In an ongoing Utah murder case, edited surveillance footage showing a suspect fleeing is set to be played in court after a prior judge’s ruling. A Utah District Court judge, Tony Graf, previously prohibited prosecutors from presenting the footage to the jury because the prosecution had modified it, including by adding zooms and circling objects of interest. The reports say the court’s decision comes after additional information in the case was disclosed, including allegations that the defendant, Tyler Robinson, made multiple confessions. One outlet describes “five alleged confessions” to killing, suggesting prosecutors are now proceeding with the case in a way that addresses earlier concerns about how the surveillance material was presented. The upcoming courtroom playback is therefore framed as a procedural step following the judge’s earlier restrictions, rather than a direct resolution of the underlying allegations. The reports do not indicate the current status of the confession claims beyond the fact that they have been revealed, nor do they provide details on evidence beyond the edited footage issue.
Footage in Tyler Robinson case to be shown after ruling on edited surveillance
In an ongoing Utah murder case, edited surveillance footage showing a suspect fleeing is set to be played in court after a prior judge’s ruling. A Utah District Court judge, Tony Graf, previously proh...
- A Utah District Court judge previously barred prosecutors from showing surveillance footage to the jury.
- The restriction was based on edits to the footage, including added zooms and circled items of interest.
- Courts are set to allow the footage to be played after that earlier ruling.
- The case involves Tyler Robinson and an alleged killing.
- One report says prosecutors revealed multiple alleged confessions, described as five, before the court proceeding.
Utah District Court Judge Tony Graf previously ruled that prosecutors could not show the surveillance footage because they had added zooms and circled items of interest.
2 hours agoUtah District Court Judge Tony Graf previously ruled that prosecutors could not show the surveillance footage because they had added zooms and circled items of interest.
4 hours ago
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