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Tyler Robinson's lawyers try to disqualify entire Utah County Attorney's office from prosecuting case because one lawyer's child witnessed Charlie Kirk shooting

"Normally I like to see a vigorous defense and attorneys doing everything they can to protect their client, but this is one that I find frivolous in nature."

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"Normally I like to see a vigorous defense and attorneys doing everything they can to protect their client, but this is one that I find frivolous in nature."

Defense attorneys in the murder case of Charlie Kirk have demanded that the Utah County Attorney's Office be disqualified from working on the case, as one of the prosecutors on the team had an adult child who was present at the Utah Valley University event where Kirk was fatally shot.

Tyler Robinson's defense team has argued that the prosecutor, because of the child's experience at the event, has a conflict of interest in the case. In some criminal cases, where there is a conflict of interest for prosecution or defense, they may have to be removed from the case. However, some legal experts have disagreed with the defense's motion to pull the prosecutor of Robinson's case, as the shooting has been made very public with thousands of witnesses. Millions more also saw it online.

"This is one of those motions I find ridiculous," legal expert Donna Rotunno told Fox News. "Normally I like to see a vigorous defense and attorneys doing everything they can to protect their client, but this is one that I find frivolous in nature."

"If the family member was the victim, then maybe this is an issue," Rotunno said. "If Erika Kirk was related to a prosecutor, they would have more ground to stand on." With the murder being at such a high-profile event with thousands in attendance, and the shooting also seen online by millions, the connection with the prosecutor's child being at the event is not very unusual.

"The legal system takes conflicts of interest seriously, but a prosecutor isn’t automatically disqualified just because someone in their family witnessed a traumatic event connected to the case," Randolph Rice, a Baltimore-based attorney and legal analyst, said. "The key issue is whether that relationship creates a real risk that decisions are being driven by emotion instead of evidence."

The court system typically needs a "clear, direct conflict that threatens the defendant’s right to a fair trial" before the prosecution can be disqualified, Rice added. "At the same time, prosecutors also have a duty to avoid even the appearance of impropriety, especially in a high-profile capital case where public trust is already on edge."

Since Robinson is facing the death penalty in the case, if the prosecution is taken off and someone else is put on the case, a new prosecution may have a different view of the death penalty, completely shifting the potential punishment for the murder.

"Getting this prosecutor or prosecutor's office kicked off the case opens the possibility of a different state agency coming in and evaluating this case differently and possibly not seeking the death penalty — which would be a huge win for Tyler Robinson's team and for him," Rice added.

A hearing regarding the issue is set to take place in Utah at 1 pm local time Friday.
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