Charlie Kirk shooting: President Donald Trump says authorities have alleged gunman in custody

President Donald Trump claimed someone ‘very close’ to the alleged gunman had turned him in.
An alleged suspect in the assassination of American conservative Charlie Kirk is in custody, President Donald Trump said.

“I think with a high degree of certainty we have him in custody,” Trump said during an appearance on Fox News on Friday local time.

Photos and video of the alleged gunman were released earlier on Friday, who is accused of firing a single rifle shot that struck the neck of Kirk, a 31-year-old author and podcast host who helped galvanise the conservative youth vote and return Trump to the White House.

Trump said that someone “very close to (the alleged gunman) turned him in” and appeared to indicate that the person was found via a minister, who ultimately got the person’s father involved.

“It was a minister, and the minister went to a friend — a minister who’s involved in law enforcement, by the way, and his good friend is a top US marshal, and they took it from there and then it was a father got involved,” he said.

The president declined to say whether the father was aware of his son’s alleged crime.

Donald Trump told Fox there was a suspect ‘in custody’ days after conservative activist Charlie Kirk (R) was shot dead.
Donald Trump told Fox there was a suspect ‘in custody’ days after conservative activist Charlie Kirk (R) was shot dead. Credit: AAP/Supplied

A press conference detailing the latest in the investigation is due to be held at 9am on Friday, local time.

“We have the person that we think is the person we’re looking for, but they drove into police headquarters and he’s there,” Trump added.

The US president also spoke about Kirk in the interview, calling the young American conservative activist “the finest person.”

Trump also addressed the shooter, suggesting he should be put to death for shooting Kirk.

“Well, I hope — he’s going to be found guilty, I would imagine — and I hope he gets the death penalty,” Trump said.

“What he did, Charlie Kirk … he didn’t deserve this. He worked so hard and so well, everybody liked him.”

Photos of the alleged gunman were released by the FBI.
Photos of the alleged gunman were released by the FBI. Credit: FBI/supplied

The president also said he hadn’t watched video of Kirk’s death after several clips of Kirk’s shooting on the Utah Valley University campus were posted on social media.

“I didn’t want to watch, I heard about it,” Trump said.

“I would have never made a good doctor, let me put it that way. I mean, I heard, I heard enough — I didn’t want to watch it, I didn’t want to I didn’t want to remember Charlie that way.”

The FBI released vision earlier on Friday showing the accused gunman jumping from a roof shortly after the shooting.

The FBI earlier released CCTV of a gunman suspected of killing conservative influencer Charlie Kirk.
The FBI earlier released CCTV of a gunman suspected of killing conservative influencer Charlie Kirk. Credit: FBI

Officials were still calling the man captured on video a person of interest, not a suspect, but placed him at the scene of the crime at Utah Valley University in Orem, Utah.

Kirk was on campus for one of his student-outreach events, featuring his trademark format of taking questions and challenging opponents to debate on the most polarising issues of the day, including gun violence and race. About 3000 people were in attendance.

The shooting has punctuated the most sustained period of US political violence since the 1970s.

Reuters has documented more than 300 cases of politically motivated acts of violence across the ideological spectrum since supporters of Trump attacked the US Capitol on January 6, 2021.

Trump himself has survived two attempts on his life in 2024, one that left him with a grazed ear during a campaign event and another two months later foiled by federal agents.

Video played at a media briefing late on Thursday showed a man walking across the roof of the building where the gunfire originated, before climbing down and dropping to the ground and leaving the campus.

Across the road, he entered a small wooded area where officials recovered what they described as a high-powered, bolt-action rifle they believe was used in the shooting.

Bolt-action rifles, unlike self-loading semi-automatic rifles often used in mass shootings, are popular with American game hunters, target shooters and snipers in militaries around the world.

They require the manual loading of each cartridge into the chamber with a turn of the bolt, but are perceived as more accurate at longer ranges when a single, fatal shot is all that is needed.

Utah Department of Public Safety Commissioner Beau Mason said the man left some palm impressions and smudges where investigators were looking to collect DNA.

“There’s a shoe imprint where we believe the suspect is clearly identified as wearing Converse tennis shoes,” Mason said.

The alleged gunman was photographed wearing an American flag and eagle t-shirt.
The alleged gunman was photographed wearing an American flag and eagle t-shirt. Credit: FBI/supplied

Utah Governor Spencer Cox, appearing at a media briefing with FBI Director Kash Patel and other officials, asked for the public’s help in identifying the slender young man, whose appearance was partially concealed by a dark baseball cap and sunglasses.

The FBI offered a $US100,000 ($A150,000) reward for information leading to the arrest of Kirk’s killer.

Politicians, commentators and online sleuths have already filled social media and message boards with speculation about the killer’s identity and blame-casting about his ideology.

Kirk, a husband and father of two, was dear to many in Trump’s MAGA political movement.

Vice-President JD Vance credited him with helping Trump win the 2024 presidential election and select people appointed to the Trump administration.

Vance cancelled a trip to New York and instead travelled to Utah to see Kirk’s family and to fly them and Kirk’s casket home to Arizona aboard Air Force Two.

Trump said he would award Kirk the Presidential Medal of Freedom, the nation’s highest civilian honour.

— With Reuters and CNN’s Karina Tsui, Lex Harvey and Matthew Rehbein

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