Tyler Robinson Hearing Aftermath: Day 2
The Charlie Kirk ShowJuly 08, 202601:17:3335.53 MB

Tyler Robinson Hearing Aftermath: Day 2

The second day of a weeklong preliminary hearing in the Tyler Robinson case just wrapped up. Brandon Tatum joins from Utah to talk about the reaction to new Tyler Robinson video and confirmation that Robinson turned himself in. Veteran jury consultant Jo-Ellan Dimitrius dissects the strategies each side of the case might pursue in recruiting potential jurors — as well as how the judge can keep motivated conspiracists out of the jury pool. Jobob joins once again.

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00:00:03 Speaker 1: My name is Charlie kirk I run the largest pro American student organization in the country, fighting for the future of our republic. My call is to fight evil and to proclaim truth. If the most important thing for you is just feeling good, you're gonna end up miserable. But if the most important thing is doing good, you'll end up purposeful. College is a scam, everybody. You got to stop sending your kids to college. You should get married as young as possible and have as many kids as possible. 00:00:31 Speaker 2: Go start at turning point. You would say college chapter. 00:00:33 Speaker 1: Go start at turning point, yould say high school chapter. Go find out how your church can get involved. 00:00:37 Speaker 2: Sign up and become an activist. I gave my. 00:00:39 Speaker 1: Life to the Lord in fifth grade, most important decision I ever made in my life, and I encourage you to do the same. Here I am Lord, Use me. Buckle up, everybody, Here we go. Noble Gold Investments is the official gold sponsor of the Charlie Kirkshaw, a company that specializes in gold I rays and physical delivery of precious metals. Learn how you could protect your wealth with Noble Gold Investments at noblegold investments dot Com. That is Noblegoldinvestments dot Com. 00:01:17 Speaker 3: All right, welcome everybody. We are live here for our special Day two of the State of Utah versus Tyler Robinson preliminary hearing. We've got so much to get to. We've got myself obviously, Blake, Brandon Tatum, Officer Brandon Tatum, and Joe Bob all there. You can see him right there. Gentlemen, thank you so much for coming and joining us. Brandon, I know you were in the courthouse all today. I can't wait to dive in and get your POV. I want to set this up just really quickly for our audience before we get into it. The Day two was I think an absolute bombshell of a day. There was multiple aspects of today that were critically important for the state to establish probable cause, which again is the standard in a preliminary hearing to take it to a full trial. Okay, the morning started off huge, and gentlemen, this is where we're going to start. We left off last night where they were trying to submit this The state was trying to submit this video compilation and they had sort of a John Madden style version of it that they were not allowed to do. But this morning they got the compilation in. It was more of the raw footage version of it, but it was huge, huge, huge, huge there was. Now we've established that Tyler Robinson was on campus, the UVU campus four times, twice in the morning, then during the actual shooting, and then once in the evening that actually bled into the early hours of September eleventh. Officer Tatum might want to start with you, sir, what was that like watching that footage, hearing for the first time four times on the campus of UVU. 00:03:04 Speaker 2: Yeah, I could say thanks for having me on. 00:03:06 Speaker 4: I could say it was an incredible relief that we can match up common sense with evidence and get it presented in court as a probable cause, you know, effort. And because a lot of people are saying that, not a lot of people, I think people without a connected brainstem are saying that Tyler Robinson wasn't even on the campus whatsoever. And obviously we see him on camera verified. He was even stopped by law enforcement at twelve thirty am on the eleventh, where they identified the vehicle and they identified him as a person driving the vehicle. Then they compile that and compare that to some of the videos that they had from previous days or the previous day, and it's clear that Tyler Robinson was the one driving the car on campus, even though he's not a student on campus. He has no reason to be there. He lived probably two hundred miles away. So it was damning evidence for the defense team. 00:03:56 Speaker 5: Yeah, and which they themselves were aware of. 00:03:59 Speaker 3: Yeah, this says the other part here. 00:04:01 Speaker 5: The first hour of today was back and forth where they basically were again were arguing, can we please not show this sequence of video, even the unedited version. Can we not show it because there is a quote, a realistic likelihood of prejudice to mister Robinson's right to a fair trial. That basically this video getting out there would be so viral, so widely seen, it would just make it would make it too difficult for Robinson to have an untainted jury someday. 00:04:29 Speaker 2: Yeah. 00:04:30 Speaker 3: Well that I mean as soon as as soon as this went out, it went viral all over Joe Bob, what did you see from your perch? As soon as that that video evidence was made public and was actually broadcast too, to judge Tony Graft's credit. 00:04:45 Speaker 6: Yeah, So to back up to the kind of the procedural part of it. There was obviously arguing over whether or not this should be shown, and it was interesting to see I think he's an attorney representing the media side of it, saying, hey, well, if graph is going to make a decision on whether this is going to proceed to trial, everybody needs to see what he sees, unless, of course, obviously it's graphic that way, so they if he makes an assess, when he makes an assessment, people can believe that assessment, which is is an interesting dynamic in the in the courtroom. Obviously, we're all grateful that this footage is now out in public. In terms of the Internet reaction, it was. It was huge, Like everybody I knew shared at least some version of one of these several videos that came out, and the normal people reacted like, yeah, this kind of seems like something we knew, something we knew was coming, and now it's here. And then you've got, you know, two percent of the population who then decided to take it and run a different direction. Well but but but but but like okay, well there's nothing you can do to please those people. But overall, this, as Brandon was saying, kind of put to bed a lot of the I don't even know what to call it, the craziness that was out there. Tyler Robinson wasn't even on the campus. Okay, thankfully we finally have footage now to make sure that that that gets put to rest. 00:06:14 Speaker 3: All right, So I totally agree there's still gonna be you know, theories that emerge that are, you know, I would say, divergent from what the state is is posting. We're seeing those online. Brandon, what was it like in the courtroom when that was happening. It felt like there's been a couple instances where I've seen Judge Graff actually get a little bit. You can see his patience is wearing thin. He's very good at keeping a dead pan presentation, but you could see there was a couple of moments and then finally he rules on this. What was it like in that inside the courtroom when that was happening. 00:06:52 Speaker 2: Well, for me, it was an incredible relief. 00:06:55 Speaker 4: I think I can echo the sentiment of most people there, you know that's on the Charlie Kirk team to try to kirkside, is that initially it was questionable whether or not that we're going to get this amount of evidence or this type of evidence into the trial. But towards the end of the day yesterday, we kind of knew that if we prepared it right, the evidence would be admissible. But it was a sigh relief, and especially because we were able to you know, I think it was a give and take because it was a sire relief because we were able to get the information in. Therefore, the world can see that Tyler Robbins was it's evidence that he was on campus. But the thing that was a little disappointing in part was that there was the other variation of the video that had some circles and zooms and blurs on it that I think would have been more appropriate for the audience at large. You know, people in the courtroom, we could see what was going on. We knew what we were looking at. I mean, it's pretty obvious. But to the public, with that video being displayed the way it was, it's not very easy to see unless you zoom in. So the video that the judge allowed to be admissible in court but not viewed by the public was a video that I think would have been a lot easier for people put a digest online. But overall, I think it was incredibly powerful, and I think it was a sigh of relief that we were things were going in the right direction. 