Charlie Kirk Shooting Suspect to Return to Utah Court
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Far-left writer Ta-Nehisi Coates defended calling conservative activist Charlie Kirk a "hatemonger" in an interview with The New York Times' Ezra Klein.
More than two weeks after Charlie Kirk, the conservative firebrand and close ally of President Donald Trump, was shot and killed while speaking at Utah Valley University, his suspected killer is set to appear in court Monday – the next step on the lengthy road to a state trial.
The exception was Kirk’s widow, Erika, who said that she forgave Kirk’s killer because “it is what Christ did, and is what Charlie would do,” and that “the answer to hate is not hate.” Two days after Kirk had been shot and killed on a Utah college campus, though, she, too, had said that “the spiritual warfare is palpable.”
A Texas man is behind bars after allegedly threatening to shoot up the Abilene Pride Parade to seek revenge for the assassination of right-wing activist Charlie Kirk.
This year’s Virginia governor’s race will test whether outrage over Charlie Kirk's death will galvanize Gen-Z conservatives to vote.
The Texas Tribune on MSN
Texas investigation into teachers’ posts after Charlie Kirk’s death violates their free speech, experts say
Free speech experts say that when teachers speak in their personal capacity, even on school grounds but outside their official duties, they retain their right to comment on matters of public concern.
Tyler Robinson's defense attorneys face an uphill battle representing the accused assassin of Charlie Kirk, with experts saying their goal is avoiding the death penalty.
Kirk’s letter, dated May 2, communicated his alarm at the “record levels” of “anti-Israel and anti-Semetic trends” on social media. Before his murder, conservative activist Charlie Kirk wrote a letter to Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu advising him on how to counter anti-Israel sentiments held by younger generations and win the “information war” being waged,