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Faith, forgiveness won’t factor in Kirk murder trial death penalty push: expert

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A top legal expert and retired Navy JAG threw cold water on claims that Erika Kirk’s «grace» and «forgiveness» of Charlie Kirk murder suspect Tyler Robinson is a boon for the defense in its likely quest to avoid a death penalty case.

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Cully Stimson, deputy director of the Heritage Foundation’s Edwin Meese Center for Legal and Judicial Studies and former George W. Bush administration Pentagon official, said observers should not conflate Erika Kirk’s «grace as a religious person» with erosion of legal accountability.

«Because she had the strength of character and the willingness to forgive as a Christian does not automatically have any bearing on whether the state can and should pursue the ultimate punishment — and whether the state and will get a judgment including the ultimate punishment,» Stimson said.

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Erika Kirk gets emotional during a memorial service for her husband, slain conservative commentator Charlie Kirk, at State Farm Stadium in Arizona, Sept. 21, 2025. (REUTERS/Carlos Barria)

As both a former prosecutor and defense attorney, Stimson said he can envision the case going to trial – though suggested it may not – and when it does that the defense will mount a case pointing to Erika Kirk’s comment.

«Look, even the decedent’s wife has forgiven our client, and therefore, there’s really no reason whatsoever to move forward with the death penalty,» Stimson envisioned the defense arguing.

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The state of Utah could then agree, and drop capital punishment as a potential outcome, or dismiss the defense’s notion out of hand.

The case is not Kirk v. [Suspect], it is the State of Utah v. [Suspect], he remarked, noting that the state as a proxy therefore has even more leverage to bring the ultimate punishment against the suspect, regardless of how the defense may translate the Kirk family’s comments.

Stimson pointed to rape cases he has tried where the victim knew the suspect, comes forward, charges are pressed, evidence is presented – but when the suspect gets convicted, the victim suddenly doesn’t want extended or harsh punishment – whether for personal, religious or other reasons.

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UTAH PROSECUTORS PREPARE POTENTIAL DEATH PENALTY CASE AGAINST CHARLIE KIRK SUSPECT TYLER JAMES ROBINSON

«In general, state victims’ rights statutes require the government – here, the prosecutor, to take into consideration the views of the victims or the victims’ family members. That doesn’t mean they have to follow them,» he said.

The case has also brought Utah’s unique death penalty scenarios back to the fore.

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Utah – along with Idaho, Mississippi, Oklahoma, South Carolina – still allow firing squad as a method of execution. Until 1996, some states also permitted hanging – with Delaware murderer Billy Bailey being the last such convict to meet that end.

Stimson dismissed criticism of a firing squad as unconstitutionally cruel or unusual, and also rejected claims the death penalty itself is wrongfully antiquated.

RETIRED FBI AGENT WARNS OF ‘ASSASSINATION CULTURE’ AFTER LEARNING KIRK SUSPECT LIVED WITH TRANS PARTNER

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«The death penalty is mentioned three times in the Constitution… the death penalty has been held constitutional since 1976.»

He said the firing squad would abide by the Eighth Amendment in that it is not cruel – as the convict dies instantly – and not unusual.

Other methods of execution like the electric chair, however, which are all but moot today, were more mainstream but at the same time less in line with the Eighth Amendment, Stimson said critics could argue in turn.

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The electric chair did not always result in painless, instantaneous death, and the method may have been considered unusual in its construct, he suggested.

The military, he said, still has the firing squad as an execution method on its books, the retired JAG officer said, although the Pentagon has not executed anyone since Pvt. John Bennett was hanged at Fort Leavenworth for rape in 1916.

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Imágenes satelitales muestran cómo el régimen de Irán reconstruye las plantas nucleares bombardeadas en la Guerra de los 12 días

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Combinación de imágenes satelitales muestra edificios destruidos (izquierda) y nuevo techo sobre estructura dañada (derecha) en el sitio nuclear de Isfahan, Irán. EEUU atacó las instalaciones en junio de 2025. (Planet Labs PBC vía REUTERS)

Imágenes satelitales recientes muestran nuevos techos en dos instalaciones nucleares iraníes después de que fueran atacadas por Estados Unidos en junio del año pasado.

Las fotografías satelitales tomadas por Planet Labs PBC muestran estructuras reconstruidas sobre edificios previamente destruidos en los sitios nucleares de Natanz e Isfahan.

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Estados Unidos atacó las instalaciones nucleares iraníes de Fordow, Isfahan y Natanz en junio de 2025, durante una guerra de 12 días entre Israel e Irán que paralizó las negociaciones nucleares entre Washington y Teherán.