00:08:08 Speaker 2: For the for the Charlie Kirk team. 00:08:12 Speaker 3: I saw that you posted some kind of selfie videos, Brandon. I don't know if those are on break or whatever. During during today, in the middle of the different breaks in the action, but you were talking about this theory of like the Patsy theory, and you were talking about could other people have been involved, and that we're still kind of dealing with this notion of And I think you know this is coming from Candas that you know, she doesn't even believe that he was on campus that day, and she doesn't believe that this guy was the right height or whatever. Let's go ahead and play this clip and I'll have you respond thirty four. 00:08:49 Speaker 2: I don't think is behind this. 00:08:51 Speaker 7: I don't do you think Tyler Robinson was there? 00:08:53 Speaker 2: You don't think he was there. 00:08:56 Speaker 7: I think he's a total Patsy. 00:08:57 Speaker 4: I think they get lookalikes and they got everybody where same outfit. 00:09:00 Speaker 6: I think he played a role, and I believe that what he did was he picked up clothes. 00:09:05 Speaker 7: And he dumped them behind the dairy Queen. I think he had a role. 00:09:13 Speaker 3: What do you make of that? 00:09:16 Speaker 4: Well, I think people should be able to digest this information and say, if a person is going to say he wasn't even there, he was a patsy and there's no evidence whatsoever presented to back that claim up, then you should probably question what a person is getting where the person is getting their information from. It is clear as the noonday sun he was on campus four times, and for him being a body double or something like that, even the defense isn't arguing this. The thing that people need to understand is that how is somebody? How is somebody who's not associated with the case, has no investigative skills, is not investigating anything. It's you know, any substantive thing going to argue something. That defense isn't even arguing. They're not arguing that Tyler Robinson wasn't on campus. They're not arguing against that. 00:10:02 Speaker 2: You know. The funny thing that I found in this trial. 00:10:06 Speaker 4: Another thing is as well, is that the prosecution is saying Tyler Robinson is here, Tyler Robinson did this. This is Tyler Robinson on campus, and the defense isn't even objecting to it. Because you would think that the defense will object to it because there's still. 00:10:21 Speaker 2: Probable costs hearing. They haven't determined that they have probable costs. 00:10:24 Speaker 4: To believe yet that Tyler Robinson is in fact that suspect. But the defense isn't even objecting to the prosecution claiming this is Tyler Robinson. He did this, he did that, he walked here. And I'll tell you something else that defense messed up on because they're, you know, they're not doing an adequate job when it comes to this, is that she tried to be impartial when she said a suspect jumps off of the roof. 00:10:47 Speaker 2: Then she says and then he did this. 00:10:50 Speaker 4: It's like, well, wait a minute, I thought you were articulating that this is a common and impartial person. How do you know if it's a male or female. None of these things have been presented yet, why are you saying he. It's because they know for a fact that it was Tyler Robinson, and at least I think they believe it was Tyler Robinson, and those things are being brought up in court. I encourage people to look at the evidence, quit listening to people online, especially those who do not have law enforcement experience or experience doing investigations, or those who won't even interview people with experience. You have to put those things together. So listen to what's going on in hearing. Make the determination on your own, but it has to be rooted in facts, and it has to be rooted in evidence. 00:11:30 Speaker 5: I think what we'll see, where we've seen it the last few days, and we will see it in the weeks, months, potentially years to come, is that people who are committed to this line of reasoning that Robinson is a patsy, that Robinson wasn't there, that Robinson, that no one fired a shot from the top of that building. I don't think they're really motivated by believing a particular source. I think they're motivated, frankly by by malice. They want to believe a certain line, and they don't They genuinely don't care what the evidence is. But fortunately, I think most people aren't going in that direction. 00:12:06 Speaker 3: Something that's on everyone's mind right now is the housing market. 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That's Andrewintodd dot com. Or call Triple eight Triple eight eleven seventy two. That's Triple eight Triple eight eleven seventy two. Get your plan in motion. Go to Andrew and toodd dot com. 00:13:12 Speaker 5: Today, I wanted to flag another thing that was very strong besides the four times on campus. I think this gets at the crux of why we can be so confident in this case that they actually asked, uh, investigator whole, did you guys have a suspect in this case until you got news that someone had turned himself in, And he said the answer is no. In fact, I think we didn't get a chance to play that earlier. Let's play it now. They're asking about this. This is clip seventeen. 00:13:42 Speaker 8: And isn't it fair to say that, as of the moment that Tyler Robinson voluntarily surrendered to authorities in Washington County, as of that moment, you all did not know who the shooter was. Is that right? 00:13:58 Speaker 9: We had identified a person of interest, but we did not specifically know who the shooter was at that time. 00:14:03 Speaker 8: Okay, and you became aware that mister Robinson was voluntarily surrendering. How how did you become aware of that? 00:14:15 Speaker 9: That information came originally, I believe, from the Washington County Sheriff to the administration at the control center at the university on the evening of the investigation, well the second evening of the investigation. 00:14:29 Speaker 5: So that just lays it out. They did not this. He didn't get arrested because they'd identified him through a story. We've already heard that his parents became suspicious. They brought in a friend I believe they said it was a scout master of his who had a flaw enforcement former, something like that. They loop him in into the part of the process and he turns himself in. 00:14:51 Speaker 3: He calls and said, hey, if we bring if you know, if he turns himself in peacefully, can we do it that way? They agreed, He goes and turns himself in. 00:15:00 Speaker 5: And they didn't They had their command center at the university, did not know they had a person of interest. Presumably they'd identified this person they'd seen on cameras, so they were releasing photos. But I think my interpretation of that was they did not have a name, they didn't have a particular person they were on a man hunt for. And then they learned that he had voluntarily turned himself in. 00:15:21 Speaker 3: And that's the defense. 00:15:22 Speaker 2: That's the defense. 00:15:23 Speaker 5: Attorney saying that Tyler Robinson turned himself in. And that's another thing that these people online have tried to deny ever happened. 00:15:31 Speaker 4: Yeah, this is incredibly damning to the defense when you have no idea who the person is. 00:15:38 Speaker 2: Why would a person. 00:15:39 Speaker 4: That had nothing to do with this voluntarily turn himself in. It's not like they had his name right. It's not like they said Tyler Robinson did it. We're looking for this guy. And he said, okay, okay, y'all got me. I'm gonna turn myself in without incident. No, this person voluntarily said I am surrendering, taking respect reponsibility for killing Charlie Kirk. Like, I don't understand how anybody's still questioning whether or not this this boy is involved in this. 00:16:08 Speaker 2: He voluntarily did it. 00:16:09 Speaker 4: This is this This flies in the face of the of the of the theory that he's somew being used by somebody else. If somebody turned him in, meaning somebody snitch and said, hey, it was him, and they went and picked him up and it happened that way, then I could see somebody saying he's a patsy or something. 00:16:24 Speaker 2: But why with your parents. 00:16:26 Speaker 4: Who love you us, presumably I see him in the courtroom and they go, I'm just gonna make this up. I'm gonna act like my son did this, hain his crime. That's gonna put him in a bad light for the rest of his life. It's gonna go down in history if he's found guilty that he killed one of the most incredible men to ever live in the United States of America, and you're telling me, just parents just turn him in because one day they just got a wild hair and thought it'd be cool to turn their son in for this. 00:16:54 Speaker 2: And he could be put to death over this that. I think the cases close on that. 00:16:58 Speaker 3: Absolutely, Joe Biba. I want to work you in here in just second. But what we're talking about, I think is a really important vein, and that is what the defense has already just sort of admitted to that Tyler Robinson turned himself in. You know, it's like they it's the dog that didn't bark kind of thing. 