Charlie Kirk Shot

spaminator

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Toronto man 'in horror,' fights fake news that he shot U.S. influencer Charlie Kirk
Author of the article:Canadian Press
Canadian Press
Sharif Hassan
Published Sep 11, 2025 • Last updated 1 day ago • 3 minute read

A well-wisher adds flowers to a makeshift memorial set up at Turning Point USA headquarters after the shooting death at a Utah college on Wednesday of Charlie Kirk, the 31-year-old founder and CEO of the organization, Thursday, Sept. 11, 2025, in Phoenix.
A well-wisher adds flowers to a makeshift memorial set up at Turning Point USA headquarters after the shooting death at a Utah college on Wednesday of Charlie Kirk, the 31-year-old founder and CEO of the organization, Thursday, Sept. 11, 2025, in Phoenix. Photo by Ross D. Franklin /THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Michael Mallinson had never met Charlie Kirk, nor had he ever heard the name of the American right-wing commentator who was shot dead in broad daylight at a Utah college event on Wednesday.


But the retired Torontonian has done some research about him after his death.


“I gather that he appeals to young conservatives. I’m an old socialist. I guess that’s the best way I could put it,” Mallinson said in a phone interview.

They would never have come across each other, but a piece of viral online misinformation has tied Mallinson to Kirk’s story. Now the former banker, 77, is fighting to make the truth understood: He is decidedly not the person who put a bullet in the controversial commentator’s neck.

Mallinson said he and his family are horrified to see his name and likeness falsely connected on a variety of social media platforms to a “heinous crime” he did not commit.

“I just felt shocked and in horror. I was bemused. I wasn’t quite believing it,” the retiree said. “I was bewildered why this would have happened.”


He found out about his weird newfound fame after waking up from a post-shopping trip nap on Wednesday to a call from his daughter. She was begging him to delete his social media accounts.

“She was a bit panicked and she was, you know, kind of shouting at me that I had to do it now, now, and I didn’t quite understand what was happening,” he said.

After the call, Mallinson said he Googled his name and came across posts that wrongly labelled him as a Utah Democrat who had shot and killed Kirk.


It seems to have spread from a fake news account that misidentified him as a man whom police arrested then released in the wake of the shooting. Why anyone would make that link is a mystery to Mallinson.

“We’re both old, we’re both bald, we’re both spectacled, but otherwise I don’t think we look alike at all,” he said.


The person who assassinated Kirk remained unidentified and a manhunt was still underway Thursday evening. Authorities announced they recovered a high-powered rifle that may have been used in the deadly attack, and released photos of an alleged gunman whom investigators believe blended into the campus crowd because he looked “college age.”

The slaying of the 31-year-old influencer, who was a close ally of U.S. President Donald Trump’s, drew widespread condemnation in Canada. Prime Minister Mark Carney offered condolences to Kirk’s family, and the Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre also strongly denounced his shooting.

As his name and face went viral, Mallinson said that he and his family started getting hate online. One person wrote to tell him he was a “savage.”


His daughter began to receive ugly messages, too, like one that said something to the effect of, “may God make him live in pain for the rest of his life,” Mallinson recalled.

“I’m not happy about it and my family is, especially my wife, is quite distressed about it all,” he said.

Mallinson lost access to important connections in the scramble to delete his social media accounts, he said. In retirement, he helped found the Canadian Spondyloarthritis Association, an organization that supports people with the chronic arthritic disease. He made lots of friends from around the world in his role engaging online as volunteer president.

Friends from as far as Poland, India and the United Kingdom have sent him emails to check in on him after the fake news spread, he said, adding he has had to reach out to individual loved ones and explain he was not the shooter.


“It’s a pain having to do it. It would be much easier to do it on social media, but I deleted my accounts.”

A full 24 hours after his pictures were shared widely in connection to Kirk’s death, Mallinson’s face was still appearing next to posts bearing the misinformation. He said he has not contacted any social media companies to take down the posts.

Instead, he has been trying to get the word out as widely as possible that the narrative that has taken over his life is “totally false.”