Desde entonces, Teherán ha afirmado que su trabajo de enriquecimiento de uranio se ha detenido, pero las tensiones siguen siendo altas en medio de un despliegue militar de la Marina estadounidense cerca de Irán, tras una violenta represión contra manifestaciones antigubernamentales el mes pasado.

Las imágenes satelitales del 21 de junio de 2025 mostraban edificios destruidos en el sitio nuclear de Isfahan. Nuevas fotografías tomadas el 1 de febrero de 2026 revelan que se ha construido un nuevo techo sobre las estructuras previamente dañadas.

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Imágenes satelitales de las instalaciones nucleares de Isfahan muestran el antes (junio 2025) y el después (febrero 2026) de la reconstrucción. EEUU atacó los sitios de Fordow, Isfahan y Natanz en junio pasado. (Planet Labs PBC)

De manera similar, en Natanz, las imágenes del 17 de junio de 2025 mostraban instalaciones destruidas, mientras que las fotografías del 30 de enero de 2026 evidencian la construcción de nuevos techos sobre los edificios afectados.

Comparación satelital de Natanz: edificio destruido en junio de 2025 (izquierda) y estructura con nuevo techo en enero de 2026 (derecha). Teherán afirma que su enriquecimiento de uranio se detuvo tras los ataques. (Planet Labs PBC)

El presidente estadounidense Donald Trump, quien se abstuvo de cumplir las amenazas de intervenir durante la represión de las protestas, ha exigido desde entonces que Teherán haga concesiones nucleares y envió una flotilla a su costa.

Trump dijo la semana pasada que Irán estaba “hablando en serio”, mientras que el principal funcionario de seguridad de Teherán, Ali Larijani, afirmó que se están realizando los arreglos para negociaciones.

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El presidente iraní Masud Pezeshkian ordenó este lunes la apertura de conversaciones con Estados Unidos sobre el programa nuclear de la República Islámica, después de que Trump se mostrara optimista sobre un acuerdo para evitar una intervención militar.

El ejército estadounidense ha trasladado el portaviones USS Abraham Lincoln y varios destructores con misiles guiados a Oriente Medio, intensificando la presión sobre Irán.

Estados Unidos exige que Irán renuncie por completo al enriquecimiento de uranio, algo a lo que Teherán se niega, alegando su derecho en virtud del Tratado de No Proliferación Nuclear, del que es signatario.

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El ministro de Relaciones Exteriores iraní, Abbas Araghchi, dijo el domingo que Irán está “totalmente de acuerdo” con el rechazo de Trump a las armas nucleares. “Por supuesto, a cambio, esperamos un levantamiento de las sanciones”, añadió.

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El ministro de Exteriores iraní, Abbas Araghchi, en Estambul, Turquía. Araghchi dijo que Irán está de acuerdo con el rechazo de Trump a las armas nucleares. (AP Foto/Khalil Hamra)

Las conversaciones previas entre Araghchi y el enviado especial de Trump, Steve Witkoff, se estancaron en la cuestión del enriquecimiento de uranio antes de la guerra de junio.

Países occidentales sospechan que la República Islámica pretende dotarse del arma atómica, algo que Teherán desmiente categóricamente.

Mientras tanto, Turquía está intentando organizar una reunión entre Witkoff y funcionarios iraníes para iniciar conversaciones que alivien la amenaza de una acción militar estadounidense contra la República Islámica, según dos funcionarios turcos.

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La presión sobre Teherán se ha intensificado desde principios de enero, tras la feroz represión de una oleada de protestas que sacudió al país. Según la ONG Human Rights Activists News Agency, con sede en Estados Unidos, la represión dejó al menos 6.842 muertos confirmados, en su mayoría manifestantes.

La Unión Europea respondió a la represión designando al Cuerpo de la Guardia Revolucionaria Islámica como organización terrorista, lo que provocó que Irán convocara a todos los embajadores de la UE para protestar.

Irán ha advertido que cualquier ataque estadounidense conduciría a una “guerra regional”, según declaró el líder supremo, el ayatolá Alí Khamenei.

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Education experts warn Mamdani plan could gut NYC gifted programs, hurt low-income students

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Socialist New York City Mayor Zohran Mamdani has outlined plans to scale back the city’s Gifted and Talented program, prompting some education experts to warn that doing so could deprive high-achieving students, particularly those from low-income families, of critical academic opportunities.

