Charlie Kirk, bullet casings
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14hon MSN
Criminologist tells MSNBC she can't find motive for Charlie Kirk's killing in bullet casing messages
MSNBC criminologist analyzed messages etched on bullet casings from Charlie Kirk shooting suspect, calling them immature rantings and saying she sees no clear political motive yet.
“Good morning, ladies and gentlemen. We got him. On the evening of September 11th, a family member of Tyler Robinson reached out to a family friend who contacted the Washington County Sheriff’s Office with information that Robinson had confessed to them or implied that he had committed the incident,” Cox began, adding:
Officials say Kirk’s assassin wrote messages on bullet casings alluding to online meme culture and anti-fascist movements.
The phrase, inscribed on an unfired casing tied to the man arrested in Charlie Kirk’s shooting, was popular in Italy after World War II. It has recently resurfaced in a Netflix series and video games.
The man accused of killing conservative activist Charlie Kirk allegedly engraved messages into bullet casings before killing him on Wednesday in Utah, officials said.
Police in Utah have arrested 22-year-old Tyler Robinson in connection with Wednesday’s shooting death of MAGA influencer Charlie Kirk at Utah Valley University in Orem, Utah, according to a press conference held Friday by Utah Gov. Spencer Cox and FBI Director Kash Patel.
The message engraved on the casing of the bullet that killed Charlie Kirk is used in trolling and “furry” subculture — and experts told The Post on Friday it was written by someone
The brazen attack sent shockwaves through the area. Police teams and forensic experts rushed to the spot and recovered six bullet casings from the crime scene.