In the end, he said, “I’m hoping it’s going to blow over.”
 

spaminator

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Feminist website speaks out after hiring ‘witches to curse Charlie Kirk’ days before killing
Author of the article:Denette Wilford
Published Sep 11, 2025 • Last updated 1 day ago • 2 minute read

A general view of a wreath laid by mourners outside the US Embassy in Pretoria on September 11, 2025 following the fatal shooting of US youth activist and influencer Charlie Kirk while speaking during an event at Utah Valley University in Orem, Utah, United States. US youth activist and influencer Charlie Kirk, a major ally of President Donald Trump, was shot on September 10, 2025 at a US university. Kirk was speaking at an event at Utah Valley University when the attack happened. (Photo by Phill Magakoe / AFP) Photo by PHILL MAGAKOE /AFP via Getty Images
Feminist website Jezebel was forced to issue a comment after it published an article that claimed to have put a curse on Charlie Kirk — just days before he was shot and killed while speaking at an event at Utah Valley University on Wednesday.


U.S. President Donald Trump confirmed the death of the 31-year-old conservative activist, husband and father of two.


“The Great, and even Legendary, Charlie Kirk, is dead,” Trump wrote on Truth Social. “No one understood or had the Heart of the Youth in the United States of America better than Charlie.”

While the motive for the shooting remains unknown, authorities disclosed they have recovered a high-powered rifle they believed was used in the attack.




The FBI also released photos of a person of interest, who they believe jumped off a roof and fled into a neighbourhood after firing one shot.

But in a strange twist, Jezebel published an article two days prior to Kirk’s tragic shooting with the headline: “We Paid Some Etsy Witches to Curse Charlie Kirk.”



The website has since added an “Editor’s Note” to preface the story under the byline “By Jezebel,” condemning the shooting.

“This story was published on September 8,” the message began. “Jezebel condemns the shooting of Charlie Kirk in the strongest possible terms. We do not endorse, encourage, or excuse political violence of any kind.”

The rest of the article appears to remain the same as when it was published.

The writer criticized Kirk’s appearance and took exception to his comments about women and that the freedoms they enjoy are “a flaw, not an achievement.”


“If the far-right misogynist with a bad haircut wants to villainize independent women, Jezebel is more than happy to be the hag of his nightmares,” it reads.


While the writer explains how and why they turned to Etsy to find a “curse” that would create issues for Kirk, they also noted that they did not wish anything bad to happen to the commentator — only daily annoyances.

“I want to make it clear, I’m not calling on dark forces to cause him harm. I just want him to wake up every morning with an inexplicable zit. I want his podcast microphone to malfunction every time he hits record,” the writer listed.



“I want his blue blazers to suddenly all be one size too small. I want one of his socks to always be sliding down his foot. I want his thumb to grow too big to tweet. To ruin his day with the collective feminist power of the Etsy coven would be my life’s greatest joy.”

Josh Jackson, president of Paste Media Group, which owns Jezebel, said in statement to Variety: “The article was a tongue-in-cheek exploration of people selling hexes on Etsy, and intended as a satirical response to Charlie Kirk’s rhetoric over the years.”

He added: “The writer was very clear that she didn’t want real harm to come to Kirk. What happened today is tragic and becoming all too commonplace, and we condemn this awful act of violence.”
 

spaminator

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2 initially detained in Charlie Kirk shooting threatened even after police cleared them
Author of the article:Associated Press
Associated Press
John Seewer
Published Sep 11, 2025 • Last updated 1 day ago • 2 minute read

Agents with FBI forensic team investigate the scene where youth activist and influencer Charlie Kirk was shot during a public event at Utah Valley University in Orem, Utah, on Sept. 11, 2025.
Agents with FBI forensic team investigate the scene where youth activist and influencer Charlie Kirk was shot during a public event at Utah Valley University in Orem, Utah, on Sept. 11, 2025. Photo by MELISSA MAJCHRZAK /AFP via Getty Images
Two people who were detained and later released following the killing of conservative activist Charlie Kirk faced a number of threats and scrutiny even after police said they were not suspects, police said Thursday.


“These individuals were not suspects. They were people of interest,” Utah Department of Public Safety Commissioner Beau Mason said. “They don’t deserve that harassment.”


Both the FBI and the state’s public safety department issued a joint statement Wednesday night with the full names of both people, saying they were initially taken in as suspects.

By then, photos of one of those men being handcuffed shortly after Kirk was shot Wednesday at Utah Valley University had been circulating online with his name. The name of the second man also began appearing on social media sites.

