by George Webb

Here’s the “Lee Harvey Robinson” thesis laid out cleanly, in ten parts, first-person, and in a buttoned-down Gary-Webb-style that separates what’s documented from what’s hypothesized.

Tyler Robinson’s uncle is a recruiter for a covert sniper program in Ukraine known as “Hey Mikey” to his friends in a David Ferry – Lee Harvey Oswald connection that is bonded by blood.

Charlie Kirk Assassination Team Meeting In St. George At Kyle Robinson’s Apartment

Tyler Robinson’s uncle is a recruiter for a covert sniper program in Ukraine known as “Hey Mikey” to his friends in a David Ferry – Lee Harvey Oswald connection that is bonded by blood.

Charlie Kirk Assassination Team Meeting In St. George At Kyle Robinson’s Apartment

We believe the Arizona team members involved in military training on the Navajo Indian Reservation were the other team members coming and going at Kyle Robinson’s residence with out-of-state plates.

We believe the “trans-lover” was simply a lookout for watching over the assassination team’s equipment.

Where I’m leaning on verified public facts, I cite them. Where I’m connecting dots, I say so plainly. And because the criminal case is active, I’m careful to treat everyone as alleged and everything as provisional until the receipts are in.

We still know a lot less about Thomas Matthew Crooks (officially, we cover him in detail in our tab here on Crooks), but suffice to say we learned most of things we know about Oswald almost fifty years later. Our knowledge can change daily.

Tyler Robinson’s Uncle, “Mikey” Robinson, runs the covert program for recruiting Ukrainian snipers.

George Webb’s Task Force Orange Journal is a reader-supported publication. To receive new posts and support my work, consider becoming a free or paid subscriber.

Part I — What happened on September 10th, and what we know three days late

Good morning from a shared workspace—people clinking mugs behind me, the hum of a coffee grinder—so I’ll keep this focused. Charlie Kirk was fatally shot during a daytime event at Utah Valley University in Orem, Utah, on September 10, 2025. Utah officials call it a political assassination.

Within roughly 24–36 hours, Utah Gov. Spencer Cox announced that a 22-year-old Washington County resident, Tyler Robinson, was taken into custody and booked without bail on suspicion of aggravated murder (a Utah capital felony)

Aggravated murder, felony discharge of a firearm, and obstruction? The venue, crowd size, rooftop vantage, and fast turnaround frame the opening facts. The Guardian+2The Guardian+2

Multiple outlets report Robinson as a bright student with no prior criminal history who attended Utah State University briefly and later enrolled in technical training; family members say he’d become more politically vocal in recent years.

Authorities and press reports say engraved ammo casings with politicized/online-culture inscriptions were recovered, and a Mauser-pattern rifle was tied to the scene—details that, if corroborated in filings, will matter for motive. The People/AP/WaPo/Guardian runs all converge on those basics. The Guardian+3People.com+3RNZ+3

Part II — Why “metadata” matters (and what I mean by it)

When I say “metadata,” I mean the orbiting facts and patterns that don’t shoot by themselves but tell you where to look: age and training profile, rooftop positioning, family involvement in ID, early narrative fog around social platforms, what was inscribed on ammo, and how investigators characterize the attack. This is how we map “Lee Harvey Robinson” to earlier templates—Lee Harvey Oswald in 1963 and Thomas Matthew Crooks in 2024—without pretending any two cases are identical.

Crooks, the would-be assassin at the Butler, Pennsylvania rally in July 2024, was a 20-year-old community-college engineering student who practiced at ranges, bought components that can double as explosive precursors, and used online resources and (per congressional and press reports) encrypted accounts. That’s not conspiracism; it’s in CBS News and FBI/oversight material. RNZ+3CBS News+3TribLIVE+3

Oswald is the Cold War template: Marine, Russia-literate defector/returnee, then short-term work at Jaggars-Chiles-Stovall (Dallas graphics firm with defense mapping contracts) immediately before the Cuban Missile Crisis intelligence crescendo—facts preserved in the Warren Commission volumes.

The argument here isn’t that Oswald equals Robinson; it’s that “young, technically inclined figure pinned to a high-stakes political act” is an old American story. History Matters

Part III — The roofline problem set

Rooftops are the common denominator. Trump’s shooter (Crooks) took a rooftop position across from the stage—documented by the FBI and national press. In Orem, Utah, investigators likewise say the fatal shot came from a rooftop while Kirk addressed a crowd of thousands.