00:17:16 Speaker 2: You know. 00:17:17 Speaker 3: This is what's interesting. There's a uh some of there was an analyst on Fox News who said it was a mount everest amount of evidence presented against Tyler Robinson. And these are people that at no prosecutions, that no criminal defense and prosecution. So but it's crazy because like, what else is the defense not saying, right, They're not saying anything about exploding mics, They're not saying anything about Egyptian planes, they're not saying anything about macade, they're not saying anything about regicide, They're not saying anything about any of that. 00:17:48 Speaker 2: Stuff. 00:17:50 Speaker 3: So I just I just like to our point here, kind of like keeping us focused on what the evidence actually is saying to us. Now, I think I have more I want to say, but I was gonna work in a Joe Bob here Joe Bob. 00:18:05 Speaker 6: Well, I don't want to. I don't want to jump ahead too far in the day. But there's the commentary that I saw online was when they got to the DNA portion of it, and the examiner there wouldn't say, well, definitive, this definitive that when actuality. 00:18:23 Speaker 3: It's US d o J policy. 00:18:25 Speaker 6: That examiners don't use definitive language when presenting DNA evidence. Uh, and specifically in a pre trial. And and to that point, on the on the crazy side, Uh, if the word show trial has been thrown around, if this were a show trial, why would any of the evidence be inconclusive? Okay, it wouldn't. Wouldn't all of that be tied up? And and also if it's all a lie, if all of this stuff is made up, then you can't use it as your argument. You can't use perceived inconclusivity as part of your argument. So the whole thing crumbles in the conspiratorial mind. And and you know, I pulled up a Bible verse here that I'm sure been referenced a number of times. This is a two Timothy three. Uh, Beware of the worms who gained control over gullible women who are loaded down with sins and swayed by all kinds of evil desires, always learning, but never able to come into a knowledge of the truth. And isn't that exactly what we are seeing in real time? Just well, nothing is ever enough, Okay, So the DNA evidence, the video evidence, the admission of guild, all of these things, it's all fake. 00:19:41 Speaker 3: It's it's I love that you brought this up, Joe Bob, I love that you brought this up. And Officer Tatum, I'm gonna appeal to your experience as a police officer here. There A lot has been made about this ring camera footage that shows Tyler Robbinson's car going in front of it. And I guess the owner of that house remembers somebody bald with three people driving the car and with three people in it, or something to that effect. So everybody's saying, oh see, it wasn't Tyler, you know, driving it or whatever. But the ring camera shows what actually happened, and that's that the car was driving by the house. So explain the difference between witness eyewitness testimony recollections, you know, the human frailty of memory versus the video evidence front pulled from that ring camera. 00:20:28 Speaker 2: Well, thank you for going to me with this one. 00:20:31 Speaker 4: But I think that people have to understand that they're looking at the totality of evidence in a actual trial. It's beyond a reasonable doubt. So there is a burden that you have to prove that's beyond a reasonable doubt. So you put all the evidence together. And this is why they don't just talk to the people that live in the house and get their written statements. That's why they have a video because sometimes people in a haste or people could be misidentifying certain things. That's why you can't go on their testimony alone either. You have to look at the video and say, Okay, now we get what they have said. This is their ring camera, but what do we actually see. There are people that can look at we can all of us can look at the same person and we may get their height different. You go, hey, man, I think they due to six y three. Somebody say six to one. Somebody say five to ten. You take the totality of evidence and you put it together and build a testimony of what happens. 00:21:23 Speaker 2: You don't take. 00:21:24 Speaker 4: Little parts here, parts there and try to make a whole case on it. They're gonna look at the vehicle as one element of placing him on campus, but they have a plethora of other evidentiary points where they see him here physically getting in and out of the car, the traffic stop that happened at twelve thirty on the eleventh, where they where a police officer identified the vehicle and him driving the vehicle around the same time that he's been seen on the ring camera. So they're gonna put all of this stuff together and they're gonna be able to present that before jury, and they're gonna have to prove the un a reasonable day. 00:22:00 Speaker 2: Now. 00:22:00 Speaker 4: I want people to be very clear on this, because you can't put the car before the horse. 00:22:04 Speaker 2: This pre trial is a probable cause hearing. 00:22:07 Speaker 4: So all of the evidence that's being presented now is not does not have to be tested against other experts. 00:22:13 Speaker 2: And scrutinized and cross examined. 00:22:15 Speaker 4: It just needs to be presented and eligible to be presented in a pre trial so the win here would be. 00:22:21 Speaker 2: Probable cause being established to go to trial. 00:22:24 Speaker 4: Now here's the other thing that could happen in this that I think people need to consider, because Tyler Robinson's team and the defense haven't put it put in a plea, So it could be a very likely scenario where if probable cause is established, they're not gonna I just don't see them having a chance in the court of law, and therefore they may even plead guilty at the end of this probable cause hearing. So that's why sometimes it's referencing the court that there may not be a trial, and that is because if the evidence is overwhelming, they may plead guilty. 00:22:55 Speaker 3: That's a fascinating, fascinating interest. It's a fascinating idea hadn't considered yet. Hi, folks, Andrew Colvett here, I'd like to tell you about my friends over at why REFI. You've probably been hearing me talk about y REFI for some time now. We are all in with these guys. If you or someone you know is struggling with private student loan debt, take my advice and give them a call. Maybe you're behind on your payments, maybe you're even in default. You don't have to live in this nightmare anymore. Why ref I will provide you a custom payment based on your ability to pay. They tailor each loan individually. They can save you thousands of dollars and you can get your life back. We go to campuses all over America and we see student after student who's drowning in private student loan debt. Many of them don't even know how much they owe. Why ref I can help. Just go to y refi dot com. That's the letter, Why then refi dot com. And remember why Refi doesn't care what your credit score is. Just go to yrefi dot com and tell them your friend Andrews sent you. Here's one other thing that I want to get your take on because I saw this going around on social media as well. And this is again when the examination of Officer Hall was ongoing. They the defense brought up the fact that there was another bullet found on site. Let's go ahead and get this, and I want to get your take on it. Thirty two. 00:24:24 Speaker 10: The unfired bullet that you refer to, is your understanding that that bullet was accounted for? 00:24:31 Speaker 9: That's my recollection, Yes, okay, and. 00:24:33 Speaker 10: It possibly belonged to an officer that could have maybe been clearing his weapon. 00:24:39 Speaker 9: Yes, that was That's what I recall being told about that particular item. 00:24:43 Speaker 10: Yes, when you said that it was possible that that round was from an officer clearing his weapon. 00:24:49 Speaker 2: What exactly do you mean by that? 00:24:54 Speaker 9: All stand and practice and autopatman is to carry a ROI ful cruise already, I'm sorry, our rifles in a situation which is called cruise already? 00:25:03 Speaker 10: What does that mean? 00:25:04 Speaker 9: Means we don't have a round chamber. So if an officer deployed with his rifle, he would chamber around once he had done whatever task it was that he was doing. In order to put that weapon back, he would eject the magazine and eject the round. Sometimes in doing so, rounds are dropped to an accountant for. 00:25:24 Speaker 3: So, I don't know if you've ever been part of a cruiser ready team, Brandon, or if you have any experience with this, but explain clearing the chamber what this means. Have you ever encountered an instance in your professional career where a bullet went missing? Explain all of that to me? And how do you account for how many? You know? How much ammo you have as a as a police officer, etc. 00:25:46 Speaker 2: Yeah, perfect. 