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Erika Kirk Demands Full Courtroom Transparency in Tyler Robinson’s Preliminary Hearing, Judge Denies Motion

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Erika as Miss Arizona USA winner in 2012

PROVO, Utah — Erika Kirk, the widow of conservative activist Charlie Kirk, filed a new motion this week demanding that all evidence presented during the preliminary hearing for the man accused of killing her husband be made visible to everyone in the courtroom, a request a Utah judge ultimately denied as the proceedings continued into their fourth day Thursday.

Tyler Robinson, 23, is charged with 10 crimes in connection with the September 10, 2025, shooting death of Kirk, who was fatally shot while speaking at a “Prove Me Wrong” event at Utah Valley University in Orem. The charges include aggravated murder, a capital first-degree felony; felony discharge of a firearm causing serious bodily injury, a first-degree felony; two counts of obstruction of justice, a second-degree felony; two counts of tampering with a witness, a third-degree felony; and committing a violent offense in the presence of a child, a Class A misdemeanor. Robinson has not been convicted, and the charges against him remain allegations that prosecutors must prove beyond a reasonable doubt at trial.

The preliminary hearing, which began Monday and is scheduled to run through Friday, is intended to determine whether prosecutors have established probable cause for the case to proceed to trial. Judge Tony Graf has presided over several days of testimony and argument, including disputes over how much evidence can be shown publicly in the courtroom given ongoing concerns from Robinson’s defense team about protecting his right to a fair trial.

In a supplemental filing submitted Wednesday evening, attorney Jeffrey Neiman, representing Erika Kirk on behalf of the victim’s family, argued that Kirk and Charlie Kirk’s parents had traveled to the courthouse specifically to observe the evidence being presented against the man accused of killing their husband and son, only to find themselves unable to view certain exhibits admitted during testimony. “At certain points throughout the preliminary hearing, the Kirk family sat in the room while evidence was admitted but not presented for their viewing,” the filing stated, according to multiple outlets that reviewed the document. “They were present in body, yet denied the very thing their presence was meant to secure: the ability to meaningfully observe the preliminary hearing.”

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The filing went further, characterizing the current process as insufficient to satisfy the family’s rights as crime victims under Utah law. “The right ‘to be present’ is hollow if the victim or his representative is physically in the room but is prevented from seeing the evidence the Court is receiving,” Neiman wrote. “A right to attend that does not include the ability to perceive what is happening is not meaningful presence at all.”

Neiman’s filing specifically requested three things: that all exhibits admitted into evidence during the first three days of the hearing but not shown in the courtroom be published during Thursday’s proceedings; that any exhibit admitted during the remainder of the hearing be displayed openly and in real time for everyone lawfully present; and that no further evidence be received by the court in a manner that conceals it from those in the courtroom. The filing directly criticized the alternative approach taken so far, stating, “To receive evidence in a manner shielded from those seated in the courtroom—as happened today—is not transparency. And in the absence of transparency, speculation and conspiracy theories related to the tragic assassination of Mr. Kirk will continue to proliferate in the public domain, breeding doubt and distrust in the judicial system. This is not what anyone should want.”

Judge Graf ruled on the motion Thursday, deciding that the court would continue its existing case-by-case process for determining how evidence is presented rather than adopt a blanket requirement to display all admitted evidence to the courtroom, according to reporting from KUTV. Graf has previously described the task of balancing transparency in judicial proceedings against a defendant’s constitutional right to a fair trial as a “fine line.”

Much of the dispute over evidence access this week has centered on a recorded interview with Lance Twiggs, Robinson’s former roommate and romantic partner. Prosecutors sought to admit the full recording, including audio that could be captured by courtroom cameras, while Robinson’s defense team pushed for significant redactions, arguing that unrestricted public release of the video could compromise Robinson’s right to a fair trial. Defense attorney Richard Novak told the court that “the number one concern in this proceeding is Mr. Robinson’s right to a fair trial.” Following extended arguments Wednesday, Graf ordered additional redactions to the interview before it could be shown, and prosecutors agreed to prepare the edited version for presentation during Thursday’s session, with the redacted recording distributed to both the defense and the court once the edits were completed.

