally. Nobody can argue that why, you know, in a perfect world, everybody would get to see all the evidence. And especially the Kirk family and friends and the beloved supporters that are there.
Starting point is 00:18:51 I want to tie that in with one thing that both of you agreed on earlier. We haven't seen a prelim like this. You had the assassination of an absolutely beloved icon, just somebody that could have been president of the United States. It's a case that transcends so many different fact patterns. under similar crime statutes. It's just different every way you think about it. And in that environment, to have evidence that is not admitted, to have evidence that is redacted,
Starting point is 00:19:19 is going to be scrutinized far more seriously, which is why I have to imagine that between the probable cause hearing, whatever the rulings end up being, whatever is redacted, and the trial, that the prosecution and the media lawyers will probably continue to push for that transparency. remember that this sort of came up at the 11th hour shouldn't have I mean that it always happens but it shouldn't have but we may be continuing to press for that Wendy that was great stuff thank you so much for being on standby for this break it sounds like the court is coming back
Starting point is 00:19:54 in session so we're going to tune right in all right Wendy it seems like they're really taking their time here bringing the public in we did check the transcript and they're reentering the courtroom as slowly as we've gone through everything else in this preliminary yeah so just Preview it for the audience, though, Wendy, what is about to happen? What's about to happen is we're finally going to see several pieces of evidence that contain statements that are attributed directly to Tyler Robinson. It's going to be the first time we've actually seen that in a court of law. We're going to see that in different formats. We're going to talk about text messages. We're going to hopefully hear from the roommate. After that, we'll no
Starting point is 00:20:31 doubt also hear some argument about how much more, if any, we can see. And I have to say that the reason I'm glad we're finally getting started is the judge made clear this is over tomorrow at 5 p.m. Yeah, Wendy, it looks like finally. Finally had the public filter in, but that was actually a really key point right there at the end. So thank you. Wendy, thank you for standing by with us this morning. Let's go back to the courtroom. Hi, folks, Andrew Colvett here. I'd like to tell you about my friends over at Y. Refai.
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Starting point is 00:21:48 And remember, why Refi doesn't care what your credit score is. Just go to why refi.com and tell them your friend Andrews sent you. We have Robert Barnes now. He's joining us. He's been all over social media trying to add fast. and logic and actually some experience of what it means to do actual law. Robert, thank you so much. Barnes Law LLP and co-host Aviva and Barnes. Thank you for joining us. Robert, what do you make of what just happened? I don't know if you were watching the hearing just there. Jack Posobic, who's in the courtroom, or at least around it, he said that huge reversal that the judge is now going to admit more of this Lance Twiggs video recording. Is that how you read what we just saw? Yeah, and I think what the judge is trying to balance is the defendant's rights to an impartial jury, which is influenced by pretrial prejudicial publicity, against the victim's rights to substantially participate and to observe all meaningful hearings under Utah constitutional and state law, as well as the U.S. and state constitutional rights of the media to have access to public court proceedings and the public's right to have open access to the courts under the First Amendment's rights. rights to petition the government for redress of grievances in which that constitutional right
Starting point is 00:23:10 encompasses that. So he's balancing those too. I think courts usually make the mistake of favoring secrecy and favoring sealing proceedings over public transparency because they're more worried about the defendant's pretrial publicity prejudice than they are the prejudice to not allowing full, complete, open access to particularly high-profile cases where it is really necessary for the public to have confidence in whatever outcome is procured through that judicial process. And I think for a very young judge, he's actually doing a better job than is normal, honestly, for judges of that type. Usually their lack of age, they default to, hey, let's keep things secret, let's keep things sealed,
Starting point is 00:23:53 because that's what the defendant wants, and overreaching in that capacity. So the, because there's an easy way to resolve the pretrial publicity issue, because that's only about the jury selection and the impartiality of the jury, you can use jury selection questioning to make sure there's nobody on that jury who has undue pretrial publicity prejudice. This is particularly true when it's evidence that is likely to be admitted at trial. Like your concern for pretrial publicity is evidence that is not likely to be introduced at trial that has a limited purpose, say, in a preliminary hearing context, could get out to the jury in ways when it won't be admitted into evidence at trial. When you're
Starting point is 00:24:35 You're talking about evidence that the jury's going to see anyway. There's no reason for be concerned about that prejudice in the jury. But is there a difference, though, because in the actual trial, Twigs would presumably be called in person, and this is a video recording of it? Does that distinction factor into the judge's decision here? Because, yeah, it will be seen at trial, but it will be cross-examined. Correct. And that's part of the defense's argument. The defense's argument is that some of this evidence may be sufficient to meet the preliminary hearing admissibility evidentiary standard, but not the trial evidentiary standard.