The person who killed Kirk remained at large and unidentified Thursday, more than 24 hours after the shooting.


Felipe Rodriguez, a former New York City police detective, said it’s dangerous for law enforcement to release the names of people who have only been detained.

“That’s highly unusual, especially in this age of doxing and online threats,” said Rodriguez, an adjunct professor at John Jay College of Criminal Justice. “We have to be held at a higher standard and be careful about what information we put out there.”

Department policies vary. Los Angeles police regulations, for example, say a suspect’s name should not be released until the person is arrested and booked.

At one point Wednesday night, there was confusion about whether anyone was in custody or if the shooter was still at large as law enforcement provided changing and difficult-to-reconcile information.

FBI Director Kash Patel, who earlier had posted on social media that “the subject for the horrific shooting” had been taken into custody, later wrote that the person had been released after being questioned. Utah authorities separately said a person of interest was in custody, but it wasn’t clear if that was the same person Patel referenced as having been released.

Utah public safety officials later said neither of the people taken into custody was determined to have any connection to the shooting.
 

petros

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Nov 21, 2008
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2 initially detained in Charlie Kirk shooting threatened even after police cleared them
Author of the article:Associated Press
Associated Press
John Seewer
Published Sep 11, 2025 • Last updated 1 day ago • 2 minute read

Agents with FBI forensic team investigate the scene where youth activist and influencer Charlie Kirk was shot during a public event at Utah Valley University in Orem, Utah, on Sept. 11, 2025.
Agents with FBI forensic team investigate the scene where youth activist and influencer Charlie Kirk was shot during a public event at Utah Valley University in Orem, Utah, on Sept. 11, 2025. Photo by MELISSA MAJCHRZAK /AFP via Getty Images
Two people who were detained and later released following the killing of conservative activist Charlie Kirk faced a number of threats and scrutiny even after police said they were not suspects, police said Thursday.


“These individuals were not suspects. They were people of interest,” Utah Department of Public Safety Commissioner Beau Mason said. “They don’t deserve that harassment.”


Both the FBI and the state’s public safety department issued a joint statement Wednesday night with the full names of both people, saying they were initially taken in as suspects.

By then, photos of one of those men being handcuffed shortly after Kirk was shot Wednesday at Utah Valley University had been circulating online with his name. The name of the second man also began appearing on social media sites.

The person who killed Kirk remained at large and unidentified Thursday, more than 24 hours after the shooting.


Felipe Rodriguez, a former New York City police detective, said it’s dangerous for law enforcement to release the names of people who have only been detained.

“That’s highly unusual, especially in this age of doxing and online threats,” said Rodriguez, an adjunct professor at John Jay College of Criminal Justice. “We have to be held at a higher standard and be careful about what information we put out there.”

Department policies vary. Los Angeles police regulations, for example, say a suspect’s name should not be released until the person is arrested and booked.

At one point Wednesday night, there was confusion about whether anyone was in custody or if the shooter was still at large as law enforcement provided changing and difficult-to-reconcile information.

FBI Director Kash Patel, who earlier had posted on social media that “the subject for the horrific shooting” had been taken into custody, later wrote that the person had been released after being questioned. Utah authorities separately said a person of interest was in custody, but it wasn’t clear if that was the same person Patel referenced as having been released.

Utah public safety officials later said neither of the people taken into custody was determined to have any connection to the shooting.
A day late Spammy
 

spaminator

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A day late Spammy
sorry for the delay. i don't always get a chance to post articles as soon as they are available. also for some unknown reason there seems to be a delay when i can see the latest articles and posts. :confused: 😊 :(
 

Ron in Regina

"Voice of the West" Party
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(YouTube & In Wake of Charlie Kirk Murder, Sen. Bernie Sanders Addresses Rising Political Violence in America)
(YouTube & 'I hope all of his family dies': Educators under fire after 'inappropriate' comments on Charlie Kirk)

Now there’s brawls at vigils for Charlie Kirk? That’s some weird shit. I’ve personally been at two different weddings that have turned into brawls (alcohol was involved), but never a funeral.
1757776449067.jpeg
What does that even mean? This dude (whose name I won’t even bother to mention) had become “more political” (?) in the run-up to the shooting and mentioned during a dinner with family that Kirk would be visiting Utah, Gov. Spencer Cox said at a news conference. The Republican governor cited as evidence engravings on bullet casings found in the rifle that authorities believe was used in the attack, as well as chat app messages attributed to the suspect that a roommate shared with law enforcement.

