Law 4: Charlie Kirk Investigation - Trusted Investigators Act
AUTHOR: Bryan Starbuck (BryanStarbuck@gmail.com)
Title
The Charlie Kirk Trusted Investigators Act
Purpose
To establish independent investigation teams led by designated trusted public figures, embedded within federal law enforcement and intelligence agencies, with full authority to investigate the death of Charlie Kirk -- including all leads identified in the 175 Critical Disclosure Items (Schedule A) -- and to publicly release their findings.
Disclaimer: This document does not assert as fact that any individual, organization, or government entity has committed any criminal, illegal, or immoral act. All references to persons and entities are made solely for proposed legislative and legal discovery purposes — to identify what information should be disclosed and investigated through lawful processes. The items listed here are questions for investigation, not conclusions. No statement in this document should be understood as an accusation, allegation, or assertion of wrongdoing against any party. This document exists solely to support public transparency through lawful legislative and judicial processes.
Section 1: Definitions
(a) "Designated Trusted Investigators" means the following individuals:
- Candace Owens
- Dave Smith
- Tucker Carlson
(b) "Investigation Team" means the government employees selected to work with a Designated Trusted Investigator.
(c) "FBI Investigation Team" means the team embedded within the Federal Bureau of Investigation.
(d) "Intelligence Investigation Team" means the team embedded within the relevant Intelligence Community agencies.
(e) "Schedule A" means the document titled "Charlie Kirk 175 Critical To Expose" as maintained at https://github.com/BryanStarbuck/Charlie_Kirk_175_Critical_To_Expose, incorporated by reference.
Section 2: Establishment of Investigation Teams
(a) Each Designated Trusted Investigator shall be authorized to establish:
- One FBI Investigation Team, embedded within the Federal Bureau of Investigation
- One Intelligence Investigation Team, embedded within the relevant Intelligence Community agencies
(b) This creates a total of six investigation teams (three FBI teams, three intelligence teams), each operating independently under their respective Designated Trusted Investigator.
(c) Each Designated Trusted Investigator and their team members shall receive appropriate security clearances within 30 days of enactment. No agency may delay, deny, or revoke these clearances to obstruct the investigation.
(d) Each investigation team shall have an independent budget appropriated for the purpose, including funds for independent legal counsel, forensic experts, and security protection.
Section 3: Team Composition and Selection
(a) Each Designated Trusted Investigator has sole authority to select which government employees they want on their team and which they do not.
(b) Any government employee may submit a request to join any investigation team. Such requests shall be:
- Submitted directly to the Designated Trusted Investigator
- Not routed through or reviewed by the employee's chain of command
- Confidential until the employee is selected
(c) It is unlawful for any manager, supervisor, agency head, or any other person to:
- Prevent a government employee from submitting a request to join a team
- Retaliate against any employee for requesting to join, joining, or serving on a team
- Interfere with the transfer or assignment of a selected employee to a team
- Pressure any employee to decline selection or leave a team
- Monitor, surveil, or intercept communications between an employee and a Designated Trusted Investigator regarding team membership
(d) Selected government employees shall be temporarily reassigned to the investigation team with full pay, benefits, and career protections.
Disclaimer: This document does not assert as fact that any individual, organization, or government entity has committed any criminal, illegal, or immoral act. All references to persons and entities are made solely for proposed legislative and legal discovery purposes — to identify what information should be disclosed and investigated through lawful processes. The items listed here are questions for investigation, not conclusions. No statement in this document should be understood as an accusation, allegation, or assertion of wrongdoing against any party. This document exists solely to support public transparency through lawful legislative and judicial processes.
Section 4: Authority and Access
(a) Each investigation team shall have:
- Full access to all files, records, databases, and systems of their host agency and any other covered agency under Laws 1 and 2
- Full access to all records produced under the DoJ/FBI Forced Disclosure Act (Law 1) and the Intelligence Services Disclosure Act (Law 2)
- Full access to all 175 items in Schedule A and all records responsive to Schedule A
- Authority to interview any government employee
- Authority to compel production of any document or record
- Authority to conduct forensic analysis of any evidence
- Authority to conduct forensic audits of agency document management systems
- Independent office space and secure communications
- Authority to engage independent forensic experts, ballistics experts, explosives experts, audio/video analysts, and any other specialists
(b) No person or agency may:
- Deny access to any information, facility, or system
- Direct, limit, or influence the scope or direction of the investigation
- Require approval from any agency official for any investigative action
- Monitor, surveil, or interfere with team communications
- Withhold any record on the basis of classification, privilege, or any other exemption (subject only to the narrow source protection in Section 5(b))
Section 5: Public Release of Findings
(a) Each Designated Trusted Investigator has the authority to publicly release the findings, conclusions, and supporting evidence from their investigation.
(b) Prior to public release, classified information shall be reviewed solely to redact:
- The identity of currently active human intelligence sources
- Specific technical collection methods currently in active operational use
(c) Redaction shall be limited to the narrowest possible scope. The substance, conclusions, and analytical findings must be disclosed in all cases.
(d) Disputes over redactions shall be resolved by a panel of three federal judges appointed by the Chief Justice, with a presumption in favor of disclosure. The panel shall rule within 14 days.
(e) Each Designated Trusted Investigator may release interim findings at any time without prior approval from any government official.
(f) Each Designated Trusted Investigator may publicly address any and all items in Schedule A, reporting what they have found, what remains unresolved, and what obstruction they have encountered.
