LS ”The Cover-Up is Bigger Than the Crime’: Candace Owens and 50 Cent Lead Viral Charge Against FBI’s Official Charlie Kirk Assassination Narrative ‘ LS
The assassination of conservative voice Charlie Kirk has spiraled from a horrific political crime into a full-blown national crisis of trust, with the official narrative disintegrating under the relentless scrutiny of online sleuths, influential commentators, and even celebrity figures. What began with the FBI’s swift identification of a lone suspect, Tyler James Robinson, has now morphed into a spectacular public clash, fueled by explosive claims from personalities like Candace Owens and 50 Cent who allege a sophisticated cover-up designed to protect bigger, more sinister players.
The story now unfolding is less a criminal investigation and more a political thriller, complete with accusations of manipulated evidence, hidden accomplices, international financing, and a secret plea deal that may name the real shooter.

The FBI’s initial attempt to close the case quickly by naming Tyler Robinson as the lone assassin was met not with closure, but with immediate, digital resistance. The agency released grainy, low-quality CCTV clips and photographs they claimed proved Robinson was lurking around the Utah Valley University (UVU) campus. But the internet, acting as an army of armchair investigators, wasn’t buying it for a second.
The immediate analysis from online communities raised devastating questions:
Bullet Trajectory: Experts noted that the projectile’s trajectory at the scene appeared inconsistent with the rooftop spot where Robinson was allegedly hiding.
Exit Wound Inconsistencies: The theory that a high-powered rifle was used, as the FBI claimed, was directly contradicted by the absence of an exit wound on Charlie Kirk.
The Limp: The FBI suggested Robinson’s unusual gait—or limp—seen in the footage was due to the way he was concealing the rifle. This explanation was quickly dismissed by many, particularly after it was confirmed that Robinson suffers from partial paralysis in his right leg—a pre-existing condition that his family, when interrogated by the FBI, used to identify him. This revelation, which suggests the FBI tried to pass off a known disability as evidence of criminality, instantly eroded public faith.
As social media shredded virtually every aspect of the initial case, FBI Chief Cash Patel was forced to backtrack, announcing an expansion of the investigation. In a remarkable turn of events, Patel stated the bureau would now meticulously investigate even the so-called “wild conspiracy theories” as possible leads. This startling admission confirmed what skeptics already believed: the original evidence was far from airtight. The FBI was now looking at accomplices, text message confessions, the angle of the bullet impact, and even a review of everyone who visited Robinson’s home in the hours leading up to the September 10th shooting. To many, the agency wasn’t solving a crime; it was struggling to control a narrative that had already gone viral.
The moment the FBI attempted to calm the storm with a vague statement promising justice while simultaneously withholding information for the “integrity of the investigation,” Candace Owens stepped into the fray with a series of explosive allegations that turned the case into a full-blown media war.
Owens, who had been vocal about her suspicions for weeks, delivered bombshell after bombshell, directly challenging the foundations of the federal case:
Just when the public thought the story couldn’t get any messier, Candace Owens dropped what she called “proof number two”—an allegation so serious it forced mainstream news outlets to address the mounting distrust. She posted side-by-side images of the rifle from the FBI’s evidence photos and a weapon from a leaked law enforcement training database. They were allegedly identical, down to the serial number.
Her implication was clear and shocking: “Tell me how a gun in your evidence room ends up being used in an active case months later… Unless someone planted it, or worse, unless this whole thing was staged.”
This claim, combined with her later, partial admission that the weapon was legally registered to Tyler but that he wasn’t the shooter, solidified the theory of a setup. Owens posited that Robinson was paid or manipulated to act as a distraction—a decoy to create chaos and allow the real, highly coordinated shooter to slip away unnoticed. The theory suggests a second man arrested on the scene, who reportedly confessed on the spot, was also a scapegoat, designed to muddy the waters and guarantee the true killer’s escape.
The final layer of the controversy was added by rapper 50 Cent, who had been hinting at the case’s vast scale. Following the leaked reports of Robinson’s alleged secret plea deal, 50 Cent jumped back into the conversation with a bold, high-stakes theory that went far beyond domestic politics.
According to inside sources, Robinson allegedly took a plea deal where he confessed to being hired as a decoy but insisted he never fired a shot. Crucially, he reportedly named the real shooter and the person who connected them, a detail that could turn the entire case on its head.
50 Cent then connected the dots to a massive, potential motive: He genuinely believes Charlie Kirk’s shooting is tied to a rumored $50 million donation offer Kirk allegedly refused from a global tech company with deep political ties.
The alleged condition of the deal was that Kirk push a specific pro-Israel narrative within his organization’s messaging. In 50 Cent’s view, this refusal made Kirk a target, suggesting he became “collateral damage” in a power play connected to major money, influence, and possibly even international ties through entities reportedly linked to Tennessee and Yahoo.
The rapper’s public remarks solidified the idea that Robinson is a mere “fall guy” for a crime orchestrated by players with seemingly limitless resources and global reach. His cryptic posts, including a tweet showing a chessboard with the caption “Your move!”, were interpreted by fans as a warning to those in power that the truth could no longer be contained.
The combination of Candace Owens’ direct accusations of federal malfeasance and 50 Cent’s theories of international conspiracy have created a digital battleground. The public no longer simply wants justice; they want the truth about who is “really pulling the strings.” The mountain of inconsistencies, from the digital footprint to the weapon’s history, suggests that the biggest bombshell is yet to drop, and the official investigation’s struggle to contain the narrative proves that for many Americans, this case is not about a lone gunman—it’s about a vast and terrifying cover-up.