The Charlie Kirk Case: Why Rogan and Owens Believe the Official Story is a Cover-Up
The assassination of Charlie Kirk has been defined by the high-profile skepticism of Joe Rogan and Candace Owens, who argue the official narrative is fundamentally implausible and likely an attempt to conceal a deeper conspiracy. Their combined findings expose multiple inconsistencies, financial motives, and highly suspicious actions by those involved.
The Premeditated Threat and Hidden Motives
Candace Owens’s investigation focuses on the motive for the assassination, suggesting Kirk knew his life was in danger and that his death was financially convenient for others.
- Kirk’s Final Warning: Owens claims that two of the three people Kirk warned the day before his death have written communication (text messages) confirming he said, “I think they’re going to kill me.” Owens is publicly pressuring these witnesses to come forward and reveal the identity of “they.”
- The Missing Millions: Just one week before his death, Kirk had publicly announced a massive internal audit at Turning Point USA, stating “millions of dollars were missing.” His death conveniently occurred before this financial audit could be completed, providing a clear motive for silence from anyone involved in the alleged missing funds.
- The Widow’s Immediate Takeover: Erica Kirk, the widow, took control of Turning Point USA just 72 hours after her husband’s public execution. Critics have called this swift move and her quick return to public appearances “super inappropriate” given the trauma of the event, especially when juxtaposed against the missing funds and impending audit.
The Logistical Failures and Suspicious Assets
Joe Rogan and Owens have pointed out several physical and logistical flaws in the official story that strain credulity:
- The Impossible Weapon: The official story claims the 22-year-old accused, Tyler Robinson, used his grandfather’s World War I rifle, which he allegedly disassembled and reassembled on a public rooftop before the shooting. Rogan dismissed this as “horseshit,” noting that such a large, unsophisticated rifle couldn’t be easily hidden in a backpack, and its rapid assembly would require specialized training the accused lacked.
- The Decoy Suspect: Rogan highlighted the baffling incident of an older man who, immediately after the shot, began yelling, “I did it,” and removed his pants. This man, who has allegedly appeared at other national tragedies, was immediately arrested on unrelated charges involving minors, conveniently making him unavailable for questioning about what he witnessed or what his strange behavior was intended to accomplish.
- The Military Plane: Owens revealed flight records showing a military plane (tail number N1098L) flew suspiciously low over the area of the shooting at the time of the incident, suggesting a military or surveillance presence that contradicts the “lone shooter” narrative.
- The Unfamiliar Campus: Owens’s sources claim Robinson’s parents do not believe their son committed the crime and that Robinson was a student accepted to Utah State University, not the Utah Valley University campus where the attack took place. This raises a major red flag: how could an individual unfamiliar with UVU’s layout navigate the rooftops to make a precision shot?
The Conclusion: Chaos as a Strategy
The overall message from both Rogan and Owens is that the sheer volume of these inconsistencies is not random. Rogan theorizes that “you add a bunch of wacky shit that doesn’t make any sense and you spam it out there at the same time” to confuse the public. The resulting chaos is intended to make citizens so overwhelmed by conflicting details that they simply “lose all faith” and accept the official version, allowing the truth to be buried.