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Neiman had separately argued in court that the Kirk family strongly believes the full Twiggs interview should be made public. “The Kirk family believes strongly it should be made public for the world to see,” Neiman said, according to KSL.com. “To not be transparent here will create doubt and distrust in the judicial system.”

The preliminary hearing has featured testimony from multiple law enforcement witnesses over its first several days, including a University police officer who was present at the scene of the shooting, a Utah State Bureau of Investigation agent who collected footage and other evidence following the shooting, and a forensic examiner called by the defense to testify about a screwdriver and towel recovered from the crime scene. Doorbell and surveillance footage tied to the investigation has also been presented during the proceedings.

Erika Kirk and Charlie Kirk’s parents have attended the hearing in person since it began Monday, according to multiple outlets covering the proceedings. The hearing is scheduled to conclude Friday, at which point Judge Graf is expected to rule on whether prosecutors have presented sufficient evidence for the case against Robinson to proceed to trial.

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PetSmart closing its only San Francisco store, citing online shopping

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PetSmart closing its only San Francisco store, citing online shopping

San Francisco pet owners are set to lose access to one of the pet care industry’s biggest brands with the upcoming closure of the city’s lone PetSmart location.

PetSmart’s store located in the City Center shopping center on Geary Blvd. is set to close on July 19, according to a report by SFGate.

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The pet store chain confirmed the planned closure in an email to SFGate, explaining that the company remains “committed to serving pet parents throughout San Francisco, who will continue to have access to nearby PetSmart locations, including our Daly City store, as well as online shopping with convenient delivery options.”

BLUE CITY’S LARGEST MALL NOW 93% VACANT AS VALUE PLUNGES $1 BILLION OVER THE PAST DECADE

A PetSmart storefront

PetSmart is planning to close its lone location in San Francisco. (Kevin Carter/Getty Images)

The company also told the outlet that it’s expanding fulfillment capabilities at the Daly City store to better serve the community.

San Francisco PetSmart employees who will be affected by the closure are being offered resources to help in their transition and “information about opportunities at nearby PetSmart locations,” SFGate reported.

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SAKS FIFTH AVENUE SHUTTING DOWN SAN FRANCISCO LOCATION AFTER NEARLY 45 YEARS

San Francisco Golden Gate Bridge

San Francisco’s lone PetSmart location is reportedly closing this month. (Justin Sullivan/Getty Images)

PetSmart’s San Francisco location has provided boarding services for customers’ dogs and cats, along with grooming services, though those services aren’t currently available at the location, according to the company’s website – though pet training and adoption services remain available.

The company cited “a number of factors” as contributing to the decision to close in its comment to SFGate, noting that with increasing numbers of customers using online shopping, autoship and same-day delivery services, PetSmart is adapting how to best serve pet owners.

FOX Business reached out to PetSmart for comment.

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BLOOMINGDALE’S TO CLOSE STORE IN DOWNTOWN SAN FRANCISCO

Chewy online pet retailer

PetSmart previously acquired Chewy, though it was spun off by BC Partners. (Gabby Jones/Bloomberg via Getty Images)

San Francisco’s retail sector has faced headwinds in recent years, with a number of Walgreen’s stores closing as well as the San Francisco Centre shopping mall losing brands like Adidas, American Eagle, Bloomingdale’s, Nordstrom and Michael Kors.

PetSmart was acquired by private equity firm BC Partners in 2015 for $8.7 billion and the firm remains its majority shareholder, though Apollo made a strategic investment in the chain in 2023.

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The company acquired Chewy – a rival pet product retailer that focuses on e-commerce – through a deal in 2017, though BC Partners moved to separate the two companies in 2023.

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Griffin tells socialists to ‘read a damn history book’ as Wall Street flees NY

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Griffin tells socialists to 'read a damn history book' as Wall Street flees NY

Citadel founder and CEO Ken Griffin took direct aim at rising socialist sentiment in America, telling progressive politicians to “read a damn history book” while warning that high taxes and poor public services are driving Wall Street out of blue states.

Speaking at a Goldman Sachs symposium, the billionaire hedge fund manager detailed how he believes fiscal mismanagement in cities like New York is accelerating a financial migration toward business-friendly hubs in Florida and Texas, according to audio obtained exclusively by Fortune.

