Text Exchange Between Tyler Robinson & His Trans Boyfriend Following The Assassination Of Charlie Kirk
Prosecutors have released a series of text messages sent between Tyler Robinson and his transgender boyfriend/roommate Lance Twiggs following the assassination of Charlie Kirk, and let’s just say there’s a lot of skepticism around the authenticity of it all.
On 10 September, the day Charlie Kirk was shot and killed, Robinson supposedly sent his roommate the message: “Drop what you’re doing, look under my keyboard.” Which led to this text exchange that prosecutors have made public:
Robinson: “I am still OK my love but am stuck in [unintelligible] for a little while longer yet. Shouldn’t be long until I can come home but I gotta grab my rifle still. To be honest I had hoped to keep this secret until I died of old age, I am sorry to involve you.”
Roommate: “You weren’t the one who did it, right?”
Robinson: “I am, I am. I’m sorry.”
Roommate: “I thought they caught the person.”
Robinson: “No they grabbed some crazy old dude then interrogated someone in similar clothing. I planned to grab my rifle from my drop point shortly after but most of that side of town got locked down. It’s quiet, almost enough to get out but there’s one vehicle lingering.”
Roommate: Why?
Robinson: “Why did I do it?”
Roommate: “Yeah.”
Robinson: “I had enough of his hatred. Some hate can’t be negotiated out. If I’m able to grab my rifle unseen I will have left no evidence. Going to attempt to retrieve it again, hopefully they have moved on. I haven’t seen anything about them finding it.”
Roommate: “How long have you been planning this?”
Robinson: “A bit over a week I believe. I can get close to it but there is a squad car parked right by it. I think they already swept that spot but I don’t want to chance it.”
Robinson: “I’m wishing I had circled back and grabbed it as soon as I got back to my vehicle. I’m worried what my old man would do if I didn’t bring back grandpa’s rifle. IDEK if it’s had a serial number but it wouldn’t trace to me.
“I worry about prints, I had to leave it in a bush where I changed outfits. Didn’t have the ability or time to bring it with. I might have to abandon it and hope they don’t find prints. How the F will I explain losing it to my old man?
“The only thing I left was the rifle wrapped in a towel. Remember how I was engraving bullets.
“The f**ing messages are mostly a big meme. If I see ‘notice bulge uwu’ on Fox News I might have a stroke alright I’m gonna have to leave it. That really f**ing sucks. Judging from today I’d say grandpa’s gun does just fine IDK. I think that was a 2k dollar scope wink wink.”
Robinson: “Delete this exchange.”
Robinson: “My dad wants photos of the rifle. He says grandpa wants to know who has what. The Feds released a photo of the rifle and it is very unique. He’s calling me RN. Not answering.”
Robinson: “Since Trump got into office my dad has been pretty die-hard MAGA.”
Robinson: “I’m gonna turn myself in willingly. One of my neighbours is a deputy for the sheriff.”
Robinson: “You are all I’m worried about, love.”
Roommate: “I’m much more worried about you.”
Robinson: “Don’t talk to the media please, don’t take any interviews or make any comments. If any police ask you questions ask for a lawyer and stay silent.”
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Now, maybe more details will come out that confirm these messages are legit, but our initial impression is that this is not how two young gay men in their early 20s would talk to each other. Half of it is in ‘cop speak’: “interrogated”, “squad car”, “retrieve it”, “swept that spot”, and it’s just so weird how Robinson is addressing all these multiple loose ends in a conversation with his boyfriend, unprompted, after claiming he didn’t want him involved.
The word choices, the phrasing, typing in full sentences with no emojis or Gen-Z style abbreviations, the narrative pushed and motives explains, detailing every action… it’s just too convenient. In the texts, Robinson says he “will have left no evidence”, and we’re supposed to believe he’d then go online and confess his crime in meticulous detail including all the key information needed to convict him, in messages to his boyfriend?
It just does not seem believable at all, and rather like a 60-year-old FBI agent or something trying to talk like they think 22-year-olds talk.
Even Grok and ChatGPT believe that the texts are fabricated:
Very suspicious indeed. Who knows, though? Maybe the texts are completely legit. Maybe they were intentionally scripted in that way to absolve the boyfriend of any involvement? Either way, it seems that Tyler Robinson will be convicted and face the death penalty for the assassination of Charlie Kirk, and the truth (if indeed we are all being duped) will never be known for sure.
For the teacher who was suspended this week for allegedly showing a class of 10 and 11-year-olds footage of Charlie Kirk’s murder, click HERE.