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Judge in Charlie Kirk killing to rule on contempt, with death penalty eligibility possibly in balance

Tyler Robinson, center, accused of fatally shooting Charlie Kirk, is shown with his attorneys before a hearing in district court in Provo, Utah, on December 11.
Rick Egan/Pool/The Salt Lake Tribune via CNN Newsource
Tyler Robinson, center, accused of fatally shooting Charlie Kirk, is shown with his attorneys before a hearing in district court in Provo, Utah, on December 11.

Originally Published: 22 JUN 26 11:21 ET

By Andi Babineau, CNN

(CNN) — A Utah judge in the case against the man accused of killing Charlie Kirk is set to rule Monday on a defense motion to find prosecutors violated a pretrial publicity order and hold them in contempt – with the defense asking to take the death penalty off the table if contempt is found.

At a hearing earlier this month, Tyler Robinson’s attorneys argued comments made to several media outlets by Christopher Ballard, one of the prosecutors and a spokesperson for the Utah County Attorney’s Office, violated the judge’s order – issued in September and amended in December – prohibiting the parties from making public comments about the case except under certain circumstances.

Robinson’s attorneys this month asked district Judge Tony Graf to remove the death penalty as a possible outcome if prosecutors were held in contempt. Graf on Monday will decide whether to grant the contempt motion.

Graf will also weigh whether prosecutors will be allowed to present hearsay evidence during Robinson’s preliminary hearing, scheduled to begin next month.

Robinson faces charges including aggravated murder, felony use of a firearm, obstruction of justice and witness tampering in the September shooting death of conservative firebrand Kirk. Robinson has not yet entered pleas.

Defense asked judge to remove death penalty

The main remedy Robinson’s defense suggested if prosecutors were held in contempt was for the death penalty to be removed as a possible punishment should Robinson be convicted.

Other possible penalties for contempt include attending a continuing education program or referral to the state bar association, the defense said.

Following the June 12 hearing where defense attorneys argued for a contempt finding, prosecutors filed an objection to the request, calling it “grossly disproportionate to the alleged misconduct.”

“To the extent the Court finds that the prosecution could have made a better statement, it certainly is not a misstep that warrants the drastic and never-before-imposed remedy of reducing the aggravated murder charge to a first-degree felony,” the document says.

Robinson’s defense fired back with its own opposition brief, calling the objection “uninvited,” and saying the court did not request nor authorize “any written post-hearing briefing.”

Contempt accusation stemmed from comments to the media about ballistics evidence

The defense filed the contempt motion in response to interviews Ballard gave to several media outlets at the end of March and beginning of April about an inconclusive ballistics report referenced in a March defense filing. Ballard testified his remarks were about circumstances that can lead to an inconclusive test result, not about specific evidence, and said he included comments in each of the interviews indicating Robinson is presumed innocent.

He said he does not believe his comments violated the court’s order.

Robinson’s attorney Richard Novak argued the comments were “extremely reckless.”

“I find no credibility in Mr. Ballard’s sworn testimony that he only intended to communicate with the media generally about bullet fragment analysis,” Novak said June 12.

Kirk’s shooting death on a Utah university campus last September triggered an avalanche of misinformation. Robinson’s attorneys have repeatedly raised concerns about news coverage of the high-profile case potentially harming their client’s right to a fair trial.

“The goal of these interviews was to respond to the specific media inquiries that were being generated by the misinformation” in the filing, Ballard said.

The defense filing Ballard addressed in the media interviews – a motion to continue the preliminary hearing filed on March 27 – states the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives “was unable to identify the bullet recovered at autopsy to the rifle allegedly tied to Mr. Robinson.”

Prosecutors argued the defense’s statement in the filing omits an important piece of the report’s conclusion: The ATF was also unable to exclude the bullet as coming from the rifle. Ballard said that is what he was trying to clarify in the media.

During their testimonies, Ballard and Utah County Attorney Jeffrey Gray repeatedly pointed to a professional rule referenced in the order that allows attorneys to comment on public information when they believe there is a possibility of prejudicial pretrial publicity.

Prosecutors want to use hearsay evidence during the preliminary hearing

Graf is also expected to rule Monday on whether he will allow prosecutors to submit hearsay evidence during Robinson’s preliminary hearing, which begins July 6.

Defense attorney Michael Burt had argued a video deposition of a key witness should not be admissible, as the witness could not be subject to cross-examination. The witness was later identified in court filings as Robinson’s roommate at the time of the shooting.

Ballard contended the defense is not entitled to cross-examine witnesses in this instance, as they are during other types of hearings, because the preliminary hearing has the limited purpose of establishing probable cause to bring charges to trial.

“If this court granted the defendant’s motion, it would be going where no other court has gone before,” Ballard said. “This court would be the first court to find that the Sixth Amendment right to confrontation applies at a preliminary hearing.”

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