The Federal Bureau of Investigation is investigating social media posts by at least seven different accounts that appeared to indicate foreknowledge of the assassination of Charlie Kirk, according to three people familiar with the investigation and screenshots obtained by the Free Beacon.
The posts—one of which referenced the date of Kirk’s assassination, September 10, more than a month before it took place—were all deleted in the days following the killing.
Several of the accounts appear to belong to transgender individuals, and at least one of them followed suspect Tyler Robinson's roommate, with whom Robinson was allegedly in a relationship, on TikTok.
Another account posted on August 6—more than a month before the shooting—that "september 10th will be a very interesting day." After Kirk’s assassination, the account followed up: "I plead the fifth."
The morbid quip was reposted by an account named "churbum75m (SAW TYLER JUNE 30)," who appears to follow Robinson’s roommate, Lance Twiggs, on TikTok, where Twiggs’s username is "lanclotl."
Minutes after Kirk was pronounced dead, churbum75m posted on X: "WE FUCKING DID IT."
Several of the accounts under investigation appear to be associated with LGBT subcultures. One individual, "Osamu bin Tezuka," used the X handle "@fujoshincel," a reference to a genre of anime that depicts romantic relationships between men.
@fujoshincel Another user, "@NajraGalvz," who had wished death to Kirk and predicted that "something big will happen" when he set foot on campus, had identified as nonbinary on X.
@fujoshincel @NajraGalvz And in a video posted on TikTok the night before the shooting, an individual who appears to be transgender wrote that "charles james kirk…does not know what’s coming tomorrow."
@fujoshincel @NajraGalvz The investigation of the posts comes as the FBI is already examining whether pro-transgender groups knew about Robinson’s plan in advance. That probe, first reported by the New York Post, includes Armed Queers SLC, whose logo features high-caliber rifle bullets.
Earlier this year, Ilhan Omar (D., Minn.) complained to Business Insider she's been the subject of a "coordinated right-wing disinformation campaign" claiming she's worth millions of dollars. "Maybe try checking my public financial statements," she said, "and you will see I barely have thousands let alone millions."
The Free Beacon did check Omar's latest disclosure. It shows Omar and her husband, Tim Mynett, are worth at least $6 million and as much as $30 million.
Their wealth is derived almost entirely from the value of Mynett’s ownership stake in his two companies that, together, were worth no more than $51,000 at the end of 2023.
The exact value of Omar's fortune at the end of 2024 is unclear—lawmakers disclose the value of their holdings and debts in ranges. Still, the figures in Omar's latest disclosures show that her and her husband's net worth skyrocketed by at least 3,500 percent in just one year.
NEW: Both Pfizer and Amazon earned perfect scores on the 2021 Corporate Equality Index, which rates how well companies treat their LGBT employees.
That same year, the companies gave at least $1 million to a nonprofit that brings U.S. officials to Qatar, "a country that criminalizes same-sex relations, bans displays of the pride flag, and has tortured LGBT people."
That money went to the Attorney General Alliance (AGA), a "bipartisan forum" for state attorneys general. Bankrolled largely by top corporations, the group pays for AGs to go on foreign trips with lobbyists from the companies they regulate.
One premier destination, a trove of documents reviewed by the Free Beacon shows, is Qatar, a hotbed of human trafficking and the home of Hamas's political bureau.
REPORT: A government-subsidized grocery store in Kansas City is on the brink of closure amid spiraling crime, plummeting sales, and empty shelves.
Zohran Mamdani—the frontrunner in New York City's mayoral election following his upset Democratic primary win over former governor Andrew Cuomo—has campaigned on opening similar supermarkets in the Big Apple.
KC Sun Fresh, which opened in 2018 inside a city-owned strip mall and was taken over by a nonprofit in 2022, is struggling to deal with spiraling crime, plummeting sales, and empty shelves, according to the Washington Post.
The store "lost $885,000 last year and now has only about 4,000 shoppers a week," the Post reported. "Despite a recent $750,000 cash infusion from the city, the shelves are almost bare."
WATCH: A CNN doctor who painted a dark picture of President Donald Trump's has little experience treating patients, instead spending her career as a diversity, equity, and inclusion specialist.
She is also an "apostle" of a church whose leader describes Trump as the "antichrist."
When the White House revealed that President Donald Trump had received the broadly unremarkable diagnosis of chronic venous insufficiency, CNN trotted out Dr. Chris Pernell to assess it.
She painted a dark picture, noting that the common condition "can be debilitating" and can "actually put a person at risk for deep venous thrombosis."
DATA: California maintains a little-known "behested payments" database that discloses when state officials request others to make charitable donations on their behalf.
It shows that Gavin Newsom has requested millions of dollars in contributions to his wife's charity, the California Partners Project, as well as an entity that pays for his out-of-state and overseas travel, the California Protocol Foundation.
Corporate donors who give big to those groups, it turns out, have a habit of getting what they want from Newsom.
In one prominent case, Newsom's office sent an August 2024 letter to the Interior Department opposing a proposed tribal casino project—a few months after a rival tribe that wanted it blocked sent $500,000 to the California Partners Project.
Newsom went on to sue the Trump administration to block the project shortly after he requested the tribe send another $500,000, records show.
JUST IN: Columbia President Claire Shipman Issues Internal Apology Over Messages School Said Lacked 'Context'
Shipman sent the apology note to a small group of colleagues and donors one day after the Free Beacon reported on leaked text messages in which she argued that the school needed to get an "Arab on our board" and suggested that a Jewish trustee should be removed over her pro-Israel advocacy.
"Let me be clear: The things I said in a moment of frustration and stress were wrong," Shipman wrote. "They do not reflect how I feel. I have apologized directly to the person named in my texts, and I am apologizing now to you."