This guy is believed to have acted alone, and the investigation is ongoing, Cox said. He was arrested on suspicion of capital murder, weapons and obstruction offenses. He was expected to be formally charged Tuesday ahead of an initial court appearance, etc…
 

petros

The Central Scrutinizer
Nov 21, 2008
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(YouTube & In Wake of Charlie Kirk Murder, Sen. Bernie Sanders Addresses Rising Political Violence in America)
(YouTube & 'I hope all of his family dies': Educators under fire after 'inappropriate' comments on Charlie Kirk)

Now there’s brawls at vigils for Charlie Kirk? That’s some weird shit. I’ve personally been at two different weddings that have turned into brawls (alcohol was involved), but never a funeral.
View attachment 31057
What does that even mean? This dude (whose name I won’t even bother to mention) had become “more political” (?) in the run-up to the shooting and mentioned during a dinner with family that Kirk would be visiting Utah, Gov. Spencer Cox said at a news conference. The Republican governor cited as evidence engravings on bullet casings found in the rifle that authorities believe was used in the attack, as well as chat app messages attributed to the suspect that a roommate shared with law enforcement.

This guy is believed to have acted alone, and the investigation is ongoing, Cox said. He was arrested on suspicion of capital murder, weapons and obstruction offenses. He was expected to be formally charged Tuesday ahead of an initial court appearance, etc…
Some people just ain't right.
 
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Ron in Regina

"Voice of the West" Party
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Some people just ain't right.
The assassination of Charlie Kirk was a hate crime, obviously. It was a terrible act of violence. Someone who hated Kirk’s writings, someone who hated his words, decided to express their disagreement with a bullet. So they stole life from a young man with a young family, simply because they didn’t like his ideas.
America’s state department may never let those celebrating — or making insensitive comments about — the evil political assassination of Charlie Kirk into the United States again. Some Canadians who have really embarrassed themselves and the country may find their names on this list.
Stop calling people you disagree with politically Nazis and fascists. Charlie Kirk was assassinated after years of political opponents falsely hurling those terms at him. He was shot and killed allegedly by a mental defective, who saw himself as an anti-fascist hunter.

“Hey fascist! Catch!” said the engraving on one of the shell-casings police recovered.

“I think that that speaks for itself,” Utah Governor Spencer Cox told reporters.

On another shell-casing, the words “Bella Ciao,” the title of an anti-fascist Italian fight song, were engraved. According to authorities, this guy was allegedly obsessed with Kirk and filled with rage in opposition to his views.
1757781584023.jpeg
Regardless of your political stripe or lack there of, this is just disgusting.
 

petros

The Central Scrutinizer
Nov 21, 2008
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The assassination of Charlie Kirk was a hate crime, obviously. It was a terrible act of violence. Someone who hated Kirk’s writings, someone who hated his words, decided to express their disagreement with a bullet. So they stole life from a young man with a young family, simply because they didn’t like his ideas.
America’s state department may never let those celebrating — or making insensitive comments about — the evil political assassination of Charlie Kirk into the United States again. Some Canadians who have really embarrassed themselves and the country may find their names on this list.
Stop calling people you disagree with politically Nazis and fascists. Charlie Kirk was assassinated after years of political opponents falsely hurling those terms at him. He was shot and killed allegedly by a mental defective, who saw himself as an anti-fascist hunter.

“Hey fascist! Catch!” said the engraving on one of the shell-casings police recovered.

“I think that that speaks for itself,” Utah Governor Spencer Cox told reporters.

On another shell-casing, the words “Bella Ciao,” the title of an anti-fascist Italian fight song, were engraved. According to authorities, this guy was allegedly obsessed with Kirk and filled with rage in opposition to his views.
View attachment 31062
Regardless of your political stripe or lack there of, this is just disgusting.
Antifa
 

spaminator

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Scarborough teacher accused of showing Charlie Kirk murder video to kids
The teacher has been removed from the classroom at Corvette junior Public School while the TDSB investigates the allegations


Author of the article:Joe Warmington
Published Sep 12, 2025 • Last updated 1 day ago • 4 minute read

The Toronto District School Board (TDSB) head office located at 5050 Yonge St. in North York.
The Toronto District School Board (TDSB) head office located at 5050 Yonge St. in North York. Photo by Jack Boland /Toronto Sun
Can anybody imagine a teacher showing students as young as 10 the video of Charlie Kirk being murdered by a gunshot to the neck?


