Leah Halan
427 posts






Remember this is the retard you guys follow for her “investigative reporting” on the Charlie Kirk assassination… If you watch one video today… Make it this one.

🔥👀 WOW… IT WAS A 30.06 THAT KILLED CHARLIE KIRK. It was NOT an exploding microphone. “This particular brand was called the deadliest mushroom in the woods… this particular round was DESIGNED when it impacted on targeted it mushroomed.” I’ve listened to Joseph Scott Morgan for a while & he is one of America’s most elite forensic experts. He explains that the DNA creates a MASSIVE DNA mathematical odds the defense would face ALONE. Morgan also tells @juliandorey that you may see a CT scan that will show the bullet path and fragmentation as it occurred. I’ll choose to listen to actual experts like this man who have seen and done it all for decades & who views the evidence from solely a scientific basis. This is one of the best interviews you can watch. It’s 3 hours long on YouTube but it’s amazing.

Death Investigator addresses the Charlie Kirk "exploding mic" Theory @JoScottForensic




@TheMilkBarTV How many times can Tucker say "it's a fact" in one episode? Someone tell him that saying it's a fact doesn't actually make it so.









The steakhouse where Tyler Robinson allegedly ate is slightly over 200 miles from Orem. He was allegedly spotted at the steakhouse around 8:45. Described as having eaten quickly and left. He allegedly sent the text message from Orem at around 11 o’clock. If they are off by even 15 minutes in their estimate as to when they spotted him at the restaurant, he could easily have made it to Orem in time driving 80 to 90 miles an hour. Did I make any mistakes here?

The evidence against Tyler Robinson is overwhelming. It's not close. Robinson confessed. Repeatedly. In person to his partner Lance Twiggs, crying, saying he was sorry he did it. By text the night of the shooting. In a note left under his keyboard. In a Discord message announcing he was about to surrender. And then he did surrender, at 9 p.m. the next night, exactly as the message said. And the single hardest fact to wave away: in that text, Robinson described leaving the rifle in a bush, wrapped in a towel — accurately describing where and how the Mauser was found by police, before any of that was public. The gun was recovered exactly there. A Mauser 98 .30-06, wrapped in a black towel, in the wooded area across Campus Drive — right where surveillance shows the rooftop figure fleeing within minutes of the shot. His DNA is all over it. Major contributor on the stock, grips, trigger and trigger guard, bolt, barrel, and scope. On the fired casing. On two of the unfired casings. On the screwdriver left on the roof. The casings were engraved — "hey fascist! CATCH!" among them. A Dremel tool and a matching bit capable of making those exact engravings were found in his home. So was a separate "Test Shot" casing — forensically matched as fired by that same rifle — sitting on a safe next to his bedroom. Plus boxes of Remington .30-06 and perforated paper targets. Surveillance puts him there. On the Losee Center roof, lying in the prone position, facing the courtyard — then up and running the moment Charlie was shot. Visiting the campus three other times that day, in different clothing, including the roof and the amphitheater where the shooting happened — tied each time to his gray Dodge Challenger. His own phone puts him there. Two Google Maps routes stored on his device: one starting near the shooting scene 23 minutes after Charlie was killed, headed to a car wash — where surveillance confirms his Challenger arrived at 12:57. The second, at 1:33 a.m., in the early hours of Sept 11, routing from near the rifle's location directly back to his home. His car puts him there. A Ring camera caught the Challenger parked near campus after midnight. At 12:30 a.m. an officer contacted that car at Campus Drive, wrote down the plate, and traced it through DMV records straight to Robinson — the same window he was texting Twiggs about sneaking back for the gun. The autopsy fits. Cause of death: homicide by a single gunshot wound. Recovered fragments measured consistent with a .30-caliber bullet. His own family turned him in. His parents recognized him from the released images and confronted him. A family friend helped coordinate his surrender. Twiggs identified him on the surveillance footage. Countless people have been convicted of murder on a fraction of this. You can find one detail that isn't explained to pixel-perfect satisfaction — a battery that died, a blurry frame, a fragment ruled inconclusive, a witness's recollection. Fine. Now explain all of it. The confession that knew where the towel-wrapped gun was before police announced it. The DNA on the roof and weapon. The engraved casings and the tool that made them. The car. The phone. His own family. His own words. Explain all of it. Not one piece or one question — all of it. Video: @knubeltierli

















