Turning Point: ATF Laundry?
Was Charlie Kirk killed because he intended to have a DOGE-like investigation done poring over the donations to Turning Point USA? Did he fear the non-profit had become a tool used by dirty parties to launder money? Specifically, was his focus upon the ATF — the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives?
Investigative reporter George Webb raises these issues in a new video Tuesday — a video he said he had to wait until he got out of Utah and found himself in a safer place to produce. Besides the video, Webb also assembled a written substack, which we carry here: https://georgewebb.substack.com/p/the-st-george-legacy-how-do-we-do
Advance knowledge of the ATF’s involvement was the reason George Webb had been at the airport in St. George, Utah, waiting for Tyler Robinson’s appearance, before the FBI had even arrested him as the prime suspect in the political assassination of Charlie Kirk. The shooting happened around noon on September 10 on the campus of Utah Valley University in Orem, Utah,
Webb notes, “Our investigators published the “St. George Welcoming Party” video day of the Charlie Kirk murder when FBI had no idea where the killer was.”
Says Webb, “If you know that Charlie Kirk was calling for an AI DOGE-type audit of TPUSA, and he had several yelling matches with key donors on the topic, you are way down the track to figure out why Charlie Kirk was killed. Quite simply put, Charlie Kirk had a very strong suspicion that Turning Point USA was being used to launder drug money through their Arizona headquarters.”
This is nothing new, says Webb. ATF has been running drugs and guns and laundering the money since the days of Iran-Contra. Webb contends that the “terrorist” bombing of the Alfred P. Murrah Federal Building in Oklahoma City back in 1995 was little more than a ruse by rogue ATF agents to erase records, effectively stopping the last big investigation into the shenanigans of these drug runners.
As Webb ominously explains, “Murder doesn’t stop these folks.” Here’s more:


