Saturday, May 9, 2026
34.1 C
New Delhi

‘Disgusting’: Who is Matt Gutman? Reporter slammed for calling Tyler Robinson’s text messages ‘very touching’

'Disgusting': Who is Matt Gutman? Reporter slammed for calling Tyler Robinson's text messages 'very touching'

ABC News chief national correspondent Matt Gutman has drawn fierce backlash after describing the text messages exchanged between accused assassin Tyler Robinson and his partner as “very touching.” Critics online branded his remarks “disgusting,” accusing him of romanticising a confession to murder.Speaking on ABC News Live, Gutman reflected on the details revealed in court about Robinson, who is accused of fatally shooting conservative activist Charlie Kirk. “It’s heartbreaking on so many levels, Kyra. Obviously, Charlie Kirk was murdered brutally in front of a crowd of thousands,” Gutman said. “On the other hand, there is this duality of a very portrait of a very human person, a very human experience from this entire family… the kid who had got a 34 out of 36 on the ACT, who had a 4.0.”He continued: “I don’t think I’ve ever experienced a press conference in which we’ve read text messages that are A, so fulsome, so robust, so apparently, allegedly self-incriminating and yet, on the other hand, so touching — right — with the suspect reaching out to his roommate, who was allegedly his boyfriend, who we understand, you know, identified as male at birth, now identifies as female. And the terminology he used, he was trying to protect him. He kept calling him ‘my love.’ ‘My reason for doing this is to protect you,’ you know, but also asking him to delete the messages and not speak to law enforcement.” Gutman added that he was not sure “if we have seen an alleged murder with such specific text messages” that offered “a very intimate portrait into this relationship between the suspect’s roommate and the suspect himself, with him repeatedly calling his roommate, who is transitioning, calling him ‘my love.’ And ‘I want to protect you, my love.’”

Who is Matt Gutman?

Gutman is ABC News’ chief national correspondent and has been with the network for nearly two decades. He reports for World News Tonight with David Muir, 20/20, Good Morning America, Nightline and ABC News Live.

  • With ABC since 2005, covering global and domestic crises from over 50 countries.
  • Chief national correspondent since 2018, previously a senior national correspondent.
  • Reported from Israel after Hamas’s 7 October attack and during Russia’s 2022 invasion of Ukraine.
  • Covered the COVID-19 pandemic, George Floyd protests, mass shootings, wildfires, and immigration crackdowns.
  • Author of The Boys in the Cave and No Time to Panic, a bestselling memoir.
  • Recipient of multiple Edward R. Murrow, Emmy, DuPont, NABJ, and Gracie awards.
  • Host of true crime podcasts Cutthroat Inc. and Devil in the Desert.

Go to Source

Hot this week

From ‘sham contracting’ to cash payments, how migrant workers face exploitation in Australia

A new survey published by Australia’s academic-led Migrant Justice Institute revealed the dark realities faced by migrants who are exploited at work in the country. Read More

Indian Railways To Upgrade Decades-Old Reservation System: What’s Changing for Train Travel?

From August 2026, the national transporter is said to begin migrating trains from its 40-year-old Passenger Reservation System (PRS) to a modern, upgraded platform. Read More

Sudden Deaths Killed 120 Working-Age Men Daily In India, Reveals NCRB Data

Sudden deaths are defined as unexpected deaths that are instantaneous or occur within minutes from any cause other than violence Go to Source Read More

PM Modi Meets Families Of Slain BJP Workers After Bengal Swearing-In Ceremony

PM Modi interacted with the families of Debasish Mondal, Soumitra Ghoshal, and Ananda Paul, expressing condolences and standing in solidarity with them. Read More

From Red Bengal To Right Bengal: Why Suvendu Adhikari’s Rise Is More Than A Regime Change

The state has not just changed its government; it has changed the direction of its political civilisation Go to Source Read More

Topics

From ‘sham contracting’ to cash payments, how migrant workers face exploitation in Australia

A new survey published by Australia’s academic-led Migrant Justice Institute revealed the dark realities faced by migrants who are exploited at work in the country. Read More

Indian Railways To Upgrade Decades-Old Reservation System: What’s Changing for Train Travel?

From August 2026, the national transporter is said to begin migrating trains from its 40-year-old Passenger Reservation System (PRS) to a modern, upgraded platform. Read More

Sudden Deaths Killed 120 Working-Age Men Daily In India, Reveals NCRB Data

Sudden deaths are defined as unexpected deaths that are instantaneous or occur within minutes from any cause other than violence Go to Source Read More

PM Modi Meets Families Of Slain BJP Workers After Bengal Swearing-In Ceremony

PM Modi interacted with the families of Debasish Mondal, Soumitra Ghoshal, and Ananda Paul, expressing condolences and standing in solidarity with them. Read More

From Red Bengal To Right Bengal: Why Suvendu Adhikari’s Rise Is More Than A Regime Change

The state has not just changed its government; it has changed the direction of its political civilisation Go to Source Read More

Indian Foreign Secretary Vikram Misri’s Nepal Visit Postponed, Here’s Why | Exclusive

Misri’s visit had been planned after talks between Nepal Foreign Minister Shisir Khanal and External Affairs Minister S Jaishankar in Mauritius. Read More

A Proactive Election Commission: The Silent Hero Behind Bengal’s Violence-Free Polls

For Bengal’s 294 Assembly seats, around 500 observers and 2,500 CAPF companies were deployed as the EC mounted one of the country’s largest poll-monitoring exercises. Read More

Related Articles