Tyler Robinson, the 23-year-old charged with murdering far-right pundit Charlie Kirk, allegedly told his roommate the day after the fatal shooting that he wished “he hadn’t done it,” according to testimony heard Thursday in a Utah courtroom. Lance Twiggs, Robinson’s then-roommate and romantic partner, testified during a probable cause hearing, revealing that on September 11, 2025 - a day after Kirk was gunned down at Utah Valley University - he found Robinson pacing around their St. George apartment like a man trying to outrun his own thoughts. When Twiggs asked if what Robinson had “said the night before” was true, Robinson reportedly confirmed it. Twiggs, who was granted immunity for his statements, also shared text messages in which Robinson wrote, “To be honest I had hoped to keep this secret till I died of old age. I am sorry to involve you.” Twiggs replied with the obvious question: “You werent the one who did it right????” The defense, naturally, is worried this looks like a confession, while the prosecution is leaning into the murder weapon - a Mauser 98 rifle found in a wooded campus area, bearing DNA reportedly matching Robinson, plus three unfired bullets engraved with messages including “if you read this, you are gay,” “hey fascist, catch,” and “oh bella ciao, ciao, ciao.” Because nothing says “I’m a serious assassin” like a Partisan anthem and a playground insult. Judge Tony Graf allowed the partially redacted interview and messages, balancing the rights of all parties - including Kirk’s widow, Erika, who fears conspiracy theories more than she fears the open courtroom.