The suspect in Charlie Kirk's assassination has been identified as Tyler Robinson, a 22-year-old Utah resident.
Law enforcement sources told Daily Mail that Robinson was taken into custody as the alleged assassin who killed Kirk at a rally at Utah Valley University in Utah on Wednesday.
Trump announced the arrest in an appearance on Fox News, where he said that 'someone very close' to the suspect turned him in.
Sources told the Daily Mail that the killer then confessed to his father, a 27-year veteran of the Washington County Sheriff's Department, public records showed. His father then contacted authorities and secured his son before he could be taken into custody.
The New York Times reported that the suspect was taken into custody around 11pm local time in southern Utah on Thursday night. The alleged shooter lived in a $600,000 six-bedroom home in Washington, Utah - around 260 miles south of where the carnage unfolded in Orem.
Little is known of Robinson at this time, and officials have not yet released a motive to the shooting.
Authorities said at a press conference on Thursday night that Robinson will face the death penalty if convicted of the assassination.
Investigators previously revealed that ammunition found in a weapon discovered near to the scene had been engraved with transgender and antifascist ideology.
Robinson's arrest comes after a manhunt for the suspect stretched to over a day and a half, with officials previously offering a reward of $100,000 for information leading to his capture.
Surveillance footage had been released showing a figure on top of a roof leaping from a building and sprinting into a nearby neighborhood after Kirk was shot from around 200 yards away.


The alleged killer was found after multiple suspects were incorrectly apprehended on Tuesday.
Initially, a 'person of interest' was said to be in custody in connection with Kirk's shooting, Utah Gov. Spencer Cox announced Wednesday evening.
However, they were later released, FBI Director Kash Patel confirmed.
'The subject in custody has been released after an interrogation by law enforcement,' Patel said in a statement. 'Our investigation continues and we will continue to release information in interest of transparency.'
The conservative commentator was hit by a single bullet while speaking to a crowd at the public university in Orem on Wednesday afternoon.
The father-of-two, known for his fierce MAGA views and thrilling debates with college kids across the country, collapsed immediately after being hit by the gunfire.



Kirk was answering a question about mass shootings mere seconds before he was struck. He was rushed to hospital, where he succumbed to his injuries.
Kirk leaves behind his wife Erika Frantzve, with whom he had a three-year-old daughter and a son, 16 months. The couple celebrated their fourth wedding anniversary in May.
President Donald Trump led the tributes for the late political commentator. 'The Great, and even Legendary, Charlie Kirk, is dead,' Trump wrote on Truth Social.
'He was loved and admired by ALL, especially me, and now, he is no longer with us. Melania and my Sympathies go out to his beautiful wife Erika, and family. Charlie, we love you!'
The President has ordered all American flags to be lowered to half-staff until Sunday evening at 6pm EST in honor of Kirk.
Chaos erupted around 20 minutes into Kirk's 'American Comeback' event, with videos showing hundreds of screaming students running for safety.


The MAGA star, wearing a white t-shirt, was sitting inside a tented gazebo taking questions from attendees.
In the moments before the shot rang out, Kirk was asked how many mass shooters there had been over the past 10 years.
'Counting or not counting gang violence?' the commentator said, before lowering his microphone.
He was shot less than a second later.
Screams were heard across the crowd of young people as those closest to Kirk rushed to his aid.
UVU officials said the shot was fired from the top of the Losee Center, about 200 yards away from where Kirk was sitting on the college campus.
Eerie footage showed someone on a rooftop just moments before conservative influencer Charlie Kirk was shot dead.
They initially took an elderly man into custody who turned out not to be the shooter, police said.

Sophie Anderson, 45, who was standing 100 feet from the stage when the shooting happened.
As chaos ensued, she told Daily Mail that she almost got trampled as she ran off into the food court, where she hid in a closet.
'The second it happened, I knew it was a gunshot,' said Anderson, who was joined at the event by her boss Phil Lyman, a former Utah state representative who was handing out hats on stage with Kirk just five minutes earlier.
'He was shot in the neck and just fell over and he was just a fountain of blood,' she said. 'They carried him off. All these kids are just falling apart and bawling.'
Kirk leaves behind his wife, Erika, and a daughter, three, and son, 16 months. The couple celebrated their fourth wedding anniversary in May.
Previously named on Forbes 30 under 30 list, Kirk was the youngest speaker at the 2016 Republican National Convention as well as the opening speaker at the 2020 RNC.
Kirk, who had millions of social media followers, co-founded the non-profit Turning Point USA in 2012 as a teenager, which he dubbed a 'national student movement.'
Its mission is to 'identify, educate, train and organize students to promote the principles of fiscal responsibility, free markets, and limited government.'

Turning Point and Kirk have played a starring role in Republican politics ever since he enthusiastically backed Donald Trump in 2016.
Kirk served as a personal aide to Donald Trump Jr during a general election campaign, and then in 2024, the non-profit increased their staff from 400 to 1,000 to 'chase the vote' in swing states.
Kirk was also one of the earliest advocates for Vice President JD Vance, then a junior senator for Ohio, to serve as Trump's running mate.
'I'm going to put my power behind JD for whatever I can,' Kirk said.
'That is a very good chapter two to the MAGA story that we're writing.'
The non-profit also strove to encourage the restoration of 'traditional American values like patriotism, respect for life, liberty, family, and fiscal responsibility.'
Kirk garnered much of his online notoriety for his 'prove me wrong' table, and in 2024 alone saw 15 billion views across multiple social media platforms.
In the last year, dedicated around 200 hours at more than 60 colleges for his 'prove me wrong' events.
He was well known among young voters for his 'populist nationalist' worldviews on issues such as immigration, gender and politics.
In his efforts to educate his young base saw Kirk found the Turning Point Academy, which provides a 'pro-American' education to more than 250 partners.
He even turned to faith and began Turning Point Faith, which collaborates with more than 3,700 congregations encouraging 'biblical citizenship,' the outlet reported.
His work was heavily involved with students at colleges and university's across the country, as Turning Point supports student body president races and recruits precinct leadership teams.
In 2026, the non-profit had goals to renew or begin 1,000 college chapters and 1,650 high school chapters under the name 'Club America.'
But Kirk's work within the MAGA realm was not confined to Turning Point, as he also authored four books and has been featured on-screen and in writing across multiple media outlets.
The shooting comes amid a spike in political violence in the United States across all parts of the ideological spectrum.
The attacks include the assassination of a Minnesota state lawmaker and her husband at their house in June, the firebombing of a Colorado parade to demand Hamas release hostages, and a fire set at the house of Pennsylvania's governor, who is Jewish, in April.
The most notorious of these events is the shooting of Trump during a campaign rally last year.
Utah governor Charles Cox said on X: 'I just got off the phone with President Trump. Working with the FBI and Utah law enforcement, we will bring to justice the individual responsible for this tragedy,' Cox wrote on X.
'Abby and I are heartbroken. We are praying for Charlie's wife, daughter, and son,' Cox added.