The Utah County Officials have released text messages between Charlie Kirk's killer, Tyler Robinson, and his roommate the day of the shooting.
Case closed! Well... not exactly. Unfortunately for law enforcement, the internet does not believe these text messages are real—and rightly so, this wouldn't be the first time messages have been forged or scripted.
Here is the text exchange, read it, and while you're doing so, ask yourself, "does this sound like a normal text exchange between friends/lovers?"


The meticulous killer who made a skilled shot from a rooftop and exited the campus without being caught, leaves behind a detailed text thread where he answers every single question the public has been asking...
It's almost too good to believe—and that's exactly why people are questioning it's authenticity.
Mel on X sums it up perfectly:
“I will have left no evidence… Except for the note I wrote to you confessing my crime and all these text messages laying out in meticulous detail all the pertinent information needed to convict me.”
Another X user under the handle Murray 🇺🇸, admits this bizarre text thread plays right into the hands of the "conspiracy theorists." The texts are not just a "confession" but also a confirmation of every detail concerning the investigation.

Who speaks like this?
A Gen Z male, who is supposedly dating a trans woman, is using the phrase "drop point" and "old man."
It's all very strange and the internet is not buying it. Of course, this could all be totally real and it could be that we're just over cautions because we've just been lied too a million times and have no trust for law enforcement and the government.
Evan Kilgore, another X account, ran the text messages through ChatGPT and asked the bot if it seemed real. ChatGPT said the texts were "most likely fabricated."
Even the computer doesn't believe what the FBI's fed us.
HOLY SH*T:
— Evan Kilgore 🇺🇸 (@EvanAKilgore) September 16, 2025
I put the alleged text exchange between Tyler Robinson and his transgender lover into Chat GPT and asked if it seemed real and genuine.
Chat GPT says the texts are "most likely fabricated," far too detailed, and too incriminating to be real...
Thoughts? pic.twitter.com/96hDBNvCER
What do you think?
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