The SUV Destroyed and the ADL Floor-Sharing Claim (Claims)
:::caution Attributed claims only Releasing and scrapping a vehicle after forensic processing is routine, and federal agencies lease commercial space from private landlords who choose their own tenants. These are two low-confidence claims, collected here for transparency rather than because either is established. Neither asserts wrongdoing by any person or organization. :::
Claim snapshot
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| The claim | (1) The SUV that transported Kirk was "chopped into a thousand pieces," melted down, and quickly disposed of. (2) The FBI's Connecticut building and the ADL are on the same floor |
| Raised by | @iluminomoly and @alleytopfiles (SUV); the investigation file's compiler (ADL floor); Candace Owens (photo release) |
| First surfaced | SUV claim posted 2026-06-26; ADL entry undated |
| Rests on | Anonymous post (SUV); unsourced list entry (ADL) |
| Evidence rating | THIN |
What is alleged
The SUV. Per @iluminomoly, the SUV that took Charlie Kirk to the hospital "was chopped into a thousand pieces. It was melted down. They quickly disposed of that SUV." Investigators pair this with photographs released by Candace Owens, watermarked "CANDACE," reportedly showing the interior of the black GMC Yukon Denali: staining on the leather seating and floor, scattered debris, and — in a separate post by @KaySu00 — an inset close-up of a pale, irregular fragment whose edges appear scorched brown and black. Their argument is that a vehicle containing contested physical evidence, including material some read as burned, was destroyed rather than preserved.
This must be said plainly: the investigation file does not attribute the disposal to the FBI or to any identified party. The claim says "they." No agency, company, owner, or individual is named anywhere in the file as having ordered, performed, or authorized the vehicle's destruction. This page sits in the FBI section because the claim circulates in FBI-adjacent commentary, not because any evidence connects the FBI to it.
The ADL floor. Item 24 of the file's "Strange events" list states that the FBI's Connecticut building and the ADL are on the same floor. It is raised as an institutional-proximity concern — the suggestion being that physical closeness implies something about influence. No address, no building, no source, and no date accompanies the entry.
The ordinary explanation
Vehicles are released and scrapped routinely once forensic processing is complete, and a vehicle whose interior is contaminated with blood is a standard insurance write-off — not a candidate for indefinite storage. More tellingly, the file's own record works against the theory it is offered to support: the same body of reporting indicates the SUV was photographed at an auto auction, which suggests it was released through an ordinary commercial channel and photographed by members of the public. A vehicle sitting on an auction lot where anyone can walk up and take pictures of it is close to the opposite of a rushed secret destruction. The two claims — quickly melted down, and publicly photographed at auction — do not comfortably coexist.
The file's own notes also state that the SUV photographs have not been independently authenticated, that the staining and debris could have innocent explanations including vehicle wear, medical-response materials, and scene contamination, and that the scorched fragment has not been identified or tested and could reflect lighting or image compression. Those caveats are in the record and are not adopted by the posts that circulate the images.
The ADL claim requires little. Federal agencies lease commercial floors from private landlords and have no control whatsoever over who the neighboring tenants are. Co-location in a multi-tenant office building is a fact about a landlord's rent roll and implies nothing about the conduct of any investigation. Thousands of federal offices share buildings with law firms, insurers, nonprofits, and dentists.
What would settle it
- Obtain the SUV's title and disposition history: who owned it, when it was released from evidence, to whom, and what happened to it.
- Obtain the vehicle processing report — what was collected from the interior, and what was tested.
- Have the Owens photographs independently authenticated, with metadata, and the scorched fragment identified.
- For the ADL item: identify the building and address, and check the public tenant record. This is a five-minute question that has not been answered.
Sources
- SUV disposal claim, @iluminomoly
- Candace Owens photo sets, reproduced via @alleytopfiles and @KaySu00 in the investigation file. The file states these images have not been independently authenticated.
- The ADL floor-sharing claim is an unsourced entry in the file's "Strange events" list.