Charlie Kirk, judge Tony Graf
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Suspect in Charlie Kirk killing can wear street clothes in court amid 'extraordinary' attention
Salt Lake City — The 22-year-old Utah man charged with killing Charlie Kirk can appear in court wearing street clothes but must be physically restrained due to security concerns, a judge ruled Monday.
The 22-year-old Utah man charged with killing US activist Charlie Kirk can appear in court wearing his normal clothes but must be physically restrained due to security concerns, a judge has ruled.
A Utah judge has ruled that the 22-year-old man charged with killing Charlie Kirk can appear in court wearing street clothes but must be physically restrained due to security concerns.
The post Judge Sides With Suspect In Charlie Kirk’s Murder In First Court Appearance appeared first on Red Right Patriot.
The 22-year-old Utah man charged with killing Charlie Kirk can appear in court wearing civilian clothes but must be physically restrained, a judge ruled.
The man accused of killing prominent conservative activist Charlie Kirk was granted permission by a 4th District judge Monday to appear at pretrial hearings in civilian clothes. Judge Tony F. Graf determined in a virtual hearing that the case against Tyler Robinson,
Tyler Robinson, the man suspected of shooting and kill Charlie Kirk during an event at Utah Valley University in September, will be allowed to dress in civilian
Fourth District Judge Tony Graf Jr. ruled that Tyler Robinson’s presumption of innocence and the significant risk of prejudice outweighed the inconvenience of dressing him in regular clothes. That means the 22-year-old student from Washington, Utah, can wear civilian clothing instead of jail garb for all pretrial proceedings.