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Judge unseals ATF report in Tyler Robinson case in Charlie Kirk killing
Summary
A Utah judge unsealed an ATF ballistics report tied to the case against Tyler Robinson; the report says a damaged bullet fragment could not be conclusively matched to the suspected rifle while a spent cartridge case was identified as having been fired in that rifle. Undetermined at this time.
Content
A Utah judge has unsealed a federal ATF ballistics report tied to the case against Tyler Robinson, who is accused of killing Charlie Kirk. The document had been attached to a defense filing that was previously sealed. The ATF report describes testing on a damaged bullet fragment and on a spent cartridge case. Prosecutors have also announced separate testing they say found DNA consistent with Robinson on the gun, a towel and three of four rounds.
Key details:
- Tyler Robinson is accused of shooting Charlie Kirk during a Turning Point USA event; authorities say the suspected weapon was a Mauser rifle recovered near the scene.
- Judge Tony Graf ordered that a defense filing and part of the ATF report be unsealed after finding no basis to keep them classified.
- The ATF report states an examiner found the damaged bullet fragment inconclusive for a match but identified a spent .30-06 cartridge case as having been fired in the Exhibit 1 rifle.
- Prosecutors have alleged that separate testing found DNA consistent with Robinson on the firearm, a towel and three of the four rounds inside.
Summary:
The unsealed ATF document adds technical detail to the evidence described by prosecutors while noting an inconclusive match for a damaged bullet fragment alongside a cartridge case identification. The judge concluded the filing should not remain sealed. Undetermined at this time.