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“I believe Citadel will be a principal player in financial services for far longer than [New York City Mayor Zohran Mamdani] will be mayor,” Griffin said according to Fortune. “We intend to be here for decades. And he will be here for a few years.”

“How have we ended up with so many 20- and 30-year-olds who actually think socialism is the path to prosperity?” Griffin asked, while noting World Bank data showing that when China shifted toward free-market policies, it lifted roughly 800 million people out of poverty over a 40-year period.

A BILLIONAIRE’S BACKING – AND LIFELONG LOVE OF SOCCER – HELPED BRING MAURICIO POCHETTINO TO TEAM U.S.A.

“It’s the greatest success story in the history of humanity,” he continued, saying that “whether it’s Bernie Sanders, whether it’s Mamdani,” to “read a damn history book for once and then tell us how to run our country.”

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Ken Griffin speaks at conference

Citadel CEO and founder Ken Griffin at the Semafor World Economy Summit meetings in Washington, D.C., on April 14, 2026. (Getty Images)

Griffin’s comments come after similar remarks he made at the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland, earlier this year. The CEO has also publicly criticized Mamdani over taxes, wealth distribution and the city’s business climate, as well as a viral advertisement that called out Griffin’s New York City penthouse.

Shortly after the pandemic, Citadel relocated its headquarters to Miami, where the firm is constructing a 1.7 million-square-foot office tower in the city’s downtown financial district.

During the Goldman Sachs symposium, Griffin also questioned the corporate hype surrounding artificial intelligence, arguing that companies often confuse genuine technological advances with marketing buzzwords.

At a dinner with top CEOs “about two years ago,” Griffin said many executives were enthusiastic about artificial intelligence, but he was skeptical.

“I couldn’t help myself. I’m like, ‘Let’s go around the table and share stories about how AI is transforming your business,’… not one involved AI.”

“There is a technological revolution happening, of which AI is a component of the story,” he told Goldman Sachs executive Ashok Varadhan Mahajan, “but it’s just a piece.”

Griffin also warned that a Chinese blockade of Taiwan would trigger an immediate economic shock in the United States by cutting off access to Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co. (TSMC), the world’s largest contract chipmaker, and shrinking the U.S. economy by an estimated 8% within six months.

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“As an American I get frustrated by this,” he said. “Simply put, we go into a Great Depression in the blink of an eye. Unlike any we’ve seen before… everything freezes.”

Citadel did not immediately respond to Fox News Digital’s request for comment.

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iHeart agrees to resolve US probe into airplay practices

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iHeart agrees to resolve US probe into airplay practices

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SpaceX Shares Rebound Above $150 After Data Center Lawsuit Recently Threatened Its $45 Billion Anthropic Deal

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Tesla CEO Elon Musk has a new title: Technoking

Shares of Space Exploration Technologies Corp. traded at $152.35 on Thursday, up $4.09, or 2.76 percent, recovering some ground after the stock briefly slid toward its initial public offering price earlier in the week following news that a lawsuit had forced the shutdown of a data center tied to a major artificial intelligence contract.

Note: This article is intended to provide factual context and does not constitute financial advice. Readers should consult a licensed financial advisor before making investment decisions.

SPCX shares fell as low as $150.55 during early trading Tuesday, coming close to slipping below the company’s original $135 listing price for a second time since the company’s public debut on June 12. According to TradingKey, the decline was tied to reports that a legal challenge had led to the shutdown of gas turbines powering SpaceX’s Colossus 2 data center, a facility central to a reported $45 billion contract with AI company Anthropic. The lawsuit raised questions about whether the disruption could jeopardize the underlying agreement, contributing to renewed selling pressure on the stock even as broader market sentiment toward technology shares remained mixed heading into the week.

The pullback came just as SpaceX was completing its formal addition to the Nasdaq-100 index on July 7, a milestone that marked the fastest such inclusion in the index’s history, occurring just 15 trading days after the company’s record-setting IPO. According to TradingKey’s analysis published around the time of the inclusion, SPCX was trading near $158 with a technical floor identified around $149, and the firm cautioned that historical precedent from other high-profile Nasdaq-100 additions, including Palantir and Strategy, showed both stocks peaking around their respective inclusion dates before experiencing significant pullbacks in the weeks that followed.