The Toronto District School Board is investigating an allegation of this happening at a Scarborough elementary school.


First, a University of Toronto professor was sent home for an X post that appeared after the shooting suggesting shooting is “too good” for fascists, and now the TDSB has done the same with a teacher who allegedly showed a Grade 5 and 6 class Kirk’s assassination in Utah.

The Corvette Junior Public School teacher was not in class Friday while the TDSB investigates the complaint from parents that a class of 10 and 11 year olds was shown a graphic video of the slaying.

This letter was sent home to parents on Friday, Sept. 12, from Corvette Junior Public School Principal Jennifer Koptie after students at the elementary school in Scarborough were shown video of Charlie Kirk's assassination.
This letter was sent home to parents on Friday, Sept. 12, from Corvette Junior Public School Principal Jennifer Koptie after students at the elementary school in Scarborough were shown video of Charlie Kirk’s assassination.
“Several students from his class went home and complained to their parents, traumatized at witnessing the on-camera death, which they were forced to witness numerous times over,” a source close to the situation alleged. “Parents subsequently reached out to school administrators, who will be putting him on leave at the start of the school day September 12th 2025.”


“While playing this video repeatedly, he gave a speech to his students regarding anti-fascism, anti-trans, and how Charlie Kirk deserved for this to occur,” the source claimed.



The school’s principal Jennifer Koptie sent a letter home to parents outlining the situation.

“We are writing to inform you about an incident that is reported to have taken place in your child’s class yesterday. During class, students were said to have been shown a portion of a violent video in response to questions being asked about a recent tragic event in the United States.”


“The teacher has been relieved of all teaching responsibilities pending the outcome of the investigation and will not be at the school,” she wrote.

FBI agents walk through the courtyard at Utah Valley University as authorities search for the man who killed political activist Charlie Kirk on Sept. 11, 2025 in Orem, Utah.
FBI agents walk through the courtyard at Utah Valley University as authorities search for the man who killed political activist Charlie Kirk on Sept. 11, 2025 in Orem, Utah. Photo by Michael Ciaglo /Getty Images
Koptie explained the school board is offering assistance to any children who were traumatized.

“I also want to assure you that our top priority is supporting students. Social Work support has been made available to the school,” she wrote.

Charlie Kirk shot
The conservative influencer was murdered on stage at University in Utah. Photo by Tess Crowley /The Deseret News via AP
The principal added: “The video is believed to have been shown once by a staff member supervising the class who is not the homeroom teacher.”

“While an investigation must still be conducted to learn all of the details, the report of this incident is extremely troubling and completely unacceptable,”Koptie said. “We recognize the seriousness of this matter and have taken immediate steps to follow all appropriate policies and procedures.”


While this allegation is still being probed, it has to be asked what comes over these educators that they do these kinds of things?

Composite
Doug Ford and Ruth Marshall. Photo by Screenshots /THE CANADIAN PRESS/X/@wtfis2bdone
The case of Dr. Ruth Marshall at U of T is another example.

Her X post that appeared soon after Kirk was murdered stated, “Shooting is honestly too good for so many of you fascist c—-,” which Premier Doug Ford called “disgusting” and Universities Minister Nolan Quinn called “flagrantly” flying in the “face” of “respectful debate.”

Marshall and the TDSB teacher are entitled to due process and an opportunity to explain themselves to those who are investigating.



But these Ontario houses of learning are also entitled to take action – and that is what they have done.

In a letter to “colleagues, graduate students and staff,” Political Science Chair Ryan K. Balot advised everybody they “should plan to work from home Friday” since “the department’s physical office space will be closed” and “the University took immediate action upon learning of the concerning social media posts of a University of Toronto professor.

“The faculty member is now on leave and not on campus,” he stated. “The matter is being looked into and the University will not be commenting further.”


Part of that probe should be to understand the context of Dr. Marshall’s post.