00:25:47 Speaker 4: I think every police officer in America probably go by these standards. They call it cruiser ready. So you don't want to have around in the chamber while you're driving around with your rifle in the car, because if something goes wrong, it depends, but more than likely, you don't want to have it that way because a lot of people carry their rifles in the bag in the trunk, and so you don't want something to happen where you get into a crash or something hit the trigger and a round goes off from the back of your car, So you ride with no round in the chamber. Normally, the boat is you don't want to have the boat locked either because then you can drop around in if you hit a bump. So you normally have the chamber to boat forward with no round in the chamber. Now, when you get out the car, because it's time to get busy, you got a chamber one, and so a lot of times they'll rack one and put it in the chamber. Now, if you don't get into a shooting or anything, you got to get the gun back ready to put back into your vehicle. So a lot of times, what you do is you drop the magazine out and you know, you hit the round and it comes out. Now, in a campus situation where there's an active shooter, potentially I could see an officer getting their rifle ready and leaving a round because they don't have time to stick around and wait for it. A lot of times, what I would do is pick my round up right, because you have to be account for every round that's in the magazine. 00:27:01 Speaker 2: So it is a. 00:27:02 Speaker 4: Possibility that an officer could have done that where they ejected around because they were getting ready to make their rifle ready to put back in the car. Now, another scenario that could have happened that I think that the detective of the Investigator alluded to was there is sometimes where in the heat of the moment, you may not know if you have a round in the chamber or not, and so you're gonna make sure that there's one chamber. So you may racket in order to make sure there's one in the chamber, but there's already one in the chamber, so you accidentally eject a round out. Now, if you're doing that in a heated situation, you're not gonna go back and grab the round you're gonna go, and you're gonna go wherever you need to go with your rifle loaded. So that could have been the case. But nonetheless, we all know what the autopsy has alluded to, at least the evidence that have been presented that it was a thirty caliber round that was found in Charlie Kirk's body. So the round that was found on the ground on the other rooftop was a five five to six two two three. That's not consistent with the caliber round that was found in Charlie's bodies. 00:28:00 Speaker 2: So that is not applicable whatsoever anyway. 00:28:03 Speaker 4: So I think that if somebody wanted to question that they should they should divert to what the detective said or or the investigator said on the stand as is, this could be the possibility of that round ending up where it said. 00:28:14 Speaker 2: Plus he was told that that was the case in the first place. 00:28:17 Speaker 3: Yeah, I think that is a great explanation, honestly, And your personal experience with this is invaluable and and it would make sense by the way that to believe the round was found on another rooftop, and I'm sure that that was kind of the first place these guys were going to go check anyways, right, so uh, or. 00:28:38 Speaker 4: They may have already been on the rooftop or or some to some degree, and and that could have been the reason why they ejected around right there on the on the on. 00:28:47 Speaker 2: The tael No. 00:28:47 Speaker 3: But it was a great explanation. Actually, So the we have a couple other we have a couple of other clips on that, but I think I think we've kind of dealt with that. I wanted to get to this point in the proceeding where it was David Engelhart's letter and it was kind of a purpose of the org and Charlie's faith and man, that took so long, so much back and forth. I think it was the lawyer's name was Novak for the defense, and that was another moment where I saw the judge get visibly sort of his patient patients was wearing thin Joe, Bob, were you watching that? And I mean, as a non legal expert who who is a Christian, who you know who knows Charlie's how his faith was so intermixed with him, with what he did his campus debates, what was going through your mind in that moment? 00:29:46 Speaker 6: Yeah, getting pulled a lot of different directions. One is probably similar to what Judge Graff is feeling, is like, this is this is a lot for this. To my understanding, again not a lawyer, it would would have been some sort of enhancement to the charge. Being that Charlie was an outspoken Christian. There's obviously a cultural angle of the organization, and did Tyler Robinson act on Charlie's faith or the cultural presence of the organization, which is obviously why they would include the letter. I think there's there's a part of me that wonders, you know, Okay, there's a lot of obviously, there's a lot of evidence there is this super necessary, especially with how long that took. 00:30:31 Speaker 3: But then there's another. 00:30:32 Speaker 6: Another side of me that thinks, you know, so often there are instances where where something happens to a some sort of I don't know, racial minority or ideological minority, and that's the only thing that matters. It was a Muslim person here who is the victim of something, a gay person here as a victim of something, and almost never never is it brought up. Okay, well, the victim was an outspoken, devout Christian, as was the case in Charlie's case, And so while I you know, there's not going to be an enhancement that's going to be, at least again to my non lawyer understanding, that's gonna be higher than aggravated murder. It is good to put it out there and be public about it. Hey, this was at least part of the decision that a chart art that Tyler Robinson allegedly made to kill Charlie, and Charlie was motivated purely by his faith. 00:31:29 Speaker 3: Yeah, and you know he's he's in a relate, he's in a gay relationship with a transidentifying person Lance Twigs obviously. And by the way, I recommend anybody out there. I think I'm gonna tweet this out soon just to kind of help get it back out there. But the Turkey Tom video I've been told has been authenticated. Turkey Tom is a YouTuber who interviewed extensively one of their roommates or friends that kind of lived and kind of hung out with these guys and and can give a very first per experience of what it was like to be around their relationship. And I mean it's it's a very depraved Lance Twig's nesting nesting the audible sexual relations upstairs, the semantic depression, the drugs. 00:32:15 Speaker 5: Where everyone kept speculating, Oh my love, he's actually that is how they talk to each other. 00:32:20 Speaker 3: Yeah, that is how they talk. And by the way, throw this up here, to your point, throw this up. This is the one three. This is what investigators say they found these text messages between them. And to your point, Joe, Bob, this enhancement of that Charlie was killed for his political and religious beliefs. I had enough of his hatred. Some hate can't be negotiated out, ironically, hear in the same text though, by the way, it explains why we might have seen Tyler Robinson on campus that night, right, because he goes, if I'm able to grab my rifle unseen, I will have left no evidence going to attempt to retrieve it. A hopefully they have moved on. I haven't seen anything about them finding it yet, so that might actually kind of be that full circle from why he went back on campus late in the evening on September tenth into the wee hours of September eleventh. But that first part is establishing motive, and that was what that letter was all about. And you're right, you're not a lawyer, but I've been talking to lawyers all day, and I'm sure Brandon understands this well. The death penalty has to be you have to establish these enhancements which would be killed for religious political beliefs, right, So the defense is trying to undermine this argument and take the death penalty off, which makes me think Brandon kind of about what you're talking about with this potential plea deal if he's going to plead at the end of this, right, because if they could establish if they could get the enhancements off by Judge Graf and get the death penalty off at the table, they might be more motivated take this thing the full trial. But if they know they're staring at a death penalty trial, you know, that might factor into their calculus. What do you think? 00:34:05 Speaker 4: Yeah, I think they have to utilize some tactics here because I think the evidence is pretty overwhelming. When they finish putting all the evidence together, I think it's going to be very clear to anybody who's willing to listen. 00:34:15 Speaker 2: But they do have to. The prosecution does have to prove probable cause for ten different charges. 00:34:25 Speaker 4: So you have ten charges they're going to have to methodically go through and say this is our probable cause statement that a person who observed this evidence would reasonably believe that Taylor, I mean that Tyler Robinson did this. They got to go through every element, and one of the elements is the enhancement, and the enhancement is very clear that Tyler Robinson opposed Charlie Kirk's religious beliefs. He opposed his political beliefs. And here's one thing that they were trying to differentiate, which I think the judge caught. The defense wanted to make a difference between political and faith, and these two things overlap. Charlie Kirk's religious beliefs or his political beliefs were stemmed from his faith, and so Tyler Robinson's hatred towards Charlie Kirk was political, but Charlie's political statements were faith driven statements. So his lifestyle that he lived, Tyler Robinson lived, some of the reasons why he hated Charlie was all coupled with his political beliefs and faith. Now, this is the reason why this is very important that they're going to have to prove later on in his hearing, is that they charged him with a enhancement based on political beliefs, and so the defense is trying to say these trying to say these two things are different. So the prosecution didn't meet the burden of identifying that this is political. Inside of this statement from Echoes, I think his name angle Heart on Angle Heart because Angle Heart's. 00:35:52 Speaker 2: Document was mainly religious. 