PROVO, Utah — Surveillance footage played in court this week has emerged as a key element in the case against Tyler Robinson, the Utah man accused of assassinating Turning Point USA founder Charlie Kirk.
The compilation, shown Tuesday during Robinson’s preliminary hearing, was presented as a timeline of the 23-year-old’s alleged movements at Utah Valley University on Sept. 10, 2025. Prosecutors said it follows him from his arrival on campus hours before the shooting through the moments before and after Kirk was killed.
Utah State Bureau of Investigation Agent David Hull testified that investigators pieced together the sequence by reviewing campus security cameras, tracing footage backward and forward from video showing a figure on the roof of the Losee Center for Student Success. Prosecutors allege that is where the fatal shot was fired.
Tyler Robinson, accused in the fatal shooting of Charlie Kirk, listens to the prosecution during a preliminary hearing in 4th District Court in Provo on Tuesday, July 7, 2026. (Trent Nelson/The Salt Lake Tribune via Pool)
The footage shown in court does not capture the shooting itself. Prosecutors said, however, that it shows the person they identify as Robinson getting onto the roof, approaching the edge of the building, crawling into position and leaving shortly after the shot was fired.
Robinson faces an aggravated murder charge in Kirk’s death, and prosecutors have said they will seek the death penalty. He has not yet entered a plea. The preliminary hearing, expected to last a week, is intended to determine whether the state has presented enough evidence for the case to move forward to trial.
Investigators said a vehicle believed to be Robinson’s arrived at a UVU parking garage before the shooting. Hull testified that the vehicle matched records connected to Robinson and was identifiable in part by its distinctive wheels. The driver, whom Hull identified as Robinson, was seen wearing a red or maroon T-shirt, gray or olive shorts and Converse shoes before walking onto campus.
According to Hull, Robinson then went to the amphitheater area, where he had contact with representatives of Turning Point USA, Kirk’s organization. Hull testified that Robinson returned to the parking garage at about 9:25 a.m. and left in the vehicle.
Hull testified that Robinson returned to campus on foot wearing the same clothing and carrying a blue backpack. Investigators tracked him to Chick-fil-A inside the Sorensen Center, where Hull said he bought food, sat down and ate. Robinson then moved across campus, crossed Campus Drive into a wooded area, and returned to campus without the backpack.
“He moves out across Campus Drive into a wooded area on what would be kind of the northeast side of Campus Drive, then returns back onto campus,” Hull explained as the video played in the courtroom. “We noticed at this point that he’s no longer carrying the backpack that he was originally wearing.”
Utah Department of Public Safety agent David Hull testifies during a preliminary hearing for Tyler Robinson, the Utah man accused of fatally shooting Charlie Kirk, in Provo on Tuesday, July 7, 2026. (Trent Nelson | The Salt Lake Tribune)
Hull said Robinson then moved through the Gunther building and the computer science building before going to a railing that provided access to the roof of the Losee Center. He then allegedly came back down the stairs and walked off campus just before 11 a.m.
Hull testified that Robinson returned to campus again, this time wearing different clothing but the same shoes. Hull said Robinson also appeared to be walking with a limp or unusual gait.
According to Hull, surveillance video showed Robinson coming up stairs in the parking structure, moving around Campus Drive and walking south across the front of the Losee Center. He then allegedly appeared on an exterior staircase that provided access to the building’s roof.
At about 12:15 p.m., Hull testified, the figure investigators identified as Robinson “kind of rolls over the railing onto the roof of the building.”
Rooftop of the Losee Center at Utah Valley University’s campus, where the alleged assassin shot Charlie Kirk on Sept. 10, 2025. (INC News)
Hull testified that the figure ran across the rooftop of the Losee Center toward the southwest corner, crouched down and crawled toward the edge of the building. Hull said the person could be seen lying prone before the reported shot was fired at 12:23 p.m.
After the shot, Hull testified, the figure stood up, moved north across the roof and headed toward the northeast corner of the building.
The video shown in court did not capture the actual shooting, prosecutors clarified. But they said it showed the person on the roof moving into position before the shot and leaving immediately afterward.
Hull testified that the figure lowered himself from the roof, jumped onto a grassy area and moved toward Campus Drive. Hull said the person appeared to be carrying “some kind of an object” in his hand.
Tyler Robinson, accused in the fatal shooting of Charlie Kirk, listens as Defense attorney Michael Burt speaks during a preliminary hearing for Tyler Robinson, the Utah man accused of fatally shooting Charlie Kirk, at the 4th District Court in Provo on Friday, July 10, 2026. (Tess Crowley/The Deseret News via Pool)
On cross-examination, Hull acknowledged he could not see an actual gun in the video. He testified that the object appeared long, concealed or in a bag, and that, based on his training and experience, it could be a firearm.
Investigators also noted that the apparent limp or unusual gait was no longer visible after the shooting.
Hull testified that investigators used the campus video to identify a wooded area they believed could have evidentiary value. The area was secured, and Hull said he was later notified that a gun had been found there.
On redirect, Hull testified that a rifle was discovered in the wooded area where investigators believed Robinson had entered. He said Robinson was seen entering the wooded area on at least two occasions: during his second visit to campus and again during the visit when the shooting occurred.
Hull testified that surveillance video showed a vehicle he identified as Robinson’s at the intersection of Campus Drive and 800 South in the early morning hours after the shooting.
According to Hull, the vehicle had contact with Officer Goforth, a Spanish Fork officer working security detail. Hull testified that something about the interaction prompted Goforth to note the vehicle’s license plate information. When information later emerged that a similar vehicle may have been involved, Goforth ran the partial plate and determined the vehicle was registered to Tyler Robinson and his mother, Amber Robinson.
Hull said Goforth reported that the person he interacted with was a male he believed to be Tyler Robinson.
Charlie Kirk’s widow, Erika Kirk, is pictured alongside Fourth District Court Judge Tony Graf, who presided over the preliminary hearing for Tyler Robinson, the man accused of assassinating Kirk outside a “Prove Me Wrong” event in Orem, Utah. (Fox News ; Francisco Kjolseth/The Salt Lake Tribune via Pool)
On Friday, Judge Tony Graf sanctioned media members after an exhibit was inadvertently shown and broadcast during Thursday’s proceedings. Graf said he did not want to “rush or make snap decisions” before ruling that no further exhibits would be shown for the rest of the day, though the final video compilation was later allowed as an exception.
Graf set oral arguments on the preliminary-hearing evidence for Sept. 1 at 10 a.m. Robinson has not entered a plea.
Following Friday’s hearing, Kirk’s family urged Graf to move the assassination case against Robinson forward without delay, arguing the five-day preliminary hearing produced “overwhelming evidence” against him.
“A prompt determination is imperative in the interest of justice,” the filing said.
The family noted that the case is nearing the one-year anniversary of Kirk’s death and that Robinson has been under arrest for 10 months.
“The defendant is entitled to a fair trial, and he must receive one,” the family’s attorneys wrote in Friday’s filing. “He is not, however, entitled to cause undue delay in the criminal justice process.”




