NEWYou can now listen to Fox News articles!
Security experts are questioning the adequacy of the threat assessment carried out ahead of Charlie Kirk’s scheduled event at Utah Valley University on Wednesday, where the conservative activist was assassinated in front of thousands of attendees. The scrutiny comes as federal authorities end a manhunt for the suspect linked to the attack.
“Universities have so many speakers that come on campus all the time. Rarely do they plan for somebody taking a longer-range shot with a rifle,” explained retired Marine Lt. Col. Hal Kempfer in an interview with Fox News Digital.
“Sniper assassinations are far less common and even in active shooter scenarios, usually the active shooter gets into a closed space where the person is very close to where the victims are,” he said, noting the immense difficulty of defending against an assailant who can strike from a concealed, elevated, or distant position.
“It’s a lot more involved to carry out and plan for counter-sniper missions,” Kempfer said, emphasizing that this level of violence was never anticipated at what was meant to be a debate-style discussion.
The revelation underscores an unprecedented challenge confronting law enforcement as they work to protect political rallies on college campuses and in communities nationwide.
“The campus has limited security. They don’t have an unlimited budget for this. They had six officers out there, which for any college campus security force, that’s not an insubstantial number of officers. But they also had 3,000 people at this event,” Kempfer said.
Kempfer noted that the gun recovered by authorities on Thursday was a bolt-action rifle, a common hunting weapon valued for its durability and reliability. Unlike semi-automatic weapons, he explained, a bolt-action rifle often retains the spent cartridge in the chamber rather than ejecting it, leaving no shell casings—or “brass”—for investigators to collect.
“That’s just one of those things where you, if you’ve thought it through, you know that you can’t leave any forensic evidence for investigators to work with,” he said.
During a press conference on Friday, authorities announced they had Tyler Robinson in custody after he was turned into law enforcement by his own family. Robinson was identified following a series of videos and photos released by the FBI.
In a photo released on Thursday, the individual authorities were looking for was wearing a hat, sunglasses, and an American flag T-shirt with an eagle on it.
CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP
The post Scrutiny intensifies over security lapses surrounding the Charlie Kirk shooting appeared first on Fox News.