That’s not trivial overlap; rooflines control angle, distance, and egress, and they interact with perimeter planning—where dogs, magnetometers, and overwatch should be. If you’ve ever war-gamed venue security, you know rooftops are the first item in the con-ops brief. Federal Bureau of Investigation+2Federal Bureau of Investigation+2

Maps and timelines published after Kirk’s death show how quickly the public ID request went out (12.23 P.M. MT, per CBS) and how the crowd geometry left a clear north-south corridor.

Those specifics matter later when we test whether a lone actor could carry rifle, cache gear, and exit without a full support team. CBS News

Part IV — The narrative fog: Discord in, Discord out

Every modern political shooting starts with a rumor mill about the suspect’s online footprint. In this case, public officials and early reporting pointed at Discord activity; within a news cycle.

Discord issued a categorical denial that the planning or coordination happened on its platform, clarifying that a roommate’s post-incident recollection of a note had been conflated with platform messages.

Daily Beast and The Verge both published clear denials; that correction matters because it trims an early “radicalized on Platform X” trope that investigators and commentators often over-weight in the first 24 hours. We should lock in the correction and move on. The Verge+1. We immediately started thinking encrypted apps were being used like the Awan Spy Ring Blackberrys instead of Discord.

Pivot to Crooks: the FBI and congressional task force materials do reference encrypted accounts and device forensics—without tying them to any single brand until returns were processed. It’s a good methodological reminder: chase warrants, forensics, and carrier records—not vibes. Federal Bureau of Investigation+1

Part V — The family vector

Families crack cases. In the Kirk investigation, Utah authorities and multiple outlets say Robinson’s family recognized him from images and contacted authorities; one report frames it as the father urging cooperation.

That’s consistent with cases where the suspect’s outward life still runs through home, school, or work. Compare Crooks: his parents called police as “missing/endangered” hours before the Butler attack—a different trigger, same vector.

Families are often the first corroborators for identity, timeline, and mental state. ABC News+2AP News+2

Part VI — Inscribed ammo, meme-culture clues, and the Oswald preoccupation

Police and press describe engraved messages on shell casings in the Kirk case—references that mix political slogans and internet culture.

No inscription proves motive by itself, but inscriptions are premeditation fingerprints: someone planned for those messages to be read. Meanwhile, Crooks ran searches like “how far was Oswald from Kennedy,” an explicit metadata bridge between 1963 and 2024.

Together, inscriptions and search logs often pull motive from inference into something the jury can hold. People.com+2RNZ+2

Here’s how I use that: not to leap to ideology, but to build a temporal chain—when were the casings etched, where were they purchased, who witnessed range days, and do the inscriptions match private posts or drafts on any seized device?

If the state wants a Gary-Webb-style “nailed down,” those are the receipts. CBS News

Part VII — Training, competence, and the “mechanic” mythos

Let’s separate lore from ledger. There’s a loud online thesis that modern shooters are covert “mechanics” spun out of quasi-official pipelines. Maybe. But what we can evidence, today, is narrower:

  • Crooks: documented range practice; online purchases of nitromethane; FBI-recovered IED components; continued device forensics. That’s a technical arc, but it’s visible in receipts and evidence photos. TribLIVE+1
  • Oswald: Marine marksmanship, Russian language exposure, and Dallas employment with a firm doing defense mapping work pre-11/63. That’s a counter-intelligence-flavored résumé, preserved in sworn testimony. History Matters
  • Robinson (alleged): bright student, Utah State stint, technical school enrollment; we do not yet have public receipts for weapons training beyond the allegation of one rooftop shot; we do have the reported ammunition engravings. Until filings drop, I keep his “competence” column deliberately blank. AP News+

If later affidavits show range logs, purchase histories, or travel to restricted ranges, great—slot those in. Until then, the disciplined move is to say “unknown” rather than fill the blanks with romance. That’s how Gary would write it.

Part VIII — Lone actor vs. network: what the patterns actually support

Every one of these cases gets framed as either (A) a hermetic lone gunman or (B) a covert team with stagers, spotters, and cleaners.

