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FBI terror hunter blows the lid on search for Charlie Kirk’s assassin

The assassin who gunned down conservative firebrand Charlie Kirk with a single, precise shot on a Utah campus was almost certainly a trained professional who may take years to catch, a former FBI chief has warned.

Chris Swecker, who served as assistant FBI director in the 2000s, told the Daily Mail that everything about the Wednesday shooting at Utah Valley University suggested a calculated, and methodical operation rather than the chaotic violence America has grown grimly accustomed to.

‘This one feels very different,’ Swecker said.

‘It feels like this guy was a professional. One shot from a pretty good distance, an accurate hit under a tent surrounded by people — and then he got away without leaving any evidence behind.’

Kirk, 31, the combative co-founder of Turning Point USA and a close ally of President Donald Trump, was speaking to more than 3,000 students and supporters when the bullet ripped through his neck. He fell to the ground as panicked spectators screamed and scrambled for cover.

The gunman, described by witnesses as wearing dark clothing and of ‘college age,’ fired from a rooftop overlooking the courtyard before fleeing. Investigators later recovered a high-powered rifle and released a photo of a ‘person of interest.’

Utah Governor Spencer Cox branded it ‘a political assassination,’ pledging that the killer would be caught and face the death penalty. Trump declared Kirk ‘Great, and even Legendary,’ hailing him as a ‘martyr for truth and freedom.’

For Swecker, who oversaw major FBI investigations during his tenure, the hallmarks of Wednesday’s killing are stark.

Kirk, 31, (pictured with his wife Erika and their two children) was fatally shot in the neck Wednesday while speaking at his own event. He was addressing a large crowd when a single shot rang out at around 12.20pm local time

‘Most attempted assassinations we’ve seen have been amateurish… This one was not. This was a professional operation,’ he said.

He pointed to the fact that Kirk was seated beneath a white tent emblazoned with the slogans ‘The American Comeback’ and ‘Prove Me Wrong.’ Hitting a target through canvas, at distance, with one clean shot would demand more than luck.

‘You can’t take that shot without a scope,’ Swecker said.

‘There’s got to be training here — whether military, law enforcement, or someone who’s spent a long time with a rifle.’

He added: ‘He had a planned escape route. He was out of there quickly, taking advantage of the confusion and panic afterwards.’

Cell phone videos show the figure on the roof moving rapidly after firing, suggesting he knew the moment to flee. Within minutes, investigators believe, he had vanished into the surrounding neighborhood and perhaps sped off in a waiting car.

Swecker compared the coming manhunt to two of the most grueling in modern American history.

‘This case may be more like the Unabomber,’ he said. ‘It could take a long time and some luck to catch him.’

He expects agents to follow the same painstaking methods used to identify Boston Marathon bombers Tamerlan and Dzhokhar Tsarnaev in 2013.

‘Right now it’s manpower-intensive: scouring CCTV, cell phone videos, even gas station cameras — walking it backwards like we did in the Boston Marathon bombing,’ Swecker said.

With up to 3,000 eyewitnesses and countless hours of shaky cell phone footage, investigators face a colossal task.

‘The FBI will be trawling social media, the deep web, the dark web — looking for anyone who posted about Kirk or hinted at this. Sometimes the trail starts there,’ he added.

'This one feels very different,' former FBI boss Chris Swecker told the Daily Mail

Swecker says finding Kirk's killer could be as arduous as the complex manhunts for Unabomber Ted Kaczynski (pictured) or the Boston Marathon bombers Tamerlan and Dzhokhar Tsarnaev

President Donald Trump (pictured with Kirk in December last year) published a grave, four-minute statement on Kirk's death from the Oval Office to his Truth Social account

Law enforcement officials searched the Utah Valley University campus for the shooter Wednesday, but he still remains at large

‘They’ll also put out a public call for tips. Maybe somebody’s brother knows who it was. That might be what cracks this case.’

The brazen assassination of one of the right’s biggest culture warriors comes amid a spike in politically motivated attacks across the United States.

In recent months, a Minnesota state lawmaker and her husband were murdered in their home; a Colorado parade was firebombed by militants demanding Hamas release hostages; and Pennsylvania’s governor escaped an arson attack at his house.

Most infamously, Trump himself was grazed by a would-be assassin’s bullet during a Pennsylvania rally last year.

‘The politics make this even stranger,’ Swecker said. ‘That part of the country is militia territory, mostly far-right. And yet the target was a conservative figure, in a conservative state, at a conservative college.’

The paradox, he suggested, may complicate any attempt to profile the shooter. Unlike past gunmen driven by clear ideological grudges, this assassin may defy easy categorization.

Questions are also swirling around the security measures in place on Wednesday.

Utah Valley University had just six campus police officers patrolling the event, augmented by Kirk’s private security team. For Swecker, that was never going to be enough.

‘Campus police are undermanned and not equipped for this,’ he said. ‘Universities don’t have the mindset or appetite to make their campuses look like armed camps — but with a figure like Charlie Kirk, they should have over-planned security.’

He noted that most preparations for high-profile speakers focus on potential disruptions from the crowd, not snipers lurking hundreds of yards away. ‘The risk of a sniper from 200 yards is really hard to prepare for,’ he conceded.

Still, Swecker says administrators underestimated the potential threat. ‘When you have a Charlie Kirk on a college campus — even if it’s a friendly forum — you should over-plan. Because it is foreseeable there could be trouble.’

Kirk’s death sent shockwaves through the conservative movement he helped galvanize.

The FBI has released images of a person of interest (shown above) in the Charlie Kirk assassination as they asked the public for help identifying them

Federal agents said earlier that they found a high-powered rifle in the woods after Kirk was shot dead at Utah Valley University - but admitted they still have not identified the gunman

President Donald Trump announced that he would be posthumously giving Charlie Kirk a Presidential Medal of Freedom, the nation's highest civilian honor. Trump made the announcement at the top of his remarks at the 9/11 ceremony Thursday at the Pentagon

Kirk was seen sitting in a gazebo on campus and taking questions from the 3,000-person crowd before he was shot and killed

Born in Illinois, he co-founded Turning Point USA in 2012 at just 18, aiming to proselytize for low taxes and limited government on college campuses. The group initially struggled but soon drew deep-pocketed donors impressed by Kirk’s flair for confrontation.

By 2016, Turning Point was firmly in Trump’s orbit, with Kirk serving as an aide to Donald Trump Jr. during the campaign. He became a regular fixture on Fox News and other conservative outlets, railing against liberal academia and ‘woke’ culture.

The Utah rally was billed as the launch of his ‘American Comeback Tour.’ Hours before he was killed, an online petition to ban his appearance had collected nearly 1,000 signatures, underscoring his polarizing presence on campus.

Trump’s eulogy for Kirk as a ‘martyr for truth and freedom’ cemented his role as a conservative icon — but also ensured that his death will deepen America’s bitter partisan divisions.

Helicopters circled above the leafy neighborhoods bordering campus Thursday as armed officers knocked on doors. Utah Valley University remained shut, its lawns and walkways eerily quiet.

For Swecker, the investigation is only beginning.

‘We’re still trying to figure out where the Kennedy shots came from,’ he reflected. ‘Pinpointing this one is going to be just as hard.’

But he remains clear-eyed about the scale of the challenge ahead: ‘This was not some chaotic, spontaneous act. It was a highly precise, well-planned operation — which doesn’t fit the usual profile of a disorganized mind.’

And that, he warns, makes the assassin all the more dangerous.

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