While her @wtfis2bdone X account is locked down and inaccessible, and while Press Progress claimed her commentary was in response to the war on Gaza and not on the Kirk killing, she has not responded to request for comment on the matter and nor has U of T.



Neither the U of T professor nor the TDSB teacher have at this point been found to have violated any rules. Both cases are being professionally probed with them not in their respective classrooms while those investigations are underway. But the overall point, as authorities in Utah arrested 22-year-old Tyler Robinson for the murder, comes down to why are any teachers at any age level of schooling taking their biases and presenting them toward students?

If the goal is to radicalize young minds, it should be stopped.

Charlie Kirk Shot (combined)
This photo released by the Utah Governor’s Office on Friday, Sept. 12, 2025 shows Tyler Robinson. Photo by Utah Governor's Office via AP
There’s no way there’s anything appropriate about glorifying any violence to kids.

The teachers are entitled to their own views but their students in the classroom should not be subjected to those views.

jwarmington@postmedia.com
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spaminator

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Who is the man arrested in Charlie Kirk’s killing?
Author of the article:Associated Press
Associated Press
Michael Biesecker And Jim Mustian
Published Sep 12, 2025 • Last updated 1 day ago • 3 minute read

This photo released by the Utah Governor's Office on Friday, Sept. 12, 2025 shows Tyler Robinson.
This photo released by the Utah Governor's Office on Friday, Sept. 12, 2025 shows Tyler Robinson. Photo by Utah Governor's Office via AP /AP
WASHINGTON — Family members of the young Utah man accused of shooting Charlie Kirk told authorities he had recently become “more political” and saw the ally of President Donald Trump as a person spreading hate, according to authorities.


Tyler James Robinson, 22, of Washington, Utah, was arrested on suspicion of aggravated murder, felony discharge of a firearm causing serious bodily harm, and obstruction of justice, all felonies, according to a probable cause statement filed in court and released Friday. A judge ordered that he be held without bail.


Robinson is registered to vote but is not affiliated with a political party, according to Utah state records. He was also listed as inactive, meaning he had not voted in at least the last two general elections.

State and federal court records do not show any prior criminal cases involving him.

His listed address in the probable cause statement is the six-bedroom home of his parents, who own a granite countertop business and are registered to vote as Republicans.



It wasn’t immediately clear Friday whether Robinson had a defence lawyer who could comment on his behalf. Messages seeking comment left Friday with family members including his parents received no response.

Robinson has two younger brothers and his parents have been married for about 25 years, according to social media posts. The family lives in a suburb of St. George, a city in the southern part of the state about a 3 1/2 hour drive from the Utah Valley University campus where authorities say Robinson shot and killed Kirk.


An honour roll student in high school who scored in the 99th percentile nationally on standardized tests, he was admitted to Utah State in 2021 on a prestigious academic scholarship, according to a video of him reading his acceptance letter posted to a family member’s social media account. He attended for only one semester, according to a university spokesperson.


Robinson is currently enrolled as a third-year student in the electrical apprenticeship program at Dixie Technical College in St. George.

Social media posts by Robinson’s mother reflect an active family with vacations to Disneyland, Hawaii, the Caribbean and Alaska. They frequently spent time outdoors — boating, fishing, riding ATVs, zip-lining and target shooting. A 2017 post shows the family visiting a military facility and posing with assault rifles. A young Robinson is shown smiling as he grips the handles of a 50-calibre heavy machine gun.

After graduating from high school in 2021, Robinson’s mother praised her eldest son for his smarts and academic success on her social media page, and both his parents helped him move into his dorm at Utah State that fall. She didn’t have any public Facebook posts after 2022.


The break in the case came after a family member of Robinson reached out to a family friend with information that Robinson had “confessed” or implied involvement in the shooting, Utah Gov. Spencer Cox told reporters Friday, shortly after Robinson was taken into custody.

Cox said it is believed that Robinson acted alone. Family members said Robinson “had become more political in recent years,” Cox said, describing a recent family dinner in which Robinson mentioned that Kirk planned to speak at UVU.

“They talked about why they didn’t like him and the viewpoints that he had,” Cox said, referring to Robinson and an unnamed family member. “The family member also stated Kirk was full of hate and spreading hate.”


