Washington DC: Tyler Robinson, the 22-year-old accused in the assassination of conservative activist Charlie Kirk, had scored in the high percentile on his college entrance exam. He had also earned a four-year scholarship to Utah State University in Logan. Days after Kirk's murder, a video of him is going viral on social media, showing a teen reading out a letter claiming to have received a scholarship for Utah State University. Social media users are claiming the man to be Robinson, the accused in the Kirk assassination case.
The video was first reportedly shared by Robinson's mother on Facebook. Soon, it went viral on social media. According to reports, the video was shot four years ago when Robinson was 18 years.
Here Is The Video:
This is Tyler Robinson, who is being accused of murdering Charlie Kirk, reading a letter he received from Utah State University for a $32,000 scholarship. pic.twitter.com/8PIJMQ7xV4
— Shadow of Ezra (@ShadowofEzra) September 12, 2025
In the video, the teen can be heard reading from a letter from the university stating that he has been awarded a scholarship worth around $32,000. He was wearing a red T-shirt with blue jeans.
"Congratulations, you have been selected to receive the Resident Presidential Scholarship from Utah State University. The value of this scholarship is approximately $32,000. This scholarship is available for four years or eight semesters," the teen can be heard saying in the video. After the teen read out the letter, two people behind the camera started cheering him.
The video surfaced hours after United States President Donald Trump announced that the accused who killed Kirk was taken into custody.
You may also like
Taylor Swift blames Travis Kelce on her turning down the Super Bowl
MoE to organise Viksit Bharat Buildathon from October 13, Group Captain Shubhanshu Shukla announced brand ambassador
'Will Zakir Naik be extradited to India?' Malaysian High Commissioner to India said this
John Stones admits he almost RETIRED earlier this year: 'I didn't want to do it'
Think your meals are healthy? Cancer expert reveals 5 hidden bombs that could be wrecking your blood sugar without you knowing