Judge in Charlie Kirk killing case to decide if prosecutors could be punished for comments in media
The judge is weighing whether prosecutors’ media comments about ballistics evidence warrant sanctions as Robinson’s lawyers seek to block the death penalty.
- Judge Tony Graf will rule Monday on whether to sanction prosecutors for media comments regarding a bullet fragment in the murder case of Charlie Kirk, following a hearing held last week on contempt allegations.
- Robinson's attorneys accused Deputy Utah County Attorney Christopher Ballard of influencing potential jurors by going on a "media tour" to discuss ballistics evidence after the defense publicly disclosed that initial tests were inconclusive.
- Ballard argued at a hearing last week that he spoke only generally about ballistics testing rather than case specifics, while representatives from the Utah County Attorney Office said they felt compelled to address public speculation.
- Lawyers for Robinson have asked Judge Graf to bar the state from seeking the death penalty as a remedy, citing a prior Utah case where the court noted it possessed such authority if facts warranted it.
- Criminal law expert Paul Cassell described the death penalty request as extreme, noting concerns could be addressed through rigorous jury questioning, with a key hearing scheduled for July 6-10 to determine if evidence warrants trial.
26 Articles
26 Articles
Judge in Charlie Kirk killing case to decide if prosecutors could be p
The Utah judge in the murder case over Charlie Kirk’s killing says he will rule Monday whether prosecutors could face sanctions for comments to the media about a bullet fragment recovered from the conservative activist’s body. Lawyers for defendant Tyler Robinson have asked Judge Tony Graf to block the death penalty in the case, claiming the prosecutors’ comments could sway potential jurors regarding his guilt. But criminal law expert Paul Casse…
Judge in Charlie Kirk killing case to decide if prosecutors could be punished for comments in media
The Utah judge in the murder case over Charlie Kirk’s killing says he will rule Monday whether prosecutors could face sanctions for comments to the media about a bullet fragment recovered from the conservative activist’s body.
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