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Recent media reports indicate that Mamdani, who took office in January, intends to end the city’s Gifted and Talented program for kindergarten students and delay entry until third grade, a move critics argue would amount to a major weakening of accelerated learning options in the nation’s largest school district.

The plan is drawing sharp criticism from Defending Education, a national education watchdog group that previously fought, and won, a years-long legal battle to preserve New York’s gifted programs after it was argued that the admissions system had discriminatory effects and reinforced racial inequities in education. 

«The Court of Appeals rightly concluded that the role of the judiciary is not to make education policy,» Sarah Parshall Perry, vice president and legal fellow at Defending Education, told Fox News Digital, adding that the program complied with state education law and equal protection requirements.

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New York City Mayor Zohran Mamdani plans to end the city’s Gifted and Talented program for kindergarten students and delay entry until third grade. (Adam Gray/Bloomberg via Getty Images)

But Perry warned that Mamdani’s policy agenda could undo what the courts upheld.

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«As we suspected he might, newly minted democratic socialist mayor Zohran Mamdani — himself, a product of expensive private schools — has pledged to shut down the gifted and talented program, despite the fact that it has helped countless students from humble backgrounds achieve their full academic potential,» Perry told Fox News Digital. 

«Depriving kids of much-needed advanced learning opportunities is not only foolhardy, but it’s also the height of hypocrisy coming from someone who was born into affluence and attended costly private schools. Apparently, Mamdani believes only the privileged should have access to various educational opportunities.»

‘FULL-BLOWN BATTLE’ BREWING IN DEM PARTY AS MAMDANI-STYLE CANDIDATES RISE IN KEY RACES

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Mamdani has argued that early gifted testing contributes to inequities in the school system, though critics counter that dismantling selective programs does little to improve outcomes for struggling students while actively harming high performers.

Paul Runko, senior director of strategic initiatives for K-12 programs at Defending Education, echoed Perry’s concerns, emphasizing the impact such changes could have on working-class families.

«On behalf of parents who simply want the best possible education for their children, Defending Education spent years in court fighting to preserve New York City’s gifted and talented programs against efforts to use the courts to inject race into every aspect of the school system,» Runko said.

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Mayor Mamdani speaks during press conference

New York City Mayor Zohran Mamdani was elected in November 2025 and sworn in as the city’s first socialist mayor on Jan. 1, 2026. (Michael M. Santiago/Getty Images)

«Those efforts may succeed if Mayor Zohran Mamdani moves forward with eliminating these accelerated learning opportunities,» he warned. «Students, particularly those from lower-income families who benefit from NYC’s gifted and talented programs, deserve opportunities for academic excellence, not a one-size-fits-all approach that could weaken learning for all students.»

Mamdani’s office pushed back on Defending Education’s characterization, telling Fox News Digital that the administration opposes testing five-year-olds for gifted and talented programs but is not eliminating advanced learning opportunities across all grade levels. 

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Mamdani’s office said the focus is instead on reshaping the public school system to provide «rigorous» instruction for all students, rather than separating children at an early age.

Mamdani faced heated criticism from his opponents in the mayoral race regarding his plans to change the program, as well as from the Washington Post editorial board in October.

«Who could have guessed that Zohran Mamdani (D), the leading candidate to become the next New York mayor, would provoke a firestorm by announcing this week that he intends to phase out the city’s early elementary school programs for gifted students in the name of equity? Parents of bright children want access to schooling that meets their needs?» The Post wrote. «Shocking.»

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Iran ramps up regional threats as Trump considers talks, and eyewitness accounts of regime violence emerge

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As diplomatic talks between Washington and Tehran gain momentum, Iran has intensified its rhetoric toward the region while continuing a violent crackdown at home, according to analysts and eyewitness accounts obtained by Fox News Digital.

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On Sunday and Monday morning, Iran issued fresh warnings that any military strike on its territory would ignite a regional conflict, even as senior Iranian officials signaled a willingness to negotiate. Reuters reported Monday that Tehran is examining the possibility of renewed nuclear talks with the United States, with Turkey emerging as a potential venue and regional mediators, including Saudi Arabia and Qatar, playing an active role, after President Donald Trump said he was hopeful a deal could be reached to avert military action against Iran.

U.S. envoy Steve Witkoff is expected to arrive in Israel on Tuesday for meetings with Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and Israel Defense Forces Chief of Staff Lt. Gen. Eyal Zamir, according to Axios. The publication also reported that Steve Witkoff will meet Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi in Istanbul on Friday.

