ABC’s Matt Gutman says he’s not sure “if we have seen an alleged murder with such specific text messages” that were “very touching, in a way, that I think many of us didn’t expect — a very intimate portrait into this relationship between the suspect’s roommate and the suspect himself, with him repeatedly calling his roommate, who is transitioning, calling him ‘my love.’ And ‘I want to protect you, my love.’”
Think about that for a second. They are reading text messages in a murder case, and instead of sounding like cold, criminal evidence, the words are dripping with affection. Gutman is basically saying this suspect is at once capable of violence and capable of tenderness. That is the narrative.
But we know ABC News, and we know that what they are really doing is trying to dilute the idea that a trans terrorist brutally murdered someone over the trans politics for the man they continue to call his “roommate” and not his trans partner.
He continues, “So, it was this duality of someone who the attorney said not only jeopardized the life of Charlie Kirk and the crowd, but was doing it in front of children, which is one of the aggravating circumstances of this case. And then, on the other hand, he was, you know, speaking so lovingly about his partner. So a very interesting and, as Pierre said, riveting press conference.”
WATCH:
DISGUSTING: ABC’s Matt Gutman says he’s not sure “if we have seen an alleged murder with such specific text messages” that were “very touching, in a way, that I think many of us didn’t expect — a very intimate portrait into this relationship between the suspect’s roommate and the… pic.twitter.com/ulPcxoOwM3
VISIT OUR YOUTUBE CHANNEL— Curtis Houck (@CurtisHouck) September 16, 2025
So the press is framing it as a contradiction. On one side, you have an act that prosecutors say endangered lives, even children. On the other side, you have a man who writes “my love” over and over. This is what passes for a compelling story in the modern media cycle.
Gutman doubled down, ten minutes later after this on ABC News Live: “It’s heartbreaking on so many levels, Kyra. Obviously, Charlie Kirk was brutally murdered in front of a crowd of thousands…[O]n the other hand, there is this duality of a very a portrait of a very human person, a very human experience from this entire family…the kid who had got a 34 out of 36 on the ACT, who had a 4.0…I don’t think I’ve ever experienced a press conference in which we’ve read text messages that are A, so fulsome, so robust, so apparently, allegedly self-incriminating and yet, on the other hand, so touching — right — with the suspect reaching out to his roommate, who was allegedly his boyfriend, who we understand, you know, identified as male at birth, now identifies as female. And the terminology he used, he was trying to protect him. He kept calling him ‘my love.’ ‘My reason for doing this is to protect you,’ you know, but also asking him to delete the messages and not speak to law enforcement. So there’s this, this heartbreaking duality that we’re seeing very tragically playing out here.”
WATCH:
ABC’s Matt Gutman doubled down, ten minutes later after this on ABC News Live: “It’s heartbreaking on so many levels, Kyra. Obviously, Charlie Kirk was murdered brutally in front of a crowd of thousands…[O]n the other hand, there is this duality of a very a portrait of a very… pic.twitter.com/0ykDhsg1Ko
— Curtis Houck (@CurtisHouck) September 16, 2025
Are you kidding me? Heartbreaking? What’s truly heartbreaking is that Charlie Kirk had a family. He had his loving wife Erica and two beautiful children who will now grow up without their father. All because a radical lunatic decided to silence him over words he didn’t like; words twisted and weaponized by leftists.
Gutman is almost amazed. He’s pointing to test scores and grades, as if a 34 on the ACT somehow makes the story more tragic, or somehow more relatable. He is emphasizing this “duality,” that word again, between a man prosecutors say carried out something horrific and the same man sending messages of devotion. It is the kind of framing designed to make the suspect appear complicated, layered, even sympathetic.
The Internet went ablaze with calls to have Gutman fired for his empathy for Robinson.
Meanwhile, Montel Williams got into the cover-up game, claiming that the 24-year-old assassin was a “love-torn child” in “his first real relationship.” Thank goodness Scott Jennings was at the table to straighten the left-wing has been out.
WATCH:
First, the left tried to convince us the man who killed Charlie Kirk was a conservative. That failed.
Now, we’re seeing multiple attempts to frame this as some transgender love story. ENOUGH.
It’s time to accept the glaring truth that is staring you right in the face. pic.twitter.com/umjLwhGMGt
— Scott Jennings (@ScottJenningsKY) September 17, 2025
Montel referred to Charlie Kirk’s murderer as “a kid.” Tyler Robinson is 22-years-old. He is not a kid. Williams also said he doesn’t think the killer was motivated politically. Seriously? Then how come he didn’t shoot at anyone else in that area? He only shot Charlie Kirk, a political icon of Republicans and conservatives.
#abcbias #mediacoverup #charliekirk




















