Defense Claims Bullet in Charlie Kirk Murder Does Not Match Suspect’s Rifle


A bombshell court filing from the defense team of Tyler Robinson claims that the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives was unable to match the bullet recovered from Charlie Kirk’s autopsy to the Remington rifle seized from the suspect’s family.
Robinson, 22, stands accused of the September 10, 2025, assassination of the Turning Point USA founder during a student rally at Utah Valley University.
The defense motion filed Friday argues that this lack of a ballistics match constitutes significant exculpatory evidence.
Lawyers for Robinson are using the findings to push for a six-month delay of the preliminary hearing, citing the need to independently review over 20,000 files and complex DNA mixtures provided by the prosecution.
While the headline sparked a firestorm of conspiracy theories on social media suggesting a cover-up or "inside job," the underlying report notes the fatal round was heavily fragmented.
Legal experts suggest that such "inconclusive" results are common with high-velocity rifle rounds and do not inherently exonerate a suspect when other evidence is present.
The prosecution remains undeterred, maintaining a mountain of circumstantial and forensic leads.
This includes a reported confession Robinson made to his father and digital evidence showing the suspect texted a roommate about retrieving the weapon without leaving a trace.
Public interest in the case remains at a fever pitch with the Daily Mail report garnering over 21 million views.
As the April 17 court date approaches, the judge is expected to rule on both the trial delay and whether to allow cameras in the courtroom for what has become the most politically charged murder trial of 2026.