IRAN WILL RETALIATE ‘WITH EVERYTHING WE HAVE’ IF US ATTACKS, SENIOR DIPLOMAT WARNS

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The state tax building burned during Iran’s protests in Tehran, Jan. 19, 2026. (Majid Asgaripour/West Asia News Agency via Reuters)

The talks are expected to focus on Iran, following Zamir’s weekend visit to Washington, where he held a series of meetings with U.S. defense officials on the Islamic Republic.

Benny Sabti, an Iran expert at Israel’s Institute for National Security Studies, told Fox News Digital this pattern is consistent with Tehran’s long-standing strategy.

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«This is very typical behavior for the Iranian regime,» Sabti said. He said Iran deliberately escalated threats days ago, warning that if it were attacked, no country in the Middle East would be safe. «They treat the region as if it is being held hostage,» he said, adding that the tactic appears to have worked.

Sabti pointed to the list of mediators now involved. «Saudi Arabia, Turkey, Qatar, all of them went to the United States pushing for talks,» he said. «They are trying to avoid being dragged into the Iranian threat.»

TRUMP SAYS IRAN ALREADY HAS US TERMS AS MILITARY STRIKE CLOCK TICKS

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Anti-government protests in Iran

Iranians attend an anti-government protest in Tehran on Jan. 9, 2026. (UGC via AP)

According to Sabti, Tehran is also projecting mixed messages by design. «There are two voices coming out of Iran,» he said. «On one side, the generals, the IRGC, the military, escalating threats. On the other side, the foreign minister and the president are talking about negotiations.»

On Monday morning, Al Arabiya reported that Iranian news agencies Tasnim and Fars deleted a report that referenced approval for negotiations with the United States.

Sabti said that even Iran’s National Security Council reflects this dual messaging. He noted that a deputy official recently signaled Iran would not yet further advance its enriched uranium, while military officials simultaneously escalated rhetoric. «It is meant to confuse the enemy and to keep the entire Middle East under pressure,» he said.

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While Iran’s external posture oscillates between threats and diplomacy, reports from inside the country point to an intensifying crackdown on protesters.

Independent casualty estimates vary widely. The Human Rights Activists News Agency (HRANA) reported that, based on its latest aggregated data, 6,842 people had been confirmed killed by the end of the 36th day of protests. According to HRANA, 6,425 of those killed were recorded as protesters, while 146 were children under the age of 18. An additional 11,280 cases remain under review. HRANA and other opposition-linked groups have warned that the final toll could be significantly higher, with some estimates reaching as high as 30,000 deaths.

Fox News Digital received eyewitness accounts from individuals identified as part of the MEK’s Resistance Units network inside Iran.

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IRAN’S SUPREME LEADER ACKNOWLEDGES THOUSANDS KILLED AS TRUMP CALLS FOR NEW LEADERSHIP: REPORTS

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Opposition-linked groups warn that the final death toll could be as high as 30,000. (MAHSA/Middle East Images/AFP via Getty Images))

One eyewitness from Eslamshahr, a southern district of Tehran, said a group of 27 protesters was fired upon, killing 10. The source said a cousin was killed, another cousin, Melika, 20, was mutilated, and the bodies were buried in a nearby park.

In Lahijan, in northern Gilan Province, an eyewitness said 30 protesters were shot outside the governor’s office on Jan. 8, with seven later dying in the hospital. In Shiraz, a 16-year-old said he was shot with pellet guns in the lips, eye and throat and is now experiencing vision problems.

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Another eyewitness from Bandar Abbas in southern Iran said that since Jan. 18, martial law has been imposed, with residents barred from the streets after 4 p.m. local time. The source claimed security forces entered hospitals to remove or kill wounded protesters and that families were allegedly told to pay 10 billion rials, roughly $8,000, to recover the bodies of their children.

Sabti said the renewed diplomacy has also deepened public disillusionment inside Iran.

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Iranian security forces allegedly killed detainees and burned bodies during protests, with clashes continuing in Kermanshah, Rasht and Mashhad despite government claims.

Iranian security forces allegedly killed detainees and burned bodies during protests, with clashes continuing in Kermanshah, Rasht and Mashhad despite government claims. (NCRI)

«Many protesters are very disappointed,» he said. «When Trump said on Jan. 13 that ‘help is on its way,’ they believed it. They were very emotional about it. After 47 years, an American president was speaking in support of the Iranian people. But now they interpret his words as helping the regime, not the protesters. The disappointment is very deep.»

Reuters contributed to this report.

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