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Charlie Kirk shooting: suspect in custody, Trump says

Friday, September 12


A suspect in the fatal shooting of conservative activist Charlie Kirk at a Utah university has been taken into custody, US president Donald Trump said on Friday, ending an intense manhunt that followed what Trump described as a “heinous assassination”.

Mr Kirk’s killer has eluded police and federal agents for more than 24 hours after Wednesday’s shooting, in which a sniper fired a single gunshot that killed the right-wing commentator during an appearance at Utah Valley University in Orem.

“I think we have him,” Mr Trump told Fox News in an interview, adding that a person who knows the suspect had turned him in. He said there was a “high degree of certainty” that the gunman was in custody.

Mr Trump said that a “minister who was involved with law enforcement” allegedly recognised the shooter. Then the shooter’s father convinced his child to go to the police.

The FBI released new images on Friday of a 'person of interest' in the shooting dead of Charlie Kirk.
The FBI released new images on Friday of a 'person of interest' in the shooting dead of Charlie Kirk.

“They have somebody that they think did it,” Mr Trump added. Utah law enforcement sources confirmed to the Reuters news agency that a suspect is in their custody.

He went on to say: “I hope he gets the death penalty.”

The president, when asked about how we “fix the country” or “come back together” after Mr Kirk’s shooting, says that he “couldn’t care less”, describing left-wing “radicals” as “vicious and horrible”.

Previously, US investigators said they had found the bolt-action rifle believed to have been used to kill Mr Kirk and released images of a person of interest.

The FBI had circulated grainy images apparently taken from security cameras showing a “person of interest” wearing a black top, black sunglasses and a dark baseball cap. The long-sleeved top appears to have been emblazoned with an image of a bald eagle flying across a US flag.

Mr Kirk, an author, podcast host and close ally of Mr Trump, helped build the Republican Party’s support among younger voters.

FBI and state officials said the killer arrived on the campus a few minutes before the start of the event, a debate led by Mr Kirk titled “Prove Me Wrong” in front of 3,000 people at Utah Valley, about 65 kilometres south of Salt Lake City.

Security-camera videos showed a person going up stairwells to gain access to a roof before firing at Mr Kirk, the officials said at a press briefing. Mr Kirk, a staunch defender of gun rights, was answering an audience question about mass shootings when the bullet struck his neck. Audience members fled in panic.

The gunman jumped off the roof and fled into an adjoining neighborhood, said Robert Bohls, an FBI special agent in charge.

Investigators found a “high-powered, bolt-action” rifle in a nearby wooded area, and were examining that along with palm prints and footprints for clues.

An investigator with the Utah Department of Public Safety scours a residential backyard next to Utah Valley University the day after the fatal shooting of Charlie Kirk in Orem, Utah. Photograph: Loren Elliott/The New York Times
An investigator with the Utah Department of Public Safety scours a residential backyard next to Utah Valley University the day after the fatal shooting of Charlie Kirk in Orem, Utah. Photograph: Loren Elliott/The New York Times

On Thursday, with classes cancelled, the roof of the building on the otherwise deserted campus and the nearby woods were strung with yellow tape as investigators scoured them for evidence.

The shooter appeared to be of college age and “blended in well” on the campus, Utah Public Safety Commissioner Beau Mason said at the briefing.

Mr Kirk - the co-founder and president of the conservative student group Turning Point USA - appeared at Utah Valley on Wednesday as part of a planned 15-event “American Comeback Tour” of US college campuses. His killing stirred outrage and denunciations of political violence from Democrats, Republicans and foreign governments.

Who was Charlie Kirk, the right-wing provocateur shot in Utah?Opens in new window ]

Mr Trump said he would award Mr Kirk the Presidential Medal of Freedom, the nation’s highest civilian honour.

Mr Kirk, who was married and the father of two young children, was celebrated by Republicans as a charismatic advocate for right-wing policies on race, gender, immigration, religion and gun regulation.

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