Starting point is 00:25:12 So the defense has a plausible claim as to why they want to exclude this. I think their main motivation may be different, but I think they do have a plausible basis for this. I saw Rick Rinell and some other people complaining about the defense lawyer. They're just doing their job and their advocacy, constitutional. which we want them to do because we want to have confidence in the outcome of the case. We want the defense to be very robust, to have full capability and confidence that they pursue. I totally agree. Yeah, I totally agree, Robert. I completely agree. But aren't they sort of conceding, like, isn't the defense conceding that they believe that this evidence is really damning
Starting point is 00:25:50 by constantly throwing up objections and fighting full transparency? Isn't that kind of the subtext here? Yeah, I think so. I mean, there is a possibility. there may be some evidentiary vulnerability in some of this evidence that they truly think they'll be able to exclude from the trial presentation. And some of this is definitely for the cameras because they have a standing objection. When you have a standing objection, you don't have to repeat your objection during the hearing. And they're repeating their objections. So they're doing this because they know they're defending them in the court of public opinion as well as the court of law, which in a high profile case, that's part of a defense counsel's job.
Starting point is 00:26:27 And I get people unhappy with that. but that's, we want that to be the case. We want to believe the defense lawyer defended them every which way they possibly could so that we can have confidence when I think what this case will ultimately secure as a conviction. They've already met their preliminary hearing standard with ease for probable cause purposes. I see a lot of incorrect, confusing, mistaken views out there that this is the trial, it's not. This is an evidentiary hearing. It's not. Tyler Robinson is being afforded more due process than 99.9% of all criminal defendants across the country and around the world. The most criminal defendants in the federal system never get a preliminary hearing. Even the ones that get it at a state level typically get far less discovery, far fewer witnesses testifying, don't get to see the underlying exhibits themselves, don't get to see audio and video in this capacity. Don't get to test it in front of the public, in front of the whole world, and the Court of Public Opinion, not just the Court of Law. They don't get a sneak peek preview of what these witnesses' credibility would look like.
Starting point is 00:27:23 So this is extraordinary. This court has gone out of its way to afford Tyler Robinson, more due process, more discovery, more evidentiary capability to be able to explore and develop their defenses than almost any criminal defendant in the country gets. So there's a lot of... Robert, I'm wondering about that. We've noticed this as well. It's taken so long.
Starting point is 00:27:44 There's been so much process. What's the primary driver of this? Is that it is that it's a capital case? Is this the judge's call? Is this something where this could in theory happen in any murder case, but usually the attorneys don't really feel like maxing it out. What's the key driver of why this has been able to go as long as it has? Who's making the decisions that decide that?
Starting point is 00:28:08 So the primary mover of delaying this through this entire process, the primary mover of trying to withhold documents and information from the public is both the defense counsel. And it's in the defense counsel's interest to do so when that evidence is damaging. As to your point, Andrew, it's implicitly very damaging for them to go there. It sounds like we're coming back. Robert Barnes, thank you so much. Stand by. We're hopefully going to see the Lance Twigs video now. If you could go back in time and buy oil before the world relied on it, would you? Of course you
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Starting point is 00:29:47 which, because we'd seen, we knew some of the stuff, evidence from campus, we knew a lot of the accounts of what had happened, but what we had not seen was the videotape testimony from Lance Twiggs, the roommate, alleged boyfriend of Tyler Robinson, who has taken an immunity deal to provide testimony. We finally got not all but large chunks of his interview with police that was conducted this spring. He talked about, he confirmed that he'd seen Tyler engraving bullet,
Starting point is 00:30:25 he confirmed that Tyler had sent him text messages confessing to the shooting. He described reconfirming that in person with him the following day. The words that are going to haunt me, haunt Andrew, haunt a lot of people, I think. He says that Tyler Robinson told him he wished he hadn't done it. He was crying. He was crying. And that's going to stick with all of us, I think. a very long time.