00:35:55 Speaker 4: But I think the prosecution to be able to identify that there is no separation between them these two things, that they're virtually the same, and that Tyler Roberson's lifestyle was antithetical to what Charlie was saying, which is why he wrote those things and then eventually shot and killed Charlie. 00:36:13 Speaker 3: Angel Studios has a new feature film that is a must see, and I really really mean it. This film tells the untold story of George Washington before he was a general or a president. At just twenty years old, Washington faced crushing failures, near death experiences, and pivotal moments that forge the courage, the character, and the leadership that would one day shape the United States. 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You'll get two free tickets to see Young Washington in theaters this Independence Day and be a part of making this film the number one movie in America for our nation's two hundred and fiftieth birthday. I want to get to two more things here. I want to get through the DNA, which was a really, really laborious thing. I mean I I see you shake your head. I mean it was hours hours. You can tell that they brought this this attorney on to the defense team specifically for forensic cross examination because this guy was asking very much in the weeds and eventually the judge did basically try and rein it in because it was dragging, it was going and going. 00:38:49 Speaker 5: I just want to make sure we play this because we did. It came after our last segment, just where they're asking they had items that had intermingled DNA of Lance Twigs and Tyler Robinson, and they were laying out the odds that this was anyone other than Tyler Robinson on this object. Let's do clip thirty one. 00:39:09 Speaker 11: Male DNA was obtained from item seven sub one. Item seven sub one was interpreted as originating from tuned two individuals, one of whom is Twigs. The DNA results from item seven sub one and what are one point seven o tillion times more likely if Twigs and t Robinson are contributors than if Twigs in an unknown unrelated person are contributors. Male DNA was obtained from item eight sub one. Item eight sub one was interpreted as originating from two individuals, one of whom is Twigs. The DNA results from item eight sub one are thirty quintillion times more likely if Twigs and t Robinson are contributors than if Twigs and an unknown unrelated person are contributors. 00:39:54 Speaker 5: Do you know if last twigs as DNA was obtained for. 00:39:59 Speaker 8: The for COMPARI in this test? 00:40:01 Speaker 1: Yes it was, And how was that DNA obtained. 00:40:04 Speaker 11: It was obtained by law enforcement officers. 00:40:07 Speaker 3: Okay, so quintillion, I don't even know what it is. That's after a trillion. That's a lot. I don't know. I'm not good at the maths, but I can tell that's that's a lot. 00:40:17 Speaker 5: And the first one, I think was a one point seven octillion octillion eight eight times ilion. 00:40:23 Speaker 3: And so that's so I want to I want to make a point here because I've seen the internet run and wild with this one too. So Lance twigs DNA was also found on the towel, and a lot of it actually, And I don't want to get like down some weird, you know, you know, rated R kind of thing, but it's these were two men that were living together, and who knows where that towl came from. I'm just gonna leave it at that. Okay, some people have been running with that. 00:40:51 Speaker 5: It had apparently had more of Twigs's DNA, yeah than Robinson. 00:40:55 Speaker 3: Same with the screwdriver. 00:40:56 Speaker 5: I wouldn't be surprised with the obvious explanation is that Robin's and just took those items from Twigs. 00:41:02 Speaker 3: Yeah. So but here's let me just make this clear clear As a reminder, Twiggs is believed to be cooperating with the prosecution and maybe receiving a limited immunity in exchange. Now, of course, and I think, Tatum, you said this on one of your videos. If it comes out that he actively participated in the murder, that immunity would presumably go away. And I would be totally in support of that, Okay, as I would be in support of if it comes out and is revealed that other people had fore knowledge, other people radicalized him, other people involved. That's not what this case is about. This case is about did Tyler Robinson kill Charlie? Okay? So I just want to make that extraordinarily clear. Do I still have questions about how did he get radicalized, who influenced him, how did he get to that point? A thousand billion percent? And I have questions about Lance Twigs, A lot of questions about Lance Twigs. But for this purpose, he is a state witness against Tyler Robinson. Officer Tatum, do you have anything specifically you want to say about that? 00:42:18 Speaker 4: Yeah, I think the kind of sum up this DNA question mark is I think that the purpose of the questioning by the defense was to just prolong and draw the thing out. They never got to any foundational conclusion. I don't understand how the judge allowed them to do this for three hours. This is a probable cause hearing. The only burden that the state needs to prove is that is this admissible and is the the documentation reliable? Because the source is reliable, that's it and it should be admissible in court. They drugged this thing on, and the judge said several times reminding both counsel that this is a probable cause hearing. So I think that this was just a tactic by the defense to draw this thing on so that the defense or the prosecution couldn't cross examine the witness and get the facts out the way they should have been presented. Also, the Lands Twigs thing, the limited immunity. The reason why you would give somebody limited immunity is that they are involved to a point where the things that they say could get them in trouble. And so you say, I'm going to give you immunity up until the testimony that you give, and you could give us the testimony and you won't go to jail over this. Now, if we find out later through other investigative methods that you were involved, you're still going to go to jail for that. But the testimony that you give, because it could be incriminating to you, and obviously it probably was. 00:43:46 Speaker 2: That's why they gave them limited immunity. You can feel free. 00:43:48 Speaker 4: To tell us everything you know and how you were potentially involved in this. Now, the DNA aspect of it is that I think they were trying to prove that the items couldn't have been something that wasn't associated to Tyler Robinson, because if the towe was just found in the bushes, it could be anybody's tower. The tower could have been placed there by somebody else. But because Lance Twigs and Tyler Robinson's DNA are on the items, it draw it. It draws the connection to Tyler Robinson because they live in the same place and the items must have come from his house. And so when you have the gun, you have I mean at least a screwdriver and the towel, both of those things associating the two individuals together would indicate that this couldn't have been external. This couldn't have been somebody planting it on Tyler Robinson and putting his DNA on there mysteriously. It had to have been something that came from a domain or dwelling that they both shared, and I think Lance Twiggs may have prepped some of this stuff for him, which is probably how he got the partial immunity. And then they're gonna testify against Tyler Robinson in court. 