Unanswered questions about why Charlie Kirk was killed. What is known from the assassin's past

Questions about Tyler Robinson's motivations, the 22-year-old accused of killing conservative activist Charlie Kirk, did not find his answer. In the absence of a clear reason for the crime, everyone has tried to gather information about Robinson and his past, The Guardian reports.
US authorities have revealed that the suspect in killing conservative activist Charlie Kirk is Tyler Robinson, a 22-year-old who grew up in Washington, Utah, on the southwest border of the state.
The young man is a third year student at an apprenticeship program in the electronic field of Technical College in the respective state.
Pictures of weapons on social networks
Both parents are registered as Republicans, but his personal political beliefs remain unclear. The photos, now deleted from social networks, show Robinson and his family members posing with weapons.
“It is very clear to us and for investigators that this was a deeply indoctrinated person with the left-handed ideology,” said Wall Street Journal and published on Saturday, the governor of Utah, Spencer Cox.
COX cited the conclusions of the investigation in relation to Robinson and its possible reason, but did not provide other details about how officials came to this conclusion.
The FBI refused to comment on the information published on Saturday by Fox News and The New York Post, two conservative press institutions, which quoted sources from the law enforcement that Robinson lived with a trans -member of a community against which Charlie Kirk had mobilized.
The statements of the Governor Cox were published one day after speaking after Robinson's arrest, in which he had a sincere moment about the identity of the attacker as a resident of the state of Utah.
“It happens bad and, for 33 hours, I prayed that if that had to happen here, it would not be one of us,” Cox said.
“I prayed for someone to have come by car from another state, someone had come from another country. Unfortunately, my prayer was not listened to as I hoped,” confessed the governor.
The anger goes to a political group
After Robinson's identity has been revealed, some conservatives attenuated their attacks on Kirk's alleged killer as an individual, but continue to show anger to liberals as a group.
Republican representative Nancy Mace in South Carolina wrote on Twitter on Wednesday, after Kirk's killing: “It's time to reintroduce death punishment.” On Friday, Mace said that Kirk “would like to pray for an individual as bad and lost as Tyler Robinson, to find Jesus Christ.” “We will try to do the same,” she wrote.
Later, she insisted on the death penalty, saying: “Some crimes are so bad that the only fair punishment is the death penalty.”
Cox's speech was praised largely because he emphasized the unit in a moment of division, offering a strong contrast with Donald Trump, who considered Kirk a close ally.
“The right -wing radicals are radicals because they don't want to see crimes anymore,” Trump told Fox News on Friday.
“Left radicals are the problem – and they are bad, horrible and skillful in politics. They want men in female sports, they want transgender, they will be open borders. The worst thing that happened to this country,” he commented.
The conservatives clung to other information that the cartridges found near the weapon that would have been used for Kirk's killing had the documents indicating the “trans ideology”.
“To nobody's surprise,” commented journalist Megyn Kelly in his online show, shortly after killing Kirk, “there is a particular group that kills Americans in the name of ideology, namely activists or transgender people, or those who declare themselves,” she said.
Once Robinson's identity was revealed, Kelly speculated that Robinson must have become radicalized after going to college.
“This child has become radicalized and obviously had a psychic fall. It disturbs me that it seems to come from a loving and intact family,” Kelly said.
“If you look at the family profile on social networks, it looks like a happy family. They look like a loving mother and a loving father. She had two younger brothers, there are many family photos with them on vacation and with whom in the family,” Kelly said.
She noted that, although the authorities will request the death penalty, ultimately, the “radicalization” of young people who go to college are based on “mental health problems”.




