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Judge Orders Release of Sealed Tyler Robinson Records

The assassination of conservative activist Charlie Kirk took place in full view of the public.

In a court ruling on Monday, the judge overseeing the case against Kirk’s alleged killer declared that the public will be able to access the contents of a hearing that had previously been sealed.

But Judge Tony Graf also ruled that some elements will remain out of the public eye.

According to NBC News, Graf ruled on Monday that the transcript and audio from an Oct. 24 hearing in the case against accused gunman Tyler Robinson will be largely open to the public.

The records had previously been sealed.

The hearing in question revolved around media access to proceedings against Robinson, according to the New York Post.

Robinson’s attorneys want to limit pre-trial publicity, claiming coverage could taint the judgment of prospective jurors.

News media organizations have argued for full access to the hearings. Kirk’s widow, Erika Kirk, has come down on the side of transparency in the legal case against the man suspected of killing her husband.

Monday’s ruling was largely a victory for those favoring public access.

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“After full consideration of these arguments, the court determined that 246 words, approximately one page of the 80 page transcript should be redacted,” Graf ruled, according to NBC.

Kirk, 31,  was fatally shot Sept. 10 while on stage at Utah Valley University in Orem, Utah, south of Salt Lake City.

It was an act of political violence that sent shock waves through the conservative end of the political spectrum — and elicited cheers from leftists.

Robinson, 22, was arrested the next day after his family alerted authorities.

Robinson was reportedly romantically involved with his “transgender” roommate — a man who identifies as a woman — and shot Kirk “because of his hatred of what Charlie stood for,” FBI Director Kash Patel told Fox News in September.

Prosecutors are seeking the death penalty in the case.

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