The text messages prosecutors released are supposed to show motive, but anyone under 25 would just laugh. Young people do not write in full sentences with perfect punctuation, yet that is exactly how the government says these texts appeared. It looks less like evidence and more like a script written by someone who never used a group chat.

I asked my kid… pic.twitter.com/BNIdgTjso9
— MotA (@VlynnQ) September 16, 2025
This version might have been believable 🤣🤣🤣 pic.twitter.com/5s0lcMqAyh
— Texan in Seattle (@texaseattle) September 16, 2025
HOLY SH*T:
I put the alleged text exchange between Tyler Robinson and his transgender lover into Chat GPT and asked if it seemed real and genuine.
Chat GPT says the texts are "most likely fabricated," far too detailed, and too incriminating to be real…
Thoughts? pic.twitter.com/96hDBNvCER
— Evan Kilgore 🇺🇸 (@EvanAKilgore) September 16, 2025
I see the FBI has taken to writing fan-fiction. Young gay men talk to one another like this?
Half of it is in cop speak: "interrogated" "squad car" "retrieve it" "swept that spot"
And why does he address multiple loose ends in a convo with his significant other unprompted after… pic.twitter.com/Wg4Awv0gwp
— Sarah (@DDGSarah) September 16, 2025
IS THIS IT?
Is this officially the DUMBEST thing the U.S. government has ever tried to force the American people to believe? pic.twitter.com/OnqZdfKlk4
— HustleBitch (@HustleBitch_) September 16, 2025
🚨🇺🇸CANDACE OWENS: “THE TEXTS ARE FAKE”
Owens claims the Tyler Robinson messages released by the U.S. gov’t were doctored and cherry-picked to push a narrative.
Demands full release with timestamps.pic.twitter.com/nf0U4Y3UeR https://t.co/deFgae82L6
— Mario Nawfal (@MarioNawfal) September 16, 2025