The truth lives in logistics: transport of the weapon, on-site caching (if any), time-and-motion between entrance and egress, comms before/during/after, and money.

  • Transport & caching: In Kirk’s case, the state says the shot was from a rooftop; to argue “team,” you’d want footage or license-plate readers tying an accomplice to a drop, plus comms that reference cache points. So far, we’ve seen no public filing at that granularity. The Guardian
  • Comms: Discord has publicly denied being the planning locus. That leaves device forensics and carrier returns. Crooks is the cautionary tale: only once the FBI got into his phone did the encrypted-account picture sharpen. Expect the same sequence here. The Verge+1
  • Money: Media narratives often over-reach here. In Crooks’ case, viral claims about “foreign bank accounts” didn’t pan out in public records; PolitiFact pushed back on that. In Kirk’s case, there’s no public financial storyline yet. Keep powder dry. PolitiFact

So my present tense view: The lone-actor hypothesis is consistent with the publicly reported facts, and the team hypothesis requires evidence we haven’t seen yet. That’s not me arguing one way or the other; it’s me refusing to outrun the record.

Part IX — The investigative playbook: what “getting the phone” really means

I’ve said this for years: in 2016–2025, the phone is the crime scene. After Butler, the FBI emphasized gaining access to Crooks’ phone and devices and kept that analysis running for months.

Encryption slowed public answers, but it didn’t stop lawful access. In Utah, the same priorities apply: seize the phone(s), SIMs, cloud backups; lock preservation letters with platforms; and get tower dumps and geofence returns to test the route to and from the roof.

That’s how you move from “it looks like him” to “here is the chain of acts and intent.” Federal Bureau of Investigation

Equally critical: tight venue mapping (already published by the Guardian and WLWT), plus a receipts-first approach on the rifle—source, purchase, serials, and any gunsmithing. The inscribed casings, if properly photographed and swabbed, will carry DNA/trace. String those together and you’re in “prima facie” land. The Guardian+1

Part X — The “Lee Harvey Robinson” frame, nailed down (what would satisfy a jury)

Here’s how I’d structure the “Lee Harvey Robinson” parallels so they’re probative, not poetic:

  1. Identity and presence
    • CCTV and stills tie Robinson to the venue and roof approach; family ID corroborates; a time-synced chain of cameras tracks ingress/egress. (Gov. Cox and multiple outlets have already put the family-ID role on record.) ABC News+1
  2. Weapon provenance and handling
    • Purchase history, custody chain, fingerprints, DNA, and toolmarks on the Mauser-pattern rifle; microscopic comparison of recovered bullets/casings to that weapon; photos of any engraving done pre-event. (Press has reported inscriptions; the lab work is the court-grade follow-through.) People.com
  3. Premeditation trail
    • Search logs, notes, or drafts about vantage points and timing; practice sessions or range receipts; any mapping apps showing recon. This is where Crooks-style device forensics turned key; expect similar emphasis here. Federal Bureau of Investigation
  4. Motive in the suspect’s own words
    • Not ideology per se, but statements of intent: DMs, drafts, voice notes, or goodbye messages. Remember, Discord says its platform wasn’t the planning hub; that shifts weight to handset/cloud and third-party platforms. The Verge
  5. Ties to Oswald/Crooks as patterns, not proofs
    • Rooftop vantage (Crooks), youthful technical profile (both), and metadata obsessions (Crooks searching Oswald; Robinson’s alleged engravings referencing politics/memes). Show the parallels to explain how someone becomes legible to a security model—not as a substitute for Utah-specific facts. Wikipedia+1
  6. Refuting alternate suspects
    • If the defense argues “that’s not me on the roof,” you want gait analysis synchronized with multi-angle footage, wardrobe item recoveries, and a no-gaps timeline. CBS’s timestamped public-appeal post (9:48 a.m. MT) already anchors the day’s sequencing; fill in the rest. CBS News
  7. Avoiding platform scapegoats
    • Early misfires around Discord are textbook narrative fog. Correcting them isn’t cosmetic; it prevents defense from painting the state as stampeding toward a villain-of-the-week instead of assembling receipts. The Daily Beast
  8. Context, not conspiracy
    • For Oswald, the context was Cold War tradecraft and mapping/intel workflows in Dallas; for Crooks, it was a summer of range time, chemicals, and a breached rooftop; for Robinson, it will be class schedules, transport, purchases, and any rehearsal captures. Keep the context tethered to documents. History Matters+1
  9. Charge discipline
    • Utah’s aggravated murder framework and death-penalty eligibility hinge on specific aggravators (endangering others, premeditation). Prosecutors will want to elevate inscriptions, rooftop positioning, and crowd endangerment into statutory boxes. People and the AP have already sketched that theory of the case. The filings will tell us if it’s legally tight. People.com+1
  10. Public accountability
  • The Guardian’s walkthroughs and big-board timelines are not judicial evidence, but they shape public understanding. If Utah law enforcement wants confidence, they’ll publish digestible chronologies and evidence summaries once it’s safe to do so. That’s the antidote to rumor. The Guardian