00:44:54 Speaker 3: One other thing here real quick, and then I want to throw to Joe Bob with this story that came out from inside the court in Erica. But you know, I see people saying that, you know that, is there any footage of the shooting and the prosecution saying no, you guys have probably seen this. A lot of people are running with this on social media. They'll run with anything that is not what happened, what actually happened. And this is about the compilation video. They're asking it basically, was there anything visible about the shooting in that video? And they said no. In that specific exhibit, they were asking, is there footage of the of the shooting in it? They said no. 00:45:32 Speaker 5: But even then, even then, we don't need to go for that far down it because we have footage of the same person showing up on campus repeatedly him going into the position where our ballistics evidence and our video evidence suggest the bullet came from he's there at the time the shooting happens, right, he's running away after it. You don't need a video of someone firing a gun if you have every single piece of surrounding evidence supporting the idea that someone went there and. 00:46:00 Speaker 3: Shot a gun. So the prosecution did not say there's no footage of the shooting. The prosecution said the exhibit, which contains a compilation of surveillance footage of Robinson moving around on campus, didn't contain graphic footage of the shooting that was relevant. By the way, Erica needs to know that stuff too. The victims sitting in the courtroom need to be aware of that. 00:46:22 Speaker 4: Go ahead, Yeah, Andrew, I think you made an incredible point that I think if people weren't sitting in the courtroom, they wouldn't have understood this. The purpose of the clarification, and the prosecutor actually came back and clarified that there is video of the suspect getting on the roof going to a promposition and the shot is believed to be fired during that position. But they wanted to clarify so that Erica didn't have to be in the courtroom witnessing. Charlie getting shot. So they were saying that it's not graphic in nature. So you're going to see the suspect get on the rooftop. He's going to get into a promposition in this area. We believe the shot happened. It's not very clear and conclusive. You know that the shot happened, but you can use defective reasoning and time and everything else. 00:47:07 Speaker 3: Twenty three when he's sitting in the prone position, which is exactly when Charlie is in shot. 00:47:12 Speaker 4: And he also admitted to it, right, So you got you got a ton of people that heard that the shots happened, You have him on the roof at the time that the shot happened, and then you got him it turning himself in as a person responsible for shooting Charlie Kirk. So, I mean, this is why they put the totality of evidence together and they have to prove beyond a reasonable doubt. And I think that with the evidence that we see, it's gonna be it's not going to be a challenge for them to prove to a jury to a jury to say, do you believe beyond a reasonable doubt that there's no reasonable doubt that Tyler Robinson did this when they put all the evidence together, and it's gonna be clear. 00:47:45 Speaker 2: You don't have a video of a guy. 00:47:47 Speaker 4: Who was identified by his parents going up the stair stairwell, getting into a promposition admitting that he took the shot. The shot is being heard by multiple people at the same time. They even look back at the direct action where the shot came from with a clear, clear line of sight. I mean, you don't get all of that, and people have a doubt it's going to be very clear with the totality of evidence, in my opinion, that he was one percent the one and Lance Twigs is going to be the. 00:48:14 Speaker 2: Key in this case. 00:48:15 Speaker 4: And I think that as the pre trial continues, his testimony is gonna get brought up and I cannot wait to hear what he has to say. And I wouldn't imagine that if he's a witness for the state, he must be giving incriminating evidence that points to Tyler's. 00:48:32 Speaker 3: Correct And reminder everybody, the cop from yesterday said I heard a rifle shot I identified as a rifle. The medical examiner report identifies the cause of death as a gunshot wound. Uh, you know, to the next So there's I mean there's all kinds of stuff that when you when you talk about this totality of evidence, Officer Tatum, Joe Bob, you wanted to bring this up. This uh, apparently Erica there was a story. You know, they're gonna claim that I planned this story. I had no idea about the story. I don't even know what ailed dot com was, But anyways, go ahead, please tell everybody. 00:49:07 Speaker 6: No, it was so during the during the trial, you're you're watching on screen, but there's obviously a lot of lulls and boring moments for lack of a better term. And so I sometimes take the time and scroll through some of the live feeds on different newspaper websites. The New York Times has a live updated feed. The Associated Press also does too, so I was scrolling through the Associated Press and during the lunch break, I don't know if this is on video, but it's in print. The Associated Press reporter asked one of the people who was inside what the experience was like, and I think we have a graphic of it. This is a woman attending the hearing says it's been emotional. Denay Branch. This is again I'm reading from the Associated Press, who had lined up with friends at midnight to get some of the few public seats in the courtroom. Said she teared up during the hearing and Erica Kirk reached over and offered her a tissue. I'm quoting from Branch here. She says she doesn't know if I'm team Erica or not yet. She handed me a tissue and I lost it. Branch said during the lunch recess, she didn't know if I was a friend or not, and she showed love and I in the midst of all of this, in trying to sort through all of the stuff going on in the actual court, I couldn't help but just get like, isn't that Erica, Like isn't that just like typical classic Erica and one? 00:50:32 Speaker 4: Yeah, but yeah, yeah, everybody that got this normal that we Erica. 00:50:37 Speaker 2: We're not shocked. 00:50:39 Speaker 12: Yeah, it's just so the the first time that I saw Erica, you know, kind of face to face after all of this happened, was backstage at a big event in Phoenix, and I, you. 00:50:53 Speaker 6: Know, I didn't I don't know what to say, Like, what what do you say? I mean, obviously I've talked to her before, but what do you say? And She's walking down the hall and goes out of her way. I think, Andrew you were there, breaks kind of the big pack that she's in, comes over and gives me a hug and says, good to see you. And I like, I I lost it. But also that's that's just the person that she is. Like, it's showing kindness and love to anybody in the vicinity who's willing to accept it. That's just Erica. 00:51:23 Speaker 2: And when I was scrolling through. 00:51:24 Speaker 6: This, I was like, yeah, like that that tracks, you know, amid all of this stuff. Of course, yeah, this is this is classic area. 00:51:32 Speaker 3: Well, Officer Tatum, Joe Bob, thank you guys so much for joining us. We are going to be joined next by an expert on jury's and she's got a CV that'll blow you away. Hi, folks, Andrew Colvett here, I'd like to tell you about my friends over at why REFI. You've probably been hearing me talk about y REFI for some time now. We are all in with these guys. If you or someone you know is struggling with private student loan debt, take advice and give them a call. Maybe you're behind on your payments, maybe you're even in default. You don't have to live in this nightmare anymore. 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You want to bring her in? 00:52:53 Speaker 5: Yes, yes, she's actually a local in this area, so we're hoping to have her in, but she had uh something pop up with her work, and so we're having her by zoom or joined by Joellen Demetrius and correct. 00:53:07 Speaker 3: Me if I got any of this wrong. 00:53:08 Speaker 5: But you have quite the CV as a jury consultant for those who are not familiar with her she she helped out with the OJ Simpson defense team with their jury selection, which a lot of people regard as quite the feet of jury selection. More recently, you advised Daniel Penny's defense team, the Kyle Rittenhouse defense team, so involved in three of the most high profile trials that we've had, and we wanted to have you in because we're already looking ahead. This is a preliminary hearing, but we're looking ahead to the trial that we know will eventually be coming, and what sorts of strategies even now the prosecution and the defense might be looking towards because we know this is. 00:53:53 Speaker 3: And my main interest, Joellen, is just because this is the first high profile public assassination of a political figure in the social media era and how does that change everything with all the conspiracies and stuff. So welcome to the show. Thank you for joining us. Well. 00:54:10 Speaker 7: First of all, Andrew and Blake, thank you so much. And I'm sorry I couldn't be there in person, but I'll definitely take a raincheck. I would love to be there in person. What a lot of people don't know about my background is that actually probably the first eight years of my career I did capital cases, in California. So I am intimately familiar with what is not only happening now in the preliminary hearing, but what will happen at trial. And as you know, and you've probably had guests that have shared right now, the responsibility is up to the judge that the prosecution has to show probable cause, that the judge would then say, Okay, I've seen enough probable cause, We'll move on to the trial. Of course, the trial is a whole different standard, the standard being reasonable dat So you're right, I think Andrew and talking about social media and the impact that that is going to have and is already having on the jury population in the state of Utah. You know, so many things are being said from both sides, all sides of the spectrum, and you know, depending I think upon where you rest politically, you know, people are picking up on those things that tend to support