Updated
Updated · PBS NewsHour · Jun 12
Tyler Robinson Seeks to Block Death Penalty Over Prosecutors' Comments on 1 Bullet Fragment
Updated
Updated · PBS NewsHour · Jun 12

Tyler Robinson Seeks to Block Death Penalty Over Prosecutors' Comments on 1 Bullet Fragment

3 articles · Updated · PBS NewsHour · Jun 12

Summary

  • Utah defense lawyers asked a judge Friday to bar prosecutors from pursuing the death penalty, arguing their public comments about a bullet fragment violated court limits and tainted the jury pool.
  • Those comments came after defense filings highlighted a preliminary ballistics finding that did not match the fragment to the rifle investigators say killed Charlie Kirk, fueling speculation about a second shooter or a staged death.
  • Prosecutors said they were correcting misinformation, not discussing case specifics, and pointed to DNA consistent with Robinson's on the rifle trigger, a fired casing, two unfired cartridges and the towel used to wrap the weapon.
  • Judge Tony Graf said he will rule June 22 on the contempt dispute after separately refusing to pause the case over courtroom-camera issues.
  • The fight lands ahead of a July 6 hearing where prosecutors must show enough evidence to send Robinson, 23, to trial in the Sept. 10 killing of Kirk at Utah Valley University.

Insights

Could a prosecutor's media comments about evidence save a murder suspect from the death penalty?
Why is one inconclusive bullet fragment so crucial in a case with DNA and an alleged confession?
As new firing squad chambers are built, is the death penalty making a comeback despite low public support?