Coda — The through-line

Here’s my honest read, with the coffee shop hiss behind me: The Robinson case, as publicly sketched, shares operational metadata with Oswald (youth, technically inclined profile adjacent to national-security narratives) and Crooks (rooftop, range-and-receipts arc, digital forensics gating early answers). That doesn’t prove coordination, statecraft, or a secret pipeline. It proves that, in America, we keep building venues of speech and lines of sight that reward the same rooftop math—and that when politics grows incendiary, someone young, bright, and alienated sometimes decides to pick up a rifle and climb.

I’ll go as far as Gary would: nail it down with documents, not adjectives. The state owes that to the victim, to the accused, and to the country.

What I treated as facts here: the date, place, arrest and booking claims; the family ID vector; the rooftop shot; the reported ammo inscriptions; the Discord denial; Crooks’ device/IED facts; Oswald’s Jaggars-Chiles-Stovall stint; Utah’s charging posture. See the citations after the relevant paragraphs for the public record I leaned on. People.com+8The Guardian+8The Guardian+8

What I labeled as hypotheses: training pipelines, team logistics, motive beyond what’s on the casings, and any bank/comms claims beyond what agencies have put in writing. Where prior viral claims fizzled (e.g., Crooks’ “foreign bank accounts”), I flagged that too. PolitiFact

If you want, I can turn this into a working dossier with a live “receipts” tracker—one tab per claim (weapon provenance, inscriptions chain of custody, device returns, roofline video set, range history), colored green when a document lands in public filings.

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  • So is he saying the Charlie Kirk shooting was faked similarly to the JFK and Trump fake shootings? He can’t be saying Oswald and Crooks actually fired any bullets: that would make him appear to be a government operative.

  • Story goes stranger by the hour. Clearly Operation Mockingbird blackout in MSM.

    There are so many questions.

    Where exactly Robinson parked on the way in?
    If walked from 800 West through tunnel under Campus Drive, where are videos from dozens of CCTVs?

    https://www.google.com/maps/@40.2787217,-111.7145013,684m

    Losee building is on slope on Charlie’s stage side. Access to third floor roof (“sniper’s nest” level above “Losee” sign) is via old school vertical metal ladder attached to outside wall in the center of recessed portion – central section:
    https://www.wikiwand.com/en/articles/Killing_of_Charlie_Kirk#/media/File:Gunther_Trades_(2312902173)_(2).jpg
    It is behind the tree, barely visible. Then, to that roof, you have to climb another vertical ladder from second floor roof. That ladder is located in the right corner of recess. The other ladder to the right of it is only to climb down to this very specific portion of roof. All in plain sight.

    Another pic:
    https://www.aljazeera.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/09/INTERACTIVE-Charlie-Kirk-shot-dead-at-Utah-university-map-1757568341.png

    There were 1000+ people at the time and not a single accidental cell phone or CCTV footage? Except two.

    There is also access from behind third floor roof, which requires jumping a fence? Again, no footage.

    What kind of signs were shown by the 2 guys to Charlie’s right?

    How did he travel 270 miles south (3+ hours) to his apartment unnoticed with his Doge Charger?

    How did he buy this car?
    Who paid $ 1800 per month for his apartment? Lots of money for two 22 yo dudes in rural Utah.
    Where are door bell cameras footage from his apartment complex?
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dju8-9zn7GQ

    Where are his lawyers?

    On and on.

 

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