2026年3月14日 / 美国东部时间上午6:21 / CBS/美联社
更新时间:2026年3月14日 / 美国东部时间上午6:21 / CBS/美联社
周五,被指控杀害查理·柯克的犹他州男子泰勒·罗宾逊再次出庭,州法官驳回了其律师试图限制公众获取法庭文件的部分请求,但并未排除在即将举行的听证会上关闭部分环节的可能性。
这一裁决为4月份的听证会铺平了道路,届时罗宾逊的辩护律师将提出排除法庭内电视摄像机、麦克风和摄影师的申请。
托尼·格拉夫法官一直在权衡公众了解案件细节的权利,同时关注辩护律师的担忧——即媒体关注度增加可能会损害罗宾逊获得公正审判的权利。检察官、柯克的遗孀以及新闻机构的律师均敦促格拉夫保持诉讼程序公开。
检察官打算寻求对22岁的罗宾逊判处死刑,他被控于9月10日在奥勒姆犹他谷大学校园枪杀保守派活动家,并被指控犯有加重谋杀罪。他们表示,DNA证据将罗宾逊与这起谋杀案联系起来。
罗宾逊尚未认罪。
(图片说明:周五,3月13日,在犹他州普罗沃的第四区法院,检察官和辩护律师以及被指控枪杀保守派活动家查理·柯克的被告泰勒·罗宾逊出席听证会。劳拉·塞茨 / 美联社)
周五,双方律师就辩方书面提出的排除摄像设备的请求展开辩论,该请求被法院归类为机密文件,是否公开这一请求成为争议焦点。
格拉夫表示,辩方未能证明其要求将动议列为机密的理由,但他将在决定即将举行的听证会哪些部分可以关闭时继续”权衡所有因素”。
罗宾逊的辩护律师斯塔西·维瑟在裁决前告诉法官,辩方并非在公共舆论法庭上进行争辩。
“似乎有一种观点认为,将法庭内的信息大量涌入公共领域,就能消除阴谋论或改变公众叙事。这本身令辩方感到担忧,”维瑟说,”我们唯一应该担心的是保护法庭内发生的事情。”
罗宾逊的辩护团队接着表示,4月17日的听证会将涉及对审前有害宣传的讨论,例如尚未被采纳的证据、关于有罪的个人观点或在法庭上本应被排除的公开声明。辩方律师迈克尔·伯特称,在公开法庭上重审这些内容可能会”再次伤害”罗宾逊的权利。
犹他县检察官办公室的检察官克里斯托弗·巴拉德驳斥了这些论点。他表示,在陪审团遴选期间进行仔细询问以及扩大陪审团规模等工具,可以确保被告获得公正审判。
“因此,仅仅说这是一场信息风暴或媒体报道铺天盖地,并不一定意味着被告会受到偏见影响,”巴拉德说。
巴拉德指出,4月份听证会中将要讨论的大部分证据已经公开,因此听证会大部分内容应当公开。
包括美联社在内的全国和地方新闻机构联盟一直在努力维护媒体的采访权。新闻媒体的律师迈克尔·贾德敦促法官将即将举行的听证会完全公开。
媒体采访权已成为最近几次听证会的焦点,法官曾因地方电视台违反法庭命令,播放罗宾逊的镣铐并拍摄特写镜头(可能让观众猜测他与律师讨论的内容)而对其施加临时限制。
法官还禁止在法庭播放柯克被枪杀的完整视频记录,此前辩方律师称,这些血腥画面会干扰公正审判。据估计,约有3000人参加了这场户外集会,聆听柯克的演讲——柯克是唐纳德·特朗普总统的盟友,致力于引导年轻选民走向保守主义。
上月,法官驳回了辩方要求取消负责此案的检察官资格的动议。罗宾逊的律师曾试图取消指派给其案件的检察官资格,理由是一名副县检察官的18岁女儿出现在柯克被枪杀的现场,他们认为这构成了利益冲突。该少女的姓名在法庭文件中被隐去,她向父亲发了短信,描述了枪击事件的经过。
12月,如今领导转折点美国组织(Turning Point USA)的埃丽卡·柯克参加了哥伦比亚广播公司新闻的市政厅节目,解释了她”临场决定”公开原谅被指控杀害丈夫的凶手。
“我原谅他,因为这是基督所为,也是查理会做的事,”她在丈夫的追悼会上说道。
当被问及对被指控的凶手有何话要说时,她说:”无话可说。我对你无话可说。无话可说。”
(相关标签:犹他州、查理·柯克)
Charlie Kirk murder case judge denies some efforts to restrict media access to court documents
March 14, 2026 / 6:21 AM EDT / CBS/AP
Updated on: March 14, 2026 / 6:21 AM EDT / CBS/AP
The Utah man accused of killing Charlie Kirk was back in court Friday as a state judge denied some efforts by his attorneys to restrict public access to court documents while not ruling out the possibility of closing portions of an upcoming hearing.
