
In a deeply emotional account, Erika Kirk has revealed the heartbreaking way she first learned her husband, conservative activist Charlie Kirk, had been assassinated.
On September 10, Erika was in Phoenix, Arizona, sitting at her mother’s hospital bedside while she underwent treatment. Charlie, meanwhile, was in Utah, hosting an outdoor Q&A at Utah Valley University.
At 11:23 a.m., her phone buzzed with a message from Charlie’s longtime assistant, Michael McCoy: “He’s been shot!” Erika later told The New York Times she somehow felt she knew what the words would be before reading them.

She immediately rushed to the airport, but Charlie was pronounced dead while she was still in the air. “I’m looking at the clouds and the mountains. It was such a gorgeous day, and I was thinking: This is exactly what he last saw,” she recalled.
A Final Goodbye
When Erika arrived at the hospital in Utah, the sheriff tried to prepare her, warning that the bullet had wrecked her husband’s neck. Still, she insisted on seeing him.
“With all due respect, I want to see what they did to my husband,” she said.
She described his body with haunting tenderness: his eyes left half-open, and he appeared to have a smile on his face. “Like he’d died happy. Like Jesus rescued him. The bullet came, he blinked, and he was in heaven.”
She kissed him one final time before saying goodbye.
Fear That Came True
Erika admitted that shortly before the shooting, she told Charlie she was worried for his safety because he had received multiple death threats. She and a friend suggested he wear a bulletproof vest or sit behind bulletproof glass at outdoor debates. But Charlie, confident in his security team, chose to continue meeting students face-to-face.
Over 30 hours later, Tyler Robinson, 22, was arrested and charged with the killing. Prosecutors say Robinson wrote in texts after the attack: “I’ve had enough of his hatred.”
A Widow’s Grace
Now the new CEO of Turning Point USA, Erika addressed more than 100,000 mourners at Charlie’s memorial. In an extraordinary act of faith, she publicly forgave her husband’s killer.
“I forgive him because it was what Christ did. And it is what Charlie would do,” she said, her voice breaking. “The answer to hate is not hate. The answer… is always love.”
She added: “After Charlie’s assassination, we didn’t see violence or riots. Instead, we saw what my husband always prayed for in this country — revival.”
A Stadium in Tears
Those who attended the Glendale, Arizona service said Erika’s words brought the vast crowd to tears. The mood shifted from defiance during JD Vance’s speech to a hushed grief when Erika spoke. Even President Trump’s address, unusually personal, revealing just how close the two men were, could not match the raw tenderness of a wife describing her final goodbye.