Tyler Robinson, the man accused of killing the conservative political activist Charlie Kirk at a college campus in September, appeared in a Utah court on Thursday for the first time in person since he was arrested.
Mr. Robinson wore a blue shirt, pastel-colored tie and khaki pants. Cameras in the courtroom showed him speaking and smiling with his lawyers. His parents and brother were also in attendance.
Mr. Robinson, 22, has been charged with seven state criminal counts, including aggravated murder, an offense that is eligible for the death penalty in Utah. The hearing was held in part to determine what could be disclosed to the public about the case.
Mr. Kirk, a close ally of President Trump, was fatally shot in the neck on the campus of Utah Valley University on Sept. 10. One shot had been fired from the roof of a building about 150 yards from Mr. Kirk, who was about 20 minutes into a speaking engagement at the university.
Christina Morales is a national reporter for The Times.
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