The outcome sets the stage for an April hearing in which attorneys for Tyler Robinson will make their case to exclude TV cameras, microphones and photographers from the courtroom.
Judge Tony Graf has been weighing the public’s right to know details about the case against concerns by defense attorneys that the heightened media attention could undermine Robinson’s right to a fair trial. Prosecutors, Kirk’s widow and attorneys for news organizations have urged Graf to keep the proceedings open.
Prosecutors intend to seek the death penalty for Robinson, 22, who is charged with aggravated murder in the Sept. 10 shooting of the conservative activist on the Utah Valley University campus in Orem. They have said DNA evidence connects Robinson to the killing.
Robinson has not yet entered a plea.
Prosecuting and defense attorneys and defendant Tyler Robinson, right, accused in the fatal shooting of conservative activist Charlie Kirk, attend a hearing in 4th District Court, Friday, March. 13, 2026, in Provo, Utah. Laura Seitz / AP
Attorneys on Friday debated whether the defense’s written request to exclude cameras, which was classified by the court as private, should be made public.
Graf said the defense failed to make its case to keep the motion private but that he will continue “balancing all the factors” when deciding which portions of the upcoming hearing may be closed.
Staci Visser, an attorney for Robinson, told the judge before the ruling that the defense is not arguing in the court of public opinion.
“There seems to be an idea that flooding the public sphere with information from this courtroom will somehow dispel conspiracy theories or shift public narratives. That, in and of itself, is concerning to the defense,” Visser said. “All we should be worried about is protecting what happens in this courtroom.”
Robinson’s defense team went on to say that the April 17 hearing will involve discussions about prejudicial pretrial publicity, such as evidence that has yet to be admitted, personal opinions about guilt or public statements that would otherwise be inadmissible in court. Revisiting that in open court could end up “reinflicting a wound” to Robinson’s rights, defense attorney Michael Burt said.
Christopher Ballard, a prosecutor with the Utah County Attorney’s Office, dismissed those arguments. He said careful questioning during jury selection and tools like expanding the jury pool can ensure a defendant gets a fair trial.
“So just saying that this is a content tornado or there’s been a barrage of media coverage doesn’t necessarily mean that there is going to be prejudice to the defendant,” Ballard said.
Ballard noted that most of the evidence that will be discussed in April is already public, so most of the hearing should be open.
Coalitions of national and local news organizations, including The Associated Press, have been fighting to preserve media access in the case. Michael Judd, an attorney for the news media, urged the judge to keep the upcoming hearing entirely open.
Media access has been a focal point of several recent hearings, with the judge placing temporary restrictions on local TV stations for showing Robinson’s shackles in violation of a court order and filming close-up shots that might allow viewers to interpret what he was discussing with his attorneys.
The judge also has prevented full video recordings of Kirk’s shooting from being shown in court after defense attorneys argued the graphic footage would interfere with a fair trial. An estimated 3,000 people attended the outdoor rally to hear Kirk, an ally of President Donald Trump who worked to steer young voters toward conservatism.
Lat month, the judge rejected a defense motion to disqualify the prosecutors handling the case. Robinson’s attorneyshad sought to disqualify the prosecutorsassigned to his case because the 18-year-old daughter of one of the deputy county attorney was atthe event where Kirk was fatally shot, which, they argued, constituted a conflict of interest. The teen, whose name was redacted from court filings, texted her father and described the events surrounding the shooting.
In December, Erika Kirk, who now leads Turning Point USA,joined CBS News for a town hallwhere she explained the “game-time decision” of publicly forgiving the man charged with her husband’s murder.
“I forgive him because it’s what Christ did and is what Charlie would do,” she said in her eulogy at her husband’s memorial service.
When asked if she had any words for his accused killer, she said: “Nothing. I have nothing to say to you. Nothing.”
In:
- Utah
- Charlie Kirk
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