Starting point is 00:30:59 And then after they presented that, they went back to the witness and they went through. They showed photos of Lance Twiggs' phone, his iPhone, his communication. It reconfirmed exchanges. We saw really just in the first week after the shooting, they released a lot of the text messages between Tyler and Lance,
Starting point is 00:31:22 but this confirmed it. We got to see the actual image of the phone exchange, where we'd seen only a transcript before. And we saw a few pieces that had been left out before. They occasionally jumped through it before. One that stood out to me, he was saying, if I'm not able to retrieve this gun, this is allegedly Tyler was saying this,
Starting point is 00:31:40 if I'm not able to retrieve this gun, I don't know how I could replace it. My grandpa had done some modification, some work on it. And that gets to another one of the conspiracy theories we've seen, which is that it couldn't have been this Mouser-98 rifle because the Mouser 98 rifle has a type of safety on it that's difficult to use with a scope. But some of our friends have looked into this,
Starting point is 00:32:03 those ballistics experts, gun experts, have looked into this. Mouser 98 is a popular rifle. There are a lot of modifications you can get on that to get around that so you can use a scope on it. So we see text message exchanges that are confirming that specific point. We do have this video that I think is also important
Starting point is 00:32:22 and I believe Jay Town has just called in. So, Jay, are you there? I'm here. Yes, gentlemen. Hey, Jay. I'm going to play this video because one of the things that I've been seeing online is, you know, the people are alleging that the images of Tyler Robinson from the surveillance footage, that compilation video yesterday, were not Tyler Robinson.
Starting point is 00:32:44 And we had a very relevant exchange between the investigator and Twigs in this video recording where they talk about just this. Go ahead and play SOT 17. I'll get your reaction, Jay. Sot 17. Okay. Okay. Before he came home, had you seen the press releases, any of the media on this?
Starting point is 00:33:12 I'd seen one Instagram, like, link a friend of mine had sent in our group chat. But I hadn't really looked into it at all. And had you seen the images that were released of the suspect? I did the next day. I don't think I saw any on the 10th. I'm going to show you a couple of those images. I'm on the FBI's website. You can see the URL there at the top. This is some press release about this event. And here on the screen, you see these.
Starting point is 00:33:59 It looks like there's two rows of three images. Do you recognize the person in these images? I wouldn't say it with 100% certainty just because of camera quality, but that looks like him in terms of the shoes he's wearing the sunglasses. I don't think I'd specifically seen him wearing that hat, but he was usually wearing a hat and then jeans. So it definitely, especially the bottom, the last two, definitely do look like him.
Starting point is 00:34:30 Oh, they do look like Tyler Robinson. Jay, speak to this for, from a legal perspective, what's the significance, I guess, both from a probable cause standpoint and looking forward to understanding that he's going to be cross-examined if this thing goes to full trial? Yeah, and it's going to full trial. I can promise you that. The people who know him best recognized him. It's as simple as that, right? His live-in, roommate, lover thinks that's him. his parents recognized him from the from the videos you know that day right when they were put out saying we was a be on a lookout for for this individual and they're like hey that looks like our son
Starting point is 00:35:20 and look i mean it's incredibly important when the people who know him best say that's him now look that that just gets him in that area it's you know the conspiracy theorists don't have that wiggle anymore the the biggest thing though honestly are the admissions with twigs. I mean, you know, you don't admit to murder. You don't confess why you did it. You don't confess. I mean, he knew an awful lot about where the gun was,
Starting point is 00:35:49 that there was a scope on that rifle on the Mouser and that he might have fingerprints on it. Of course, we know he had DNA on it. And right where he was talking about the area, where exactly where they found that murder weapon. I mean, that is just damning evidence. And admissions are absolutely the best evidence or prosecutor can hope for. I have prosecuted or investigated hundreds of homicides in my career and death penalty cases as well.
Starting point is 00:36:19 I can tell you the evidence in this case is as strong as I have seen. And there is no mental health defense here that the defense is trying to put forward. If there was, then they would just concede it all and say, yeah, but he was crazy. No, they're fighting tooth and nail about every single item, because they know the more that happens, the more the public knows, the more the future jury fool knows. This is, no case is a layup, no cases a slam dunk, but this is as good as it's going to get for any state, for any prosecution in a homicide case. Yeah, I mean, I think that's a pretty definitive statement, Jay. Hi, folks, Andrew Colvette here.
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Starting point is 00:37:43 Just go to whyrefi.com. That's the letter Y, then refi.com. And remember, why refi doesn't care what your credit score is. Just go to whyrefi.com and tell them your friend Andrews sent you. I am curious about this limited immunity for Lance Twigs. you know, I would, you know, just full transparency, reading some of that stuff where he's talking about, hey, drive safe, you know, after he's just, you know,
Starting point is 00:38:13 confessed to a murder, you know, and they're kind of going back and forth, you know, the fact that, I don't know, it's just, it was infuriating to watch that portion of it. Because it does seem like hours went by where Lance Twiggs was aware of what happened and he did nothing about it. So can you break down what that limited immunity would be?