Section 6: Mandatory Investigation of Schedule A
(a) Each investigation team shall specifically pursue the leads and information identified in Schedule A (175 Critical Disclosure Items), including but not limited to:
- Exploding Microphone Theory: The DoD contract, the AES facility, the August 25 flight, the microphone evidence, explosive residue, wound characteristics, and the AES factory explosion
- Foreign Intelligence Involvement: Israeli cell phones at UVU, Egyptian aircraft and military contractors, surveillance planes, Counter-UAS testing, foreign nationals in the security zone
- FBI Cover-Up Evidence: FBI requesting video deletion, remotely deleted videos, crime scene paving, blocked FOIAs, decisions not to charge distraction people
- Alternative Shooter / Evidence Planting: Rifle chain of custody, K-9 failure, FBI-directed re-search, clothing discrepancies, man in black at construction site, alternative calibers, laser targeting
- Financial Connections: Wire transfers to Tyler Robinson and Lance Twiggs, payments to distraction people, foreign financial activity in Utah
- Psychological Operations: Manipulation of Tyler Robinson and Lance Twiggs, handler communications via Discord/Steam/in-game chat, electronic equipment at Lance Twiggs' residence
- Pre-Planning and Foreknowledge: Fort Huachuca meetings, One Rodney Square meetings, TPUSA security planning anomalies, Charlie Kirk's death threats, the declined business deal, Hampton meeting
- Electronic Warfare: Cell/internet jamming at UVU, drone video feeds and recipients
(b) Each investigation team shall track and report on each Schedule A item individually, documenting what was investigated, what was found, what was obstructed, and what remains unresolved.
Disclaimer: This document does not assert as fact that any individual, organization, or government entity has committed any criminal, illegal, or immoral act. All references to persons and entities are made solely for proposed legislative and legal discovery purposes — to identify what information should be disclosed and investigated through lawful processes. The items listed here are questions for investigation, not conclusions. No statement in this document should be understood as an accusation, allegation, or assertion of wrongdoing against any party. This document exists solely to support public transparency through lawful legislative and judicial processes.
Section 7: Non-Interference
(a) It shall be a federal crime, punishable by up to 15 years imprisonment, for any person to:
- Obstruct, impede, or interfere with any investigation team
- Destroy, alter, conceal, or withhold information from any investigation team
- Threaten, intimidate, or retaliate against any Designated Trusted Investigator or team member
- Attempt to influence, direct, or limit any investigation
- Monitor, surveil, or intercept communications of any Designated Trusted Investigator or team member
(b) Attempted violations carry the same penalties as completed violations.
Section 8: Whistleblower Channel
(a) Any government employee may submit information, documents, or evidence directly to any Designated Trusted Investigator or investigation team for public disclosure.
(b) It shall be unlawful to persecute, retaliate against, or take any adverse action against any government employee for:
- Submitting information to an investigation team
- Cooperating with an investigation team
- Providing testimony or evidence to an investigation team
(c) Violations carry criminal penalties of up to 5 years imprisonment, mandatory reinstatement, back pay, and civil damages including treble damages.
(d) Any adverse personnel action taken within 2 years of submitting information or cooperating creates a rebuttable presumption of retaliation.
Section 9: Personal Security
(a) Each Designated Trusted Investigator and key team members shall be provided with a dedicated security detail funded by the investigation budget, independent of any agency being investigated.
(b) No covered agency may conduct surveillance of, attempt to monitor, or gather intelligence on any Designated Trusted Investigator or their family members.
(c) Violations of this section constitute a federal crime punishable by up to 10 years imprisonment.
Section 10: Succession
(a) If a Designated Trusted Investigator is unable to serve (due to incapacity, death, or voluntary withdrawal), the remaining Designated Trusted Investigators shall jointly nominate a replacement, subject to confirmation by the relevant congressional committees within 14 days.
(b) If only one Designated Trusted Investigator remains, that investigator shall nominate the replacement subject to congressional confirmation.
(c) An investigation team's work shall not be disrupted by the succession process; existing team members shall continue operating under the acting authority of the team's senior government member until the new Designated Trusted Investigator assumes their role.
Disclaimer: This document does not assert as fact that any individual, organization, or government entity has committed any criminal, illegal, or immoral act. All references to persons and entities are made solely for proposed legislative and legal discovery purposes — to identify what information should be disclosed and investigated through lawful processes. The items listed here are questions for investigation, not conclusions. No statement in this document should be understood as an accusation, allegation, or assertion of wrongdoing against any party. This document exists solely to support public transparency through lawful legislative and judicial processes.
Section 11: Duration and Reporting
(a) Investigation teams shall operate for a minimum of 24 months, extendable by the Designated Trusted Investigator.
(b) Each team shall produce:
- Interim public reports at least every 90 days, addressing Schedule A items
- A comprehensive final public report addressing all 175 items individually
(c) The investigation may not be terminated by any government official. Only the Designated Trusted Investigator may conclude their team's investigation.
Section 12: Coordination
(a) A voluntary coordination mechanism (shared findings database) shall be available to all six investigation teams.
(b) Each team is free to share or withhold findings from other teams at the Designated Trusted Investigator's discretion.
(c) Independent investigations by multiple teams create redundancy that makes suppression of findings virtually impossible.
Section 13: Effective Date
This Act shall take effect immediately upon enactment.