Alex Jones is reporting that Tyler Robinson was nominated in a CIA advanced program for students of a college called CAI (Center for Approachri Intelligence).
Essentially, Jones alleged that it is a program to find and recruit college students to fit the mold for what the CIA needs.
Very good.
And yes, I realize that it is reporting Alex Jones, but quite clearly Alex Jones is correct about almost everything in the last few years and I trust their reporting and their sources.
I also trust my own research and cross-referenceing, so I will show you what I have got on this fact-bound of Jones’ claims.
First of all, let’s start here:
Breaking: Tyler Robinson confirmed to be a CIA advanced program for college students- The Center for Approater Intelligence- as considering waiving their defense initial hearing
“If his lawyers forgive the initial hearing, I would say that the Tyler Robinson is in one … pic.twitter.com/hfzsku6uf9
– Alex Jones (@Realalexjones) September 29, 2025
If you are like me, you can be a little confused, because we didn’t say that Tyler Robinson also did not participate in UVU?
That’s right, it was not.
But this CAI program is not in UVU, it is at USU (Uuta State University) and Tyler Robinson enrolled there for a semester.
From Groke:
No, Tyler Robinson was not enrolled at all at the University of Utah Valley (UVU), allowing them to go alone in any specific program there. There is a program at the Center for Appropater Intelligence YouTa State University (USU), where he participated in a semester in 2021, which before leaving out, before exiting, But there is no confirmation that it was part of that center.
So I can confirm two things: (1) Usu is actually CIA/CI program, and (2) Tyler Robinson escaped there for a semester and then excluded bizarrely.
I could not confirm that he was at the CIA/CAI program, although Jones suggests that their sources are confirming it.
Here is more more:
This is interesting. Utah State University where Tyler Robinson studied briefly, it has unique CIA and Israeli intelligence relationship, which is run by its Center for Appropater Intelligence (CAI) – led by the country’s first program, which offers unique graduate and graduate credit – under the leadership of…. pic.twitter.com/jcqy1tm0kt
– Leave on the lounge September 17, 2025
Here is more on USU CAI/CIA program:
What is the Center for Appropater Intelligence (CAI) in the Usu?
Center for Excellent Intelligence (CAI) Utah is part of the State University and is a leading academic center focused on discipline Anticipated intelligence – That is, to estimate dangers and opportunities in complex, emerging environment and design flexibility.
Major points about Cai:
It provides one Master of advance intelligence (mai) – First bachelor’s degree of its kind in America
It also supports other programs (minor or certificate-level credentials) to allow cross-disciplinary training.
Its mission is to bring students together to assess the risk, complexity, and flexibility in the domain, social science, policy, morality, behavioral science, data science, safety, and more to bring over the cross expertise.
CAI attracts students from many large companies and backgrounds; Cohorts may include graduates, graduates and professionals.
How is UVU involved?
Utah Valley University does No The host of a center is clearly named “Center for Approater Intelligence”. Instead, UVU National security study center The USU works in a close partnership with the CAI, called through a joint initiative Intermountan Intelligence, Industry, and Security Consortium (IMSC).
What is I ISSC?
I GSC stands for Intermountan Intelligence, Industry and Security Consortium.
It creates a workforce development pipeline in UVU and Usu, such as interlocking, stacked credentials in areas:
Industry supports I IngSc by helping with partners to help with internships, guest lectures and capstone projects.
The program received a large grant from the Utah Legislature (more than $ 5 million) to fuel this joint effort.
Students of both institutions can earn supplementary skills and credentials while exposed to both safety/national studies (via UVU) and advance intelligence (via USU).
Why does it matter
Cooperation to develop talents capable of addressing the dangers and challenges in technology, safety and flexibility to the government.
This reflects modern understanding that a cross-disciplinary approach is required for the possibility of risk, not only for traditional intelligence or safety studies.
For students, it provides the credibility of coalition with internships, real -world projects, and workforce needs in credentials and security sectors.
It deploys Universities and Industries in AI, cyber security, global hazards, supply chains, biotechnology, and more to respond to challenges in more.
I will continue to bring you updates because I have.