what their political views are. You know, in a preliminary hearing, what unusual certainly is that the defense does not have to put on any witnesses. They only have the ability to cross examine the witnesses. What to me is fascinating at this point is that the prosecution, I think very adroit greatly has indicated pursued to a rule eleven O two in Utah, that they're going to be putting on A Tyler's roommate via the video that he took while he was he was being investigated, so that the defense will not have that opportunity to cross examine him. Everything now is going to be viewed through that fine tooth comb called the camera in the courtroom. And I can certainly speak to cameras in the courtroom, certainly based on what we saw in an OJ how you know, my goodness, we had witnesses that were impacted by other witnesses and their testimony and reactions to the testimony, and now it's certainly just ballooned because of social media. So what's happening right now in the jury pool? You know, I think to some degree we all want to think this is captivating everybody's attention. I think it certainly is an important component of what's happening in our society right now, But we tend to forget that. You know, the average person who isn't really up on what's happening in courtrooms, and they're just concerned about how much they're paying for their guests or where their next meal is going to come from. They're not necessarily going to be glued to social media about this. 00:57:33 Speaker 5: Well that's said, Oh, I want to go out that a bit, Joellen, which is when we get to jury selection, what level of selection are they going to have here in terms of are they going to be trying to find people who are really oblivious, who maybe can't remember who Charlie Kirk even is. 00:57:52 Speaker 3: I have a question on that too, like are they able to say who do you follow on social media? Can they actually like review like who they follow and who they engage with? Is that level of granularity available to the prosecution of the defense? 00:58:07 Speaker 7: Absolutely? And I would certainly, and I say this to my clients. I think there's a level of perhaps misconduct by attorneys who don't use social media searches. What I'm worried about is a consultant. And I think any consultant who may be working on this case or weighing in about the case, is that someone who may have an agenda, a hidden agenda, you know, they may choose to if they find out they're being summoned for jury selection, they may sadly scribe their social media if it has something that is favorable to Charlie or something that's favorable to Robinson. And that's where so much is going to go into both the teams sides about a jury questionnaire, to ask specific questions about knowledge about the case, to look at their social media, what their what their internet collection may be, and then judging all of that by what the oral responses are during the Voideier process. What's interesting about a capital case is that there's two phases. The first is the guilt phase. The second is what we call the punishment phase. And that would be hypothetically, if the prosecution goes ahead and charges of the death penalty. Uh, they would be questioned about their views about the death penalty. So there's a lot of layers to jury selection that will occur, you know, if the judge sends this to trial, and certainly social media is a huge component of that for both sides. 01:00:03 Speaker 2: Jo. 01:00:04 Speaker 3: So I'm just curious kind of the sequence of events here. So a person gets a jury summons in the mail, they have to show up for, you know, to to the court or whatever. At what point is say the state in this instance, the prosecutors aware of their jury pool that they have and would would they be aware that that person is going to be brought to you know, sit in this instance, the Tyler Robinson trial before the juror does. So I'm getting to the point of would they would the jury even though they have time to scrub their social media account because they're thinking, Oh, I'm going to get called for the Tyler Robinson trial. 01:00:42 Speaker 7: You know a great question, Andrew, and every judge is different. I can share with you that when I worked on the Enron case, obviously that's not capital punishment, but the summons were sent out to jurors. I want to say, like gosh, two months a month and a half before the actual trial. The questionnaires were then sent out by the court to the jurors, and the teams were able then to review the questionnaires prior to ever seeing the jurors. So your question as to when both sides would know who these people are is really going to be contingent upon the judge in this case and how he's going to proceed with the process. And I'm sure there will be motions on both sides about how that process should exist. Should it be that those people that are summoned they receive a questionnaire in the meal or in other cases that hasn't happened until the jurors have actually showed up in the courtroom. Needless to say, I think the judge is very solemnly looking at all of these things and ultimately determining what is going to give the best information without being too invasive, I guess to a jurors privacy, which in a death penalty case, you know, I don't see how you can be somewhat invasive. 01:02:24 Speaker 3: Yeah, and Joel, and I think you answered the question that the judge does have at his disposal different mechanisms to sort of kind of make sure that the jurors potential jurors don't even know what case it is that they're answering the questionnaire for, or the timing of it, because that does seem like a concern. If I'm the defense, I'm probably gonna want, you know, certain people to be following certain people on social media. If I'm the prosecution, I would want the opposite. So continue on, Joellen. I didn't mean to cut you off there, but. 01:02:53 Speaker 7: No, that's okay. 01:02:54 Speaker 3: Yeah, but it's good to hear. There's both the defense and the state can file motions to the judge to determine the process for jury selection. That's a huge, huge insight, So thank you. 01:03:05 Speaker 7: Well. You know the other part of this, Andrew and Blake, is that I suspect I don't know for sure, but the defense may file what's known as a change of venue motion. And in a change of venue motion, you're saying to the court and of the prosecution, we cannot get a fair trial here. We've conducted a survey. We found that eighty percent of the people in the county in which the case will be held, I think that our client is guilty. What happens in that situation, obviously there's a hearing and whomever does the survey is brought in to testify. Should a judge decide that, in fact, there is enough evidence for a change of venue, the judge then has the discretion about where to move it to. Is very very very rare to have it moved out of state. What more traditionally happens is the trial would be moved to probably a contiguous county, the county that it's in right now. The judge may say, well, we're going to move it to such and such a county which is contiguous, because you don't want to create a lot of problems for witnesses that would be coming in to testify what the judge. 01:04:29 Speaker 3: The judge, The judge would stay put though on the on the trial right that that wouldn't mean like a new judge gets appointed or something. 01:04:36 Speaker 7: No, that's a good question. Not the judge generally generally goes with. And that's one of the reasons that they choose contiguous counties because you know, if you were to go from I don't know, a county in northern Utah to you know, something like down in Saint George, you know, that might be problematic for the judge as well. So everybody's uh, you know, everybody whose participating in, all the witnesses, the lawyers, you know, all of that would be a factor I think in the judge's ultimate determination. 01:05:10 Speaker 3: Alliance defending Freedom knows that freedom belongs to those who fight for it. Americans have carried that legacy for two hundred and fifty years, and now we must do so again. Censorship is rising, threatening your free speech in every sphere, from classrooms to counselor's offices and even online. Unborn babies are dying as abortion drugs continue flooding states nationwide. Parents are being cut out of kids' critical decisions for their lives. 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That's JOINADF dot com slash Charlie or text Charlie to eight three eight four eight. 01:06:31 Speaker 5: So there's a there's a big elephant in the room with this case that we're all thinking about, which is, besides the more direct questions of guilter evidence with Tyler Robinson. We know there's been a lot of really weird conspiracy theories surrounding this case. People have been pushing them for the past year. People have been still pushing them as hard as ever over the past few days, and we've noted the defense lawyers don't seem to have made many gestures in the direction of that. They did ask one of the witnesses if he was involved in the decision to pay over the site of the shooting, which there's been some discussion about, but there's not too much about exploding lapel pins anything of that nature. 