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Defendant Tyler Robinson Turned Himself In After UVU Campus Shooting

Reality Check with Ross Coulthart · Watch live: Day 3 preliminary hearing for accused Charlie Kirk killer · July 8, 2026
Defendant Tyler Robinson Turned Himself In After UVU Campus Shooting
Reality Check with Ross Coulthart
Reality Check with Ross Coulthart
Watch live: Day 3 preliminary hearing for accused Charlie Kirk killer
"We received information that an individual had turned himself in or was going to turn himself in to police in regard to his involvement with the incident, the shooting on UVU campus."
SBI Agent Brian Davis testified that on September 11, 2025, at 8:30 PM, law enforcement learned Tyler Robinson planned to surrender in connection with the September 10 UVU shooting. Robinson arrived at Washington County Sheriff's Office around 9 PM with his parents and a family friend, and was formally arrested at 4 AM on September 12 after interviews were conducted.

About this episode

This preliminary hearing session in the Tyler Robinson UVU campus shooting case centered on heated constitutional disputes over what evidence can be broadcast to the public. SBI Agent Brian Davis testified extensively about the investigation, revealing that Robinson voluntarily surrendered at Washington County Sheriff's Office on September 11, 2025, arriving around 9 PM with his parents and family friend Mike Mitchell. Robinson was formally arrested at 4 AM on September 12 and transported to Utah County Jail. The court heard that Robinson's roommate Lance Twiggs was granted use immunity by both the Utah County Attorney's Office and U.S. Attorney's Office before providing a video-recorded interview on April 20, 2026, taken in lieu of his testimony at the preliminary hearing. The session became dominated by extensive legal argument over whether Twiggs' recorded interview and other exhibits containing alleged statements by Robinson could be broadcast during the televised hearing. Defense attorney Michael Novak argued that broadcasting what prosecutors will characterize as confessions violates Robinson's 14th Amendment due process rights, citing the Supreme Court's Estes v. Texas decision. The prosecution sought to play the audio of the interview while keeping visual exhibits off camera, while media attorneys and the Kirk family's representative argued for full transparency. Judge [name not stated] ultimately ruled that Twiggs' entire interview is admitted into evidence for the court's consideration but ordered specific portions redacted from public broadcast, from timestamp 6:56 to 20:27 and 32:55 to 35:48, citing Rule 403 concerns about cumulative evidence given that text messages may be separately introduced. The judge emphasized balancing transparency with constitutional rights to a fair trial, acknowledging the difficulty of the task. Agent Davis also testified that a live, unfired .223 caliber round was found on the UVU Computer Science Building roof, though there was no line of sight from that location to victim Charlie Kirk's position. The hearing adjourned early to allow the state to prepare redacted video exhibits overnight, with proceedings set to resume at 9 AM the following day.

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