Prosecutors have released what they describe as the “official” text messages between Charlie Kirk’s alleged assassin, Tyler James Robinson, and his roommate. But instead of clearing things up, these messages raise more questions than answers.
The problem? They don’t sound like a 22-year-old texting at all. The exchanges use perfect punctuation, complete sentences, and even words like “vehicle” instead of casual terms like “car” or “ride.” For anyone familiar with how young adults actually text, this looks suspiciously polished.
Observers online have already pointed out that the messages read more like official testimony than private conversation. Could this be a case where evidence was carefully curated — or even written — to fit the narrative prosecutors want to present?
Why It Matters
If the prosecution is willing to hand the public a version of “texts” that seem this scripted, it begs the question: what else has been edited, staged, or manipulated? The language alone is enough to fuel doubt about whether we’re getting the truth or a crafted story.