01:07:14 Speaker 3: And so I was wondering if you have thoughts. 01:07:16 Speaker 5: First of all, even if the defense aren't talking about that, is it possible that they'll be making maneuvers when we get to jury selection to make it possible for one of those people to get on a jury, someone who's not going to care about evidence, someone who's going to believe really delusional things, something who someone who might have that agenda you mentioned. 01:07:37 Speaker 3: Let me just get me on the jury and I'll do what I feel and let me just boil it down. I mean, the people that are kind of part of this, I mean it is it's almost cult like in the way that they sort of believe the opposite of the facts. 01:07:50 Speaker 2: Right. 01:07:50 Speaker 3: It doesn't matter what the fact says. You cannot convince them that there's anything to them that it's all fed slop, it's all narrative, right, even though there's like DNA and and so. 01:08:01 Speaker 5: Three things that I guess I get it, which is one is the defense thinking about this, is their strategies they would do. Two are their strategies the prosecution can do to get ahead of this. And I guess three, biggest picture of all, how can the judge handle this case? To how do you handle it if there's if there's a cult out there that could potentially taint your jury pool? 01:08:25 Speaker 7: Great, all all great questions, and it suffices to say number one, yes, the defense is looking at all of these aspects. They have to. They have to look at, you know, the crazy components that are out there. And then that's so crazy components that are out there. I mean, goodness, Like in OJ we've been remember hearing about the Columbian necklace, you know, during some of our meetings. So it suffice it to say they are definitely looking at that. And I think that the prosecution is too. There's so many different issue areas that, you know, where I working with either side, I'd be looking at that. I'd be looking at people's personal use and understanding of guns. I'd be looking at their views of law enforcement. I'd be looking at their views of First Amendment free speech, oh, my goodness, political views. And I think, and I don't know this to be the case, but I think that the defense has utilized a consultant in the past. I don't know the individual's name or the company name, but my guess would be that they're probably already taking a look at some of those issues, whether it's in surveys or focus groups. Certainly, I think both sides could certainly gain a lot of knowledge from that type of research. 01:09:57 Speaker 3: Yeah, you kind of wonder, to Blake's point, when they brought up the paving over of the crime scene, which again is something we learned about on the news, just like the the witness that was testifying today, it you you sort of wonder, I don't know just how how much that has crept in to the psyche of the of the jury pool, and and you know, how do you how do you find anybody in a case this high profile that is kind of dispassionately removed from it and is able to look at something objectively. I will tell you to something that you said, We're so close to this. This is sort of all consuming all day. It's what we do today, It's what we did yesterday, so we're going to do this week. But when I go out and you know, in the real world and I talk with you know, when we me and my wife are hanging out with friends or whatever, they have no idea that you know, I'm in a Twitter feud or you know, something like that they have They have no idea about so much. And it's actually really relieving. So I I do sort of understand what you're saying that there's a lot of people out there that are not tuning into this twenty for seven, you know, getting the full TikTok of it every day. So let's hope that there's still enough untainted potential jurors out there. 01:11:12 Speaker 7: Well, you know, in from both size perspective, really, the only thing that you can hope for is, you know, people will will know about this. You hope and you pray during the process of jury selection and the trial that those twelve people ultimately that you do select are able to listen and only focus and only make their determination on the evidence that they've heard in the courtroom. And you know, sadly, you know, we've learned about bizarre things that happen all the time, like Alex Murda and what happened with the current clerk in that case, influencing verdict. But I think hopefully that's the rarity. And I do believe that people take jury service seriously and they want to do the right thing. But now there's so many other factors that are out there. The one thing I can tell you for sure, though, is that this judge will very much protect the identity of those jurors and that jury panel when they come in. And how is that done. Well, First of all, you know, the media is never allowed to take photos or video of jurors. Secondly, if a questionnaire is used, only the number of the juror will be used. And sometimes a judge, if they release the completed questionnaires, they will excuse me, they will black out elements that might in some way identify them like where they work or how many kids they have, something like that. So I can assure you just based on what I've read about this judge, he will be very, very protective of these jurors. And you just hope that there isn't somebody that has a hidden agenda for you know, for either side that ends up coming in on this jury panel. 01:13:14 Speaker 5: You're an expert on jury profiling. I think it was that you created the perfect juror that the OJ team wanted to look for. What would we you say, what's the ideal type of juror that you maybe might anticipate for the prosecution in this case, and I suppose for the defense if you're willing to speculate on that, I don't want to put you on the spot. 01:13:37 Speaker 7: That's okay. I get put on the spot all the time. So traditionally in this kind of case, you would want to be from the prosecution's perspective. You know, clearly you want somebody who's law in order, somebody who doesn't necessarily believes in the credibility of the police, doesn't necessarily discount what their testimony may be. I suspect you would probably want somebody who has familiarity with weapons rifles in particular. You you know, you're generally, I think, looking for older individuals. What's interesting here in Utah is the religiosity component of this case, and by that I refer to the large number of LDS individuals who live in Utah, you know there. I actually kind of was looking at this the other day. The from what I understand, the LDS church does not have any public statement about the death penalty. They kind of leave it up to the individual uh, their individual congregation as to what would you know, make up their mind. But clearly the prosecution is going to want somebody if in fact they do charge uh Tyler with the with the death penalty, they want somebody who's going to be supportive of that. On the other side, on the defense side, you're going to be looking for those individuals who, you know, opposite, don't necessarily have the trust for the police. You're looking for individuals who don't have experience utilizing weapons that can be you know, perhaps led by an expert in any way that they can also, I think politically, you're looking for people who are more liberal traditionally in in capital cases, that's what you're looking for. People who would have a difficult time themselves applying the death penalty. I mean, for me in this case, and what I know about this case, you know, I I think from a defense perspective, they would be looking towards that second phase in terms of who are the people they're going to want to eliminate, who are the dangerous people to them, and who are the people that might be favorable to them. So, just as a very general proposition, I think those are areas that both sides would be looking at. 01:16:23 Speaker 3: I think that's really smart. This has been amazing, John. We want to respect your time and the time of our audience. We try and keep the nightly recaps on the tighter side. So I think we're going to close out here, but thank you so so much. A really incredible insight, especially on how the judge can kind of protect the jury pool from knowing which case they're going to be a jur on, and the social media scrubbing that was really fascinating. So thank you. And we're going to have you on again soon if you're willing, if you'll, if you'll come back on with us, So we need to here. 01:16:54 Speaker 7: I'd love to. This has been a treat. 01:16:55 Speaker 3: Thank you, awesome great, We'll have a great night, and God bless you and thank you so much. That concludes our night two of day two of the preliminary hearing in the state of Utah versus Tyler Robinson. Please let us know if you have any other questions. Sends us emails at freedom at Charliekirk dot com. Freedom at charliekirk dot com. If you have questions, that means we should probably be trying to provide answers, So please send us those questions and we'll get right on it until tomorrow. God bless you, we'll talk to you now. 01:17:28 Speaker 7: For more on many of these stories and news you can trust, go to Charliekirk dot com.