A shocking claim has surfaced in the fallout of last week’s political assassinations in Minnesota: an alleged letter from murder suspect Vance Boelter reportedly accuses Gov. Tim Walz of ordering the assassination of U.S. Sen. Amy Klobuchar.
According to multiple reports, Boelter allegedly sent the letter to the FBI prior to the June 14 attack that left Speaker Emerita Melissa Hortman and her husband dead and State Sen. John Hoffman and his wife hospitalized. In the letter, Boelter supposedly claimed Walz directed him to kill Klobuchar so the governor could take her U.S. Senate seat.
The claim has circulated across media outlets and social platforms in recent days. Fox News host Jesse Watters discussed the alleged letter on his show, citing unnamed sources familiar with the case. The Hindustan Times reported that two individuals disclosed the letter’s contents to the Star Tribune.
Minnesota assassin Vance Boelter told the FBI in a letter that TIM WALZ asked him to KILL Sen. Amy Klobuchar so that Walz could take her seat in the US Senate.
THIS IS WHY they are hiding the manifesto.
WE NEED A FULL INVESTIGATION NOW! Walz is actively covering this up! pic.twitter.com/WPzpxjJ5DW
— Alex Jones (@RealAlexJones) June 21, 2025
But officials say there is no evidence supporting the explosive accusation. A spokesperson for the Hennepin County Attorney’s Office, Daniel Borgertpoepping, told the Star Tribune:
“Due to the seriousness of the allegations it contains, we will state only that we have seen no evidence that the allegations regarding Governor Walz are based in fact.”
Neither the FBI nor the Minnesota Bureau of Criminal Apprehension has confirmed the letter exists or that Boelter ever sent it.
Questions Mount Around Motive
Despite initial portrayals of Boelter as a conservative extremist, evidence points in multiple directions. As The Dallas Express previously reported, Boelter left behind flyers in his car for the radical left-wing “No Kings Day” protest movement — a nationwide mobilization targeting former President Donald Trump.
The coordinated anti-Trump protests occurred on the same day as the killings and were backed by progressive organizations including Indivisible, MoveOn, Bernie Sanders’ Our Revolution, and the ACLU.
Boelter had also previously served on a state workforce board after being appointed by both Walz and former Gov. Mark Dayton, both Democrats. His résumé includes a string of bizarre jobs — including harvesting eyeballs from cadavers and working in the Democratic Republic of Congo.
Walz, for his part, had already announced plans to run for a third term as governor in 2026 — not for the U.S. Senate — raising doubts about the credibility of the letter’s alleged motive.
Walz’s Rhetoric Under Scrutiny
The governor has also come under fire for his own incendiary remarks just two weeks before the murders, as previously reported by The Dallas Express. During a public appearance, Walz called Trump a “wannabe dictator” and said Democrats should “bully the sh*t out of him back.”
“Maybe it’s time for us to be a little meaner. Maybe it’s time for us to be a little more fierce,” Walz told the crowd.
The comments drew widespread criticism. “There’s no place for any of this rhetoric from our political leaders,” Dr. Phil said on The Real Story. “Encouraging bullying from the top sends a lethal message.”
Walz’s office has denied any involvement in the shootings and says it is cooperating with law enforcement.
Sen. Klobuchar has not publicly commented on the letter.
Truth Still Unknown — But Stakes Are Clear
Whether the letter is real, fabricated, or delusional, the fallout reveals a deeper problem: the rising normalization of political hatred — and the growing tendency among both media and officials to ignore facts that contradict their preferred narrative.
The Dallas Express will continue to track developments and report the facts as they emerge, without fear or favor.