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Despite the recent volatility, Wall Street sentiment toward SpaceX has remained largely constructive. According to TipRanks, SpaceX has received several buy ratings from major brokerages since officially joining the Nasdaq-100, and analysts currently characterize the stock as undervalued relative to its price. Morgan Stanley analyst Adam Jonas has continued to advocate a bullish case for the company, according to CNBC, while separate coverage from JPMorgan described the possibility of a future merger between SpaceX and Tesla, both led by Elon Musk, as “strategically coherent,” fueling continued speculation about the long-term structure of Musk’s broader corporate holdings.

Investor Cathie Wood’s ARK Invest has continued to make notable moves involving SpaceX shares in recent sessions. According to TipRanks, ARK Invest exchange-traded funds purchased 182,000 additional shares of SpaceX on Wednesday, extending a pattern of active portfolio adjustments the firm has made involving the stock since its public listing. Separately, options market activity has shown a moderately bearish tilt among traders in recent sessions, with notable put buying activity observed as shares traded in the mid-$140s earlier in the week.

Beyond the data center dispute, SpaceX has continued to generate a steady stream of corporate news since going public. The company’s newly integrated AI division, operating under the SpaceXAI banner following its merger with Elon Musk’s xAI earlier this year, announced this week that it was releasing its latest large language model, Grok 4.5, in partnership with AI coding company Cursor. SpaceX also moved bitcoin on-chain for the first time in six months on Tuesday, according to TipRanks, an $88 test transaction that ended a lengthy period of blockchain inactivity for the company and drew attention from cryptocurrency-focused analysts tracking corporate bitcoin holdings.

SpaceX’s broader business continues to span three primary segments. Its Space division designs, manufactures and launches reusable rockets, including the Falcon 9, Falcon Heavy and Starship vehicles, for both commercial and government customers, and conducts more orbital launches annually than any other launch provider in the world, including national space programs. Its Connectivity segment operates the Starlink satellite broadband network, which now includes approximately 9,600 satellites in low-Earth orbit delivering service to customers across more than 164 countries and territories. Its AI segment, formed through the xAI acquisition earlier this year, operates the Grok large language model, the X social media platform, and a growing footprint of AI computing infrastructure, including the Colossus data center system at the center of this week’s legal dispute.

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The company’s customer base includes some of the largest institutional space and technology purchasers in the country, with NASA, the U.S. Space Force and the National Reconnaissance Office among its largest government clients. Elon Musk owns approximately 42 percent of SpaceX’s outstanding shares and controls roughly 85 percent of the company’s voting power through a structure of super-voting stock, giving him continued significant control over the company’s strategic direction even as it now trades as a public company.

Valuation remains a central point of debate among analysts covering the stock. According to Morningstar, SpaceX’s aggressively lofty valuation implies that investors will likely need to wait years, if not decades, for the company’s earnings to grow into its current market multiples, even as the firm acknowledged SpaceX’s dominant, decade-long lead over competitors in launch experience and payload volume. The company’s market capitalization stood at approximately $2.13 trillion as of the most recent trading data from TipRanks, reflecting the scale of investor interest in the stock despite its short public trading history.

SpaceX’s 52-week trading range, reflecting price movement since its IPO just weeks ago, spans from a low of $147.11 to a high of $225.64, according to TipRanks, illustrating the significant volatility that has characterized the stock’s brief time on public markets. The company has not yet announced a date for its first quarterly earnings report as a public company, an event analysts have identified as a key upcoming catalyst likely to provide further clarity on the durability of both its core launch and Starlink businesses and its rapidly expanding AI infrastructure segment.

With the data center dispute still developing and the broader Anthropic contract’s status not yet fully clarified in public disclosures, investors are likely to continue monitoring further updates on the legal proceedings, along with SpaceX’s ongoing execution across its space, connectivity and artificial intelligence businesses, as key factors shaping the stock’s trajectory in the weeks ahead following its historic entry into the Nasdaq-100 index.

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Northern Technologies International Corporation (NTIC) Q3 2026 Earnings Call Transcript

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OneWater Marine Inc. (ONEW) Q1 2026 Earnings Call Transcript