Influencer Camilla Araujo condemned online celebrations of Charlie Kirk’s death in an emotional video, calling it “disgusting” and “heartbreaking” to see people mock a father’s killing.

“Regardless of your political beliefs or anything that you believe in, I just want you to know that one day those children will grow up and see the way that their father was brutally murdered,” Araujo said. “Maybe they’re a little bit too young to know or have seen what truly happened, but they feel their mom’s pain and they will see the videos people are posting rejoicing their father’s death.”

Araujo grew visibly emotional in the clip. “That is f—ing disgusting and truly, I’m floored to see how some people are celebrating a human life’s death,” she added. “Politics just divides people and this man was a husband and he was a father of two children. One of them was so young they didn’t even get to experience what being loved by their father looks like.”

She ended her statement by saying, “I’m truly disgusted. I’m heartbroken. My prayers go out to Charlie Kirk and his family.”

Behind Utah Valley University’s Losee building, FBI agents on Wednesday recovered the bolt-action rifle used in the shooting. Officials stated the weapon was a Mauser .30-06, a traditional hunting rifle often sold with five-round magazines.

ATF officials said they won’t comment while the investigation is active. Former ATF Associate Deputy Director Tom Chittum said the use of a bolt-action weapon suggests a single, calculated shot. “This was a longer shot,” he said. “It suggests a person has prepared and practiced.”

The FBI has not confirmed a motive. The shooter fled the scene immediately after the attack. Evidence markers were seen on a hill behind the building, tracking the suspect’s apparent escape route toward a nearby construction site.

Dylan Hope, an electrician working near the scene, told reporters that a coworker operating an excavator had a brief encounter with a man before sirens went off. “The alleged shooter asked if he could walk through the site. The excavator guy stopped him, and the man said he was ‘trying to get home safe,’” Hope said.

Officers later used a canine unit to track the man’s path across the construction zone and onto adjacent private property.

The firearm is now in FBI custody and being tested for DNA or fingerprints. Chittum said the fact it was left behind will help agents trace its origin. “It’ll have biological evidence, and the trace itself will produce leads,” he said.

Kirk, 31, was the founder of Turning Point USA. He was shot once while speaking at a campus event and died at the scene.