Authorities then interviewed a friend of Robinson’s who showed them a series of messages on the social media platform Discord in which Robinson discussed obtaining a gun.

When authorities took him into custody, court records show, Robinson also was wearing clothing “consistent” with surveillance photographs of the person of interest.

Cox said ammunition found at the scene had engravings that reference meme culture and referred to fascism.

— Mustian reported from New York. Associated Press journalists Brian Slodysko and Collin Binkley in Washington, Jack Brook in New Orleans, and Ali Swenson and Randy Herschaft in New York also contributed.
 

spaminator

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People are losing jobs, minds for celebrating Charlie Kirk slaying
Author of the article:Denette Wilford
Published Sep 12, 2025 • Last updated 1 day ago • 3 minute read

Immediately after Charlie Kirk’s assassination, social media was ripped in two — with one side mourning and the other celebrating.


Reaction to the murder of the conservative commentator was almost as brutal as the shooting itself, with many ecstatic over the news that Kirk died in hospital from a single gunshot to the neck while speaking at an event at a Utah university.


Conservative activist Christopher F. Rufo wrote on X: “The number of people celebrating Charlie Kirk’s death who work as teachers, nurses, psychologists, social workers, and other ‘helping professions’ is immensely disturbing.”

He added: “We have a serious problem in this country.”



Teachers
The people who were hired to shape young minds revealed their views in disturbing posts across the U.S. following Kirk’s shooting.

There was a special education teacher in Massachusetts seen in a video joyfully singing “God Bless America” while standing before a breaking news report on Kirk’s assassination, a South Carolina high school social studies teacher who wrote, “America became better today,” and an Iowa art teacher who allegedly wrote, “1 Nazi down.”

The social studies teacher has since been fired for his post while the art teacher was placed on administrative leave, according to the Libs of TikTok X account.

While some school districts across the U.S. have responded to the outrage, state officials in Florida issued a warning pledging to punish any “vile, sanctionable” behaviour from teachers directly relating to Kirk’s death.


Sports world
The Carolina Panthers fired Charlie Rock, a member of the team’s communications department over insensitive social posts, including one featuring the Wu-Tang Clan song Protect Ya Neck, following Kirk’s shooting.

Phoenix Suns beat writer Gerald Bourguet was also let go over a series of X posts, which he concluded with, “Truly don’t care if you think it’s insensitive or poor timing to decline to respect an evil man who died. Too many of you are more concerned with being polite and *appearing* to be good people rather than showing some damn backbone and standing on principal to condemn hate.”

Meanwhile, transgender former Team USA BMX rider Chelsea Wolfe made celebratory posts on her Instagram Stories, including a photo of her giving a thumbs up with a caption that read, “Being a Nazi is completely optional btw. He didn’t have to do all that, but he did and now he’s dead. Don’t live your life in a way that the world is better following your death.”


Government and school workers
Secret Service Agent Anthony Pough has been placed on leave, according to Libs of TikTok, for writing, “If you are mourning this guy… delete me. He spewed hate and racism on his show.”

A University of Kentucky security employee is also now on leave for mocking Kirk’s assassination, while people are calling for a University of South Dakota professor to be fired for allegedly writing, “I don’t give a flying f— about this Kirk person. I have no thoughts or prayers for this hate spreading nazi.”


Meanwhile, the last person to debate Kirk seconds before he was shot acknowledged the irony in the argument he posted to the Turning Point founder.

Mathematics student Hunter Kozak attended Kirk’s “Prove Me Wrong” event in Utah to debate statistics around transgender mass shooters, according to a video he shared on social media.


“Do you know how many transgender Americans have been mass shooters over the last 10 years?” Kozak asked Kirk, who replied, “Too many.”

As Kozak noted that the number is “five,” Kirk, in his final words, asked, “Counting or not counting gang violence?” before taking a single bullet to the neck.



Kozak reflected on their sparring, and how ironic it was that he was attempting to prove the political left was non-violent — just as Kirk was violently killed.

“First off, you sick f—king psychos that think this is the answer, it’s not,” he said in the video as he became emotional.

“I’m on the record with how much I disagree with Charlie Kirk, but he’s still a human being. Have we forgotten that? Are we crazy?”

He added: “I stand by so little of everything that he said, but one of the things that he stood by was conversation.”