Hopes for
a Fast Capture of Kirk’s Shooter Fade After Patel Backtracks
Kash
Patel, the F.B.I. director, said that the agency’s investigation was
continuing, reversing his earlier announcement that someone had been
apprehended.
Glenn
Thrush Nicholas
Bogel-Burroughs
By Glenn
Thrush and Nicholas Bogel-Burroughs
Sept. 11,
2025
Updated
2:15 a.m. ET
https://www.nytimes.com/2025/09/11/us/charlie-kirk-shooting-manhunt-fbi.html
Hopes for
the fast capture of the person who fatally shot the right-wing activist Charlie
Kirk in Utah evaporated on Wednesday when Kash Patel, the F.B.I. director,
announced that the authorities had released a man he had described as a central
subject of a multiagency manhunt.
“The
subject in custody has been released after an interrogation by law
enforcement,” Mr. Patel wrote on his X account, adding: “our investigation
continues.”
Two hours
earlier, Mr. Patel had stoked expectations of a fast end to the search by
congratulating state, local and federal officials for taking into custody “the
subject for the horrific shooting today.”
The
release of the subject capped a day of shock, fear and uncertainty over what
officials described as political assassination, committed in broad daylight in
front of thousands of people who had come to participate in a discussion with
Mr. Kirk, 31, at Utah Valley University.
The
backtrack was a source of significant embarrassment for the F.B.I. director on
a day when three former F.B.I. agents filed a lawsuit against Mr. Patel that
portrayed him as a partisan neophyte more interested in social media, and swag,
than in the day-to-day operations of the nation’s flagship law enforcement
agency.
That the
director of the F.B.I., historically known for careful messaging on fluid
investigations — and deferring to local leaders — would personally take the
lead in releasing information about the shooting was unusual.
It was
even more unusual that he chose to post that information minutes before Gov.
Spencer Cox of Utah and officials from the F.B.I. and local law enforcement
were scheduled to provide the first on-camera briefing on the shooting.
Moments
after Mr. Patel’s post, Beau Mason, the commissioner of Utah’s Department of
Public Safety, told reporters that his agency and the F.B.I. would be working
together “to find this killer,” suggesting the search was ongoing.
Mr. Cox
spoke next, saying that the authorities had “a person of interest in custody,”
but also that the police would find whoever had committed the crime.
In
response to reporters’ questions about Mr. Patel’s post, the governor repeated
his statement that authorities were questioning someone in custody.
Another
person who had been taken into custody immediately after the shooting — and
seen in videos that circulated widely on social media — was determined not to
be the shooter, the authorities said.
Glenn
Thrush covers the Department of Justice for The Times and has also written
about gun violence, civil rights and conditions in the country’s jails and
prisons.
Nicholas
Bogel-Burroughs reports on national stories across the United States with a
focus on criminal justice. He is from upstate New York.


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