Starting point is 00:38:35 Does he have any exposure here? Well, the only exposure you would have is if he suddenly has different testimony than what he has given already in those take-to interviews, right? So if suddenly he changes and says something that is exculpatory to Tyler Robinson, then he could be stripped of that immunity and be prosecuted for any crimes to include perjury. now look that's not going to happen he knows he's never going to see tyler robinson was counting on twigs being able to keep this secret with him for the rest of his life that's why he left the note that's why he told him that it was him and admitted it all to him and didn't realize that twigs would uh immediately uh go to police and say
Starting point is 00:39:24 yeah this is him and and this is what he told me it was disgusting though when you as you pointed out the well drive safely it was almost sort of just matter of fact was it you yeah it was me oh why did you do it uh and and he's like man i really i hate the fact that i'm going to lose that two thousand dollar scope that's on that mouser my dad's really going to be mad that's what's going through your mind at the moment right you just murder a husband a father a national leader it it really is it's disgusting and it is going to infuriate it is great argument in a jury trial when you are advocating for death And by the way, there's a lot in those messages to Twigs from Robinson about why he did it. And it was all because of the spreading hate and the political messages of Charlie Kirk, well, that is the death aggravator at issue here.
Starting point is 00:40:14 Not that he's a Christian, not that, you know, he's a father. It was that he was spreading hate by doing what, by doing what Charlie Kirk did, which is go to campus and talk about politics, a very open session with students and adults. And it was that politics that drove Tyler Robinson to do what he did. That's exactly the death aggravator that the state is seeking the death penalty upon. We mentioned whether he's telling the full truth. The part of that testimony that stood out to a lot of people is he says, Twiggs says, that they didn't talk about politics much, that he'd never heard Tyler bring up Charlie Kirk specifically by name before.
Starting point is 00:40:56 And it gets me wondering, first of all, is that, fully true or if it is true then are we still looking for that nexus that was driving Tyler to actually do this? Was there is there another discord group that we don't know about? Yeah he did mention that he when he talked about politics Tyler is usually talking about Trump so that maybe that nexus is enough could be that for um but you and I both said we we really I mean we badly want everyone who was involved in this beforehand to be brought to justice. And that gets back to if he was in another Discord group that they haven't found yet perhaps, maybe that's where he was getting nudged towards this violent act if it wasn't really coming from his roommate.
Starting point is 00:41:44 It could be. I mean, look, they're going to keep looking. Cash for telling the FBI are going to use every tool they can to determine if there was a second sort of discord swing or string or any other. type of application that where he was on and he was being sort of radicalized. But I actually think the simplest explanation is the truth here. There would be no reason. I'll confess to murder to you, but I won't confess about this second, you know, string or thread on a different app. It seems to me that he was, you know, I believe that he didn't discuss Charlie much at all with him simply because Trump was enough, right? This is exactly what Trump's arrangement says.
Starting point is 00:42:26 syndrome does to people that those closest to him are just as big a targets. And who is closer than Charlie Kirk, right? I mean, Charlie Kirk had everything to do with Trump getting back into office, everything to do with it. And, you know, I had the opportunity to take Charlie Kirk out, meaning Charlie was in Utah at a university just a few hours away from Tyler Robinson, and so he took it. Blaming Trump, blaming Kirk, blaming all of us for the support of the president.
Starting point is 00:42:54 It could just be that simple, guys. Jay, thanks for joining us, man. I think I, you know, candidly need to take a break, too. Thank you for jumping on and being sort of available for us today. Any final thoughts, Blake, Jay? Yeah, and I just, and this is important. Andrew, this is important. Look, this is very personal for you guys to sit and watch us,
Starting point is 00:43:24 as it is for Erica and the family, and so many people that love Charlie. But it takes a lot of courage, takes guts to sit there and have to watch it and be objective still because you have every right to be angry. So I appreciate what you guys are doing by watching the whole thing, reporting it back, being as objective as you can, bringing the truth out the best you can. You know the truth, we know the truth, and we're with you. Thanks for saying that. Jay. Appreciate it. For more on many of these stories and news you can trust, go to Charlie Kirk.com.

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