Bullet Used To Kill Charlie Kirk Did NOT Match Rifle Allegedly Used By Tyler Robinson, New Court Filing Claims

The bullet that killed Charlie Kirk on September 10 last year did not match the rifle used by suspected killer Tyler Robinson, according to a new court filing.

Robinson, 22, is facing capital murder charges and a potential death penalty, but his lawyers say there’s a discrepancy between the ballistic evidence and the weapon he supposedly used to assassinate Kirk.

Robinson’s laywers claim the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives conducted a summary report which indicates the ATF was “unable to identify the bullet recovered at autopsy to the rifle allegedly tied to Mr. Robinson.”

The motion continues: “Although the State has not indicated an intent to produce this report at the preliminary hearing, the defense may very well decide to offer the testimony of the ATF firearm analyst as exculpatory evidence.”

Now, “unable to identify” does not categorically mean that it’s not a match, but it does lend to the sketchiness that already exists around Charlie Kirk’s murder.

Reports claim that Kirk was killed with a .30-06 round, but according to experts this makes no sense as this type of bullet typically causes a catastrophic exit wound, whereas we’ve been told the bullet remained lodged under Kirk’s skin, where it was recovered.

Furthermore, “multiple unidentified DNA profiles” were found on the supposed weapon and its wrappings, which the defense is using to suggest others may have handled it.

Perhaps most suspicious of all, Kash Patel and the FBI stopped Joe Kent, the former director of the U.S. National Counterterrorism Centre, and others, of investigating Charlie Kirk’s death, and insisted it be left up to local authorities. Why would they do that?

There’s also the text messages that Tyler Robinson supposedly sent to his transgender furry boyfriend, which many claim contain blatant “cop language”, or what an FBI boomer would think text messages from a 22-year-old sound like:

Aside from all that, there are multiple categories of forensic evidence still incomplete, which means Robinson’s defense team can’t yet determine whether evidence against him is actually reliable or not.

Robinson’s lawyers also want the trial to be televised: “Keeping court proceedings as public as possible helps to quell and contradict the tide of misinformation.”

Robinson allegedly confessed to his dad that he shot and killed Kirk on the Utah Valley University Campus last September, but he reportedly has not confessed to authorities and remains uncooperative in the investigation.

For footage of Robinson reading a letter he received for a $32,000 scholarship to university, click HERE.

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