Audio By Carbonatix
Chilling Confession Of Alleged Charlie Kirk Assassin: 'I Had The Opportunity To Take Out Charlie Kirk And I Took It' – Handwritten Letter To Boyfriend Reveals Twisted 'Mission'
40 days ago
Audio By Carbonatix
In a bombshell revelation that has sent shockwaves through the nation, newly unsealed court documents have exposed the cold-blooded handwritten letter left by Tyler Robinson, the 22-year-old accused of assassinating conservative firebrand Charlie Kirk.
The note, allegedly penned by Robinson before he allegedly gunned down the Turning Point USA founder at Utah Valley University on September 10, 2025, reads like a deranged farewell from a man on a self-appointed deadly crusade.
According to the search warrant affidavit, Robinson – who is said to have been in a romantic relationship with his roommate – sent a frantic text instructing his boyfriend to "drop what you are doing, look under my keyboard.
"There, hidden beneath the keys in their apartment, lay the handwritten confession that prosecutors say lays bare the suspect's murderous intent."If you are reading this per my text, then I am so sorry. I left the house this morning on a mission, and set an auto text," the note reportedly began."
I am likely dead, or facing a lengthy prison sentence. I had the opportunity to take out Charlie Kirk, and I took it."I don’t know if I will/have succeeded, but I had hoped to make it home to you. I wish we could have lived in a world where this did not feel necessary."The dramatic disclosure comes as Robinson faces charges in the shocking assassination that claimed the life of the outspoken Conservative activist during a public event. Kirk, 31 at the time of his death, was a polarizing figure known for his fiery campus speeches and conservative activism that riled left-wing protesters across America.
Sources close to the investigation describe the note as a window into the mind of a killer who viewed his alleged act not as cold-blooded murder, but as some warped moral imperative – a "mission" to eliminate a man whose views he could no longer tolerate.
Robinson's boyfriend, described in court filings as his romantic partner and roommate, reportedly handed over the note and text exchanges to authorities, providing a damning trail of evidence.
In follow-up messages after the shooting, Robinson is said to have admitted the act directly, telling his lover he was sorry while urging him to delete incriminating texts – a desperate bid to cover his tracks that ultimately failed.
The unsealed documents paint a picture of a calculated plot. Robinson allegedly planned the attack for days, positioned himself for a long-range shot, and then fled the scene as chaos erupted on the Utah campus.
Forensic evidence, including DNA linking him to the crime scene, has reportedly tied him firmly to the assassination.FBI Director Kash Patel previously revealed details of the note and Robinson's alleged communications, describing how investigators confirmed its contents despite the original being destroyed.
The case has gripped the nation, with Kirk's death mourned by conservatives as the brutal silencing of a powerful voice against "woke" culture on college campuses.
Robinson, who turned himself in after a 33-hour manhunt involving his parents' intervention, has been hit with multiple charges, including first-degree murder. Prosecutors are said to be seeking the death penalty in what many are calling a politically motivated killing.
Friends and family of the victim have expressed outrage at the callous tone of the letter, which ends with a self-pitying wish for a different world – one where assassinating political opponents apparently wouldn't be "necessary."As the case heads toward trial, the handwritten note stands as a haunting artifact: a young man's alleged admission that hatred drove him to pull the trigger on one of America's most prominent conservative voices.
Charlie Kirk's legacy of bold conservatism endures, but the manner of his death has left many wondering how deep the divisions in this country have truly become – and whether more "missions" like this one lurk in the shadows.
