Judge Orders Release of Redacted Transcript from Tyler Robinson's Closed Hearing
Just the facts

Judge Orders Release of Redacted Transcript from Tyler Robinson's Closed Hearing

Summary

A Utah judge has mandated the release of a redacted transcript from an October closed-door hearing concerning Tyler Robinson, who is charged with the fatal shooting of Charlie Kirk.

A Utah judge has ordered the release of a redacted transcript from an October closed-door hearing concerning Tyler Robinson, who is charged with the September 10 shooting death of conservative activist Charlie Kirk at Utah Valley University. The hearing addressed whether Robinson should be shackled during court proceedings and the presence of cameras in the courtroom.

State District Judge Tony Graf emphasized the importance of public transparency, stating it is "foundational" to the judicial system. He ordered the 97-page transcript and an audio recording to be released with limited redactions for security reasons.

Defense attorney Richard Novak argued against cameras in court, expressing concerns about potential jury bias from images of Robinson in restraints. Judge Graf has not yet ruled on the camera ban but permitted Robinson to wear civilian clothes in court while requiring him to remain restrained for safety. Additionally, Graf restricted media from publishing images showing restraints and warned of sanctions for violations.

The judge denied a media request to formally intervene in the case but ordered that they be informed of future access-related hearings. Prosecutors plan to seek the death penalty, with a preliminary hearing scheduled for May 18, 2026.

Source

KSL.com

Fact-checking

Fact-check the facts of the article using external sources and databases.

Confirmed

A Utah judge has ordered the release of a redacted transcript from an October closed-door hearing concerning Tyler Robinson.

Confirmed

The hearing addressed whether Robinson should be shackled during court proceedings and the presence of cameras in the courtroom.

Confirmed

State District Judge Tony Graf emphasized the importance of public transparency, stating it is 'foundational' to the judicial system.

Confirmed

Defense attorney Richard Novak argued against cameras in court, expressing concerns about potential jury bias from images of Robinson in restraints.

FL Plus

Read the full story with FL Plus

Unlimited news plus the analysis behind every headline.

Unlimited news feed
See why each story scored
Full fact-check details