
Erika Kirk Shares 3-Word Message to Alleged Killer at Husband Charlie's Memorial Service
The wife of the late Turning Point USA founder gave a speech at his public memorial service over the weekend, where she vividly recalled the moment she laid eyes on her husband's body.
It was the moment that silenced a stadium. Erika Kirk, the heartbroken wife of Turning Point USA founder Charlie Kirk, stepped to the microphone at his public memorial and relived the instant she saw his lifeless body — a raw, searing portrait of love and loss that left mourners gasping.

Erika Kirk speaks during the memorial service for her husband, political activist Charlie Kirk at State Farm Stadium on September 21, 2025, in Glendale, Arizona. | Source: Getty Images
In a voice trembling but unbroken, the 36-year-old widow painted an intimate picture of the ordinary morning that became every wife's worst nightmare, then the shocking discovery that will haunt her forever.
On Sunday, September 21, inside State Farm Stadium in Glendale, Arizona, more than 90,000 people listened as Erika shared the small, tender detail she'd never confessed to her husband in life.

Erika Kirk speaks during the memorial service for her husband, political activist Charlie Kirk at State Farm Stadium on September 21, 2025, in Glendale, Arizona. | Source: Getty Images
"I saw the one single gray hair on the side of his head, which I never told him about," she recalled. "Now he knows." Then, glancing heavenward through tears, she joked, "Sorry, baby," adding, "Telling you now, but never told him. Didn't want to."
But the most jaw-dropping moment of her eulogy came when she turned her words not to her late husband — but to his alleged killer: "I forgive him."

Erika Kirk speaks during the memorial service for her husband, political activist Charlie Kirk at State Farm Stadium on September 21, 2025, in Glendale, Arizona. | Source: Getty Images
A Normal Morning Becomes a National Tragedy
In a poignant interview published the same day, Erika told of the mundane calm before the storm. Charlie was buzzing about his "American Comeback" tour — restless, meticulous, determined.
The night before flying to Provo, Utah, he'd crashed in a separate room, too keyed up to sleep. Morning came; he slipped out quietly. She texted him one last, simple promise: "I love you."

Charlie and Erika Kirk with their children in a photo posted on September 10, 2025. | Source: Instagram/mrserikakirk
She had planned to go with him — but duty at home intervened. "Home needs you," she remembered Charlie telling her — so she stayed in Phoenix while her mother underwent a medical procedure, agreeing to meet him for the next stop in Colorado.
Then came 11:23 a.m. on September 10, 2025 — the timestamp now burned into her memory — when Charlie's assistant Michael McCoy called, screaming the words no spouse can endure: "He's been shot," Michael screamed from the other end of the line. (Charlie had been shot at around 12:20 p.m. local Utah time, which is approximately one hour ahead of Arizona).
She boarded the next flight. Somewhere above the desert, hope died. "I'm looking at the clouds and the mountains," she remembered of those surreal hours. "It was such a gorgeous day, and I was thinking: This is exactly what he last saw."

Erika Kirk speaks during the memorial service for her husband, political activist Charlie Kirk at State Farm Stadium on September 21, 2025, in Glendale, Arizona. | Source: Getty Images
'With All Due Respect… I Want to See What They Did to My Husband'
At the Utah hospital, a sheriff offered a mercy that felt like cruelty — to see or not to see. Erika didn't hesitate. "With all due respect," she told the officer, "I want to see what they did to my husband." She braced for horror — and instead met a mysterious peace.
"His eyes were semi-open," she said. "And he had this knowing, Mona Lisa-like half-smile. Like he'd died happy. Like Jesus rescued him. The bullet came, he blinked, and he was in heaven." She never got to kiss him goodbye that morning, so she gave him her final kiss there.
The Single Shot That Shattered a Campus
As previously reported, Charlie Kirk, 31, was fatally shot during a midday appearance at Utah Valley University on Wednesday, September 10, 2025 — a crisp event turned catastrophe that triggered lockdowns, eyewitness panic, and a sprawling federal probe.

Charlie Kirk speaks at Utah Valley University in Orem, Utah on September 10, 2025 | Source: Getty Images
A UVU spokesperson confirmed the timeline with precise, clinical calm, "We had a speaker, Charlie Kirk, who was invited by a student group, Turning Point USA, who was speaking on campus today at noon."
Then came the blow no institution ever wants to deliver: "At about 12:20, shots were fired from a building about 200 yards from the speaker. To the best of our knowledge, the individual was hit and was taken away immediately by his security personnel. The campus is closed for the rest of the day and our campus police has a suspect in custody."

A man with a skateboard evacuates as law enforcement responds to the scene of the shooting at Utah Valley University, on September 10, 2025 | Source: Getty Images
TPUSA scrambled to reassure supporters — but dread leaked through the words. "This is an ongoing situation," said spokesperson Aubrey Laitsch. "We can confirm that Charlie Kirk has been shot. He is in the hospital, and we are praying for him at this time."
By late afternoon, hope collapsed. In a note later shared with CNN, the organization told staff and supporters: "It's with a heavy heart that we, the Turning Point USA leadership team, write to notify you that early this afternoon, Charlie went to his eternal reward with Jesus Christ in Heaven."
A Phantom Shooter and a Precision Kill
The early suspect was questioned and released, according to FBI Director Kash Patel on X. With no one in custody, the manhunt widened — and the fear deepened. CNN's law-enforcement voice John Miller warned investigators may be chasing a ghost: a shooter who planned to move silently, remain unseen, fire once, and vanish.
The deadly accuracy suggested training. "This is someone who knew exactly what they were doing and is probably known to others, and this may be working to the advantage of law enforcement. As someone who has a long history in shooting, this wasn't an amateur," he explained.
'Part of an Act?' Witness Goes from Confusion to Terror in Seconds
Panic rippled through the crowd. Jeremy King, 45, standing a mere 15 feet from Kirk, didn't realize at first what he'd heard — thinking the crack might be "part of an act or performance" linked to the day's debate over gun rights and the LGBTQ+ community.

The stage area of Charlie Kirk's "American Comeback Tour" at Utah Valley University is left deserted after the shooting, on September 10, 2025 | Source: Getty Images
The illusion evaporated as Charlie fell. "Everyone around me dropped to the ground. I immediately stood over my wife. You don't know if this is a single shot or if it's going to turn into a mass shooting. And so you're scanning," he said.
Instinct took over. "At that moment, I did grab my phone and start recording as they moved him to the SUV and loaded him up."

People scramble for safety after shots were fired during Charlie Kirk's appearance at Utah Valley University on September 10, 2025 | Source: Getty Images
'Heinous Assassination': The President Mourns, the Nation Reels
From the Oval Office to ordinary homes, tributes poured in. President Donald Trump called it a stain on American soil.
"I am filled with grief and anger at the heinous assassination of Charlie Kirk on a college campus in Utah. Charlie inspired millions, and tonight all who knew him and loved him are united in shock and horror," he said — elevating Kirk as a "martyr" and labeling the moment a "dark moment" in the nation's story.
Vice President JD Vance amplified the message on X, adding a brief prayer for Charlie's peaceful rest. Earlier that day, the President ordered U.S. flags flown at half-staff through September 14 — from the White House to embassies around the world — a solemn symbol of a country in mourning.