Utah County asks state for $2 million to help cover costs in the Tyler Robinson prosecution and defense

Utah Legislature - Appropriations Subcommittee · February 9, 2026

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Summary

Utah County officials told the appropriations subcommittee the high‑profile Tyler Robinson case has put extraordinary one‑time costs on county taxpayers and requested $2,000,000 to help cover prosecution and defense expenses related to the case.

Utah County officials asked the Appropriations Subcommittee Wednesday for a $2 million appropriation to help cover extraordinary costs associated with last year’s high‑profile criminal case involving Tyler Robinson.

Representative Shellenberger introduced the county’s presentation and turned the time over to Ezra Nair, county administrator for Utah County. Nair described the case as a historic, high‑profile matter that took place on state property; although the victim and accused are not county residents, under current law the county is responsible for prosecution and defense costs that arise within its jurisdiction. “Today, we're requesting a $2,000,000 appropriation to assist with the extraordinary cost of the Robinson case,” Nair said.

Nair said the county spends more than $13 million annually on public defense and more than $16 million on prosecution from its general fund, and noted structural limits on county revenue (property tax growth rules) that make one‑time, extraordinary spikes difficult to absorb. He asked the state to partner with the county to cover a portion of the extraordinary costs so local services and public safety obligations are maintained.

Committee members expressed sympathy and a willingness to consider a state contribution; Senator Owens said the state should “pitch in and help you on this one together.” The committee did not vote on the request at the hearing and asked county staff to remain available while legislators consider the request as part of the budget process.

The county’s formal ask was for a $2,000,000 appropriation to be split between defense and prosecution costs.