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Prosecutor Warns Defense Tactics Making Tyler Robinson Look Most Guilty Person Ever

Charlie Kirk Show · Prosecutor EXPOSES Tyler Robinson Defense's DESPERATE Courtroom Tactics · July 7, 2026
Prosecutor Warns Defense Tactics Making Tyler Robinson Look Most Guilty Person Ever
Charlie Kirk Show
Charlie Kirk Show
Prosecutor EXPOSES Tyler Robinson Defense's DESPERATE Courtroom Tactics
"I am going to paint the most guilty person that the that ever lived for the whole world to to see and behold. So I'm I'm not pulling punches if I'm the prosecution at this point. You're going to make me waste a week on this? Fine. Guess what? Your guy is going to look like the most guilty person that ever lived. And he is."
Former US Attorney Jay Town explained that the defense's decision to proceed with a laborious preliminary hearing rather than waiving it is backfiring spectacularly. By forcing the prosecution to present all evidence publicly, including inadmissible hearsay and witness statements, the defense is allowing the world to see overwhelming proof of Robinson's guilt before trial. Town suggested the prosecution will now deliberately present the most damning possible picture of the defendant.

About this episode

Former US Attorney Jay Town joined hosts to analyze the preliminary hearing for Tyler Robinson, accused of murdering political figure Charlie Kirk. Town, a career prosecutor, expressed surprise that Robinson's defense team chose not to waive the preliminary hearing despite having received all prosecution evidence showing overwhelming guilt. He characterized the defense's strategy of objecting to every exhibit and dragging out proceedings as likely ineffective and possibly incompetent, noting that while such tactics might work to preserve appellate issues, they risk making Robinson appear extraordinarily guilty to potential jurors and the watching public. Town explained that preliminary hearings have no rules of evidence, meaning hearsay and other normally inadmissible material can be presented, giving prosecutors an opportunity to paint the most damning picture possible of the defendant. The hearing is expected to last most of the week and will include testimony from four police officers covering 40-50 exhibits, including drone imagery, videos of the shooting from multiple angles, ballistics evidence, surveillance footage, doorbell camera recordings, medical examiner reports, and a recorded statement from witness Lance Twigs. UVU Police Officer Chris Bagley testified about hearing a rifle shot and witnessing Kirk's immediate reaction and fall. Town suggested the defense may be attempting to break the prosecution's will, taint the jury pool, or build an appellate record, but emphasized that all defense strategies are ultimately losing propositions given the strength of evidence. He noted the challenge of finding jurors in conservative, religious Utah who haven't formed opinions about the case but can still support the death penalty.

Key takeaways

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