Hunter had just finished asking Charlie Kirk a question about how many mass shootings have happened in the United States over the past decade when he heard a loud pop.
The 29-year-old philosophy and mathematics student at Utah Valley University didn’t spend a lot of time around guns, so he didn’t immediately recognize the sound. But he instinctively grasped his head and stepped backward from the microphone as the crowd screamed.
When he saw Kirk bleeding, Hunter knew what had just happened.
“My brain immediately went: drop to the floor. Then I thought: that is an assassination. He was the target. It was right on point. Charlie is dead,” said Hunter, who spoke to the Washington Post on the condition that he be identified by only his first name because he fears he and his family could face threats.
Hitting the ground, Hunter looked at the surrounding students who had queued for over an hour for the chance to debate Kirk. Organizers had moved Hunter to the front of the line when they realized he was a left-wing student with differing opinions, he said. The students reassured each other before crouching and scurrying away from the “Prove Me Wrong” tent as Kirk’s security team hustled the stricken 31-year-old away.
After the shooting, Hunter’s first thought was to find his wife, the mother of his two children, who was in the audience and recording a video at the time of the shot. The pair of political junkies had taken a break from visiting their days-old daughter in a neonatal intensive care unit to attend the event at UVU, where Hunter is studying for his bachelor’s degree.
Immediately after he was reunited with his wife on Wednesday, Hunter sought out a police officer and provided his contact details and the video his wife took of the shooting, he said.
His brother, he said, had also been in a school shooting and lives nearby. The pair had talked about their shocking shared experiences.