Charlie Kirk’s widow, Erika Kirk, said she rejects the idea of barring cameras from the courtroom in the trial of her husband’s alleged killer. Defense attorneys have sought to ban recordings in court.
Judge Tony Graf ruled that media outlets are prohibited from taking certain video footage and photos of the suspect, namely as he is entering or exiting the courtroom, or when he is standing up, or when he is seen in shackles. However, the judge said that he wasn’t yet ready to rule on what limits he would place on cameras in the courtroom.
Kirk, who is the current head of Turning Point USA, said, “Why not be transparent? There’s nothing to hide. I know there’s not because I’ve seen what the case is built on.
“Let everyone see what true evil is. This is something that could impact a generation and generations to come,” she added in the interview, which is slated to air in full on Fox News on Wednesday evening.
Her husband was shot and killed during an event at Utah Valley University on Sept. 10. Authorities announced the arrest of Robinson more than a day after the shooting. Prosecutors allege that the suspect had admitted guilt to his family members.
Robinson’s attorneys argued that forcing the defendant to wear jail garb and shackles would damage his capacity to receive a fair trial because it would prejudice members of the jury pool due to extensive media coverage.
Robinson faces a number of charges, including aggravated murder, which carries the possibility of his facing the death penalty. He has yet to enter a plea.
This past week, Robinson’s next hearing was set by Graf for Jan. 16, 2026, when he’s expected to make his first in-person court appearance.
Prosecutors have said that Robinson sent a text message to his romantic interest, Lance Twiggs, and left behind a handwritten note beforehand saying that if he had the opportunity to kill Kirk, one of the nation’s leading conservative voices, “I’m going to take it.”
DNA on the trigger of the rifle that killed Kirk matched that of Tyler Robinson, Utah County Attorney Jeff Gray said in September while outlining the evidence. Authorities have not revealed a clear motive in the shooting, but Gray said that Robinson wrote in a text about Kirk to his partner: “I had enough of his hatred. Some hate can’t be negotiated out.”
Robinson’s mother told investigators that their son had turned left politically in the last year and had become more supportive of LGBT and transgender rights after dating someone who is transgender, Gray said.







