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Megyn Kelly: Erika called a priest to house to fight Etsy witches curse the night before Charlie’s assassination

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In a recent episode of The Megyn Kelly Show, Megyn Kelly provided chilling new details regarding the final hours leading up to the assassination of Turning Point USA founder Charlie Kirk. Kelly alleges that Kirk and his wife, Erika, were emotionally shaken weeks before his death over an online “curse” reportedly placed on him by the leftist site Jezebel.

On September 8, Jezebel published a now‑deleted article under the title “We Paid Some Etsy Witches to Curse Charlie Kirk.” According to Kelly, the post proudly proclaimed:

“We paid some Etsy witches to curse Charlie Kirk.”

Although the article has been removed, an editor’s note now remains, condemning the subsequent assassination while claiming the original piece was meant as satire:

“Jezebel condemned the shooting of Charlie Kirk in the strongest possible terms. We do not endorse, encourage, or excuse political violence of any kind.”

Kelly, however, dismissed this as hollow damage control.

Kelly says the Kirks did not take the curse talk lightly. Learning of Jezebel’s post reportedly left Erika Kirk “genuinely rattled, in particular.” In her own words, Kelly described:

“Erika and Charlie Kirk heard about these curses, and that news genuinely rattled Erika in particular… She was scared when she heard of the curses Jezebel had culled up.”

Disturbingly, Kelly claims the couple contacted a Catholic priest to come to their home the night before Kirk was murdered, seeking spiritual protection:

“She and Charlie contacted a friend, who I believe she said was a Catholic priest, and asked him to come over and pray with them over Charlie the night before he was murdered.”

Kelly also warned of the supernatural dangers at play:

“There actually are demons in this world, calling on the spirit world, in particular the devil’s spirit world, can actually have real‑world consequences … It’s not something to mess with. It’s not a game, it’s literally evil.”

To Kelly, it’s not just a bizarre footnote — it’s a moral reckoning. The targeting of a devout Christian, political family with threats cloaked in occult language, she argues, should provoke accountability.

“Why torture a family like this? A Christian, believing family. Why do this vile thing to a young couple?” Kelly asked.

She called on Jezebel to reveal the identity of the writer responsible, issue a full apology to Erika Kirk, and suggested Jezebel “should close down” in shame. She likewise urged Etsy to stop facilitating the sale of curses and return to its original craft‑and‑arts mission.

The Jezebel article, by Kelly’s account, claimed the writer contracted multiple curses using Etsy witches, timed to align with a new moon in Virgo, and even arranged a follow‑up from a “Priestess Lillin” who sent a burned photograph of Kirk’s face. Kelly contends that the timing of the “spellwork” was intended to culminate just as tragedy struck.

After the shooting, Jezebel removed the article, attributing the decision to “an abundance of caution” for its staff — but also insisted its original words were still valid. Kelly rejects that defense and maintains that the damage was already done.

1 Comment

  1. I would not ignore the fact that it could have been part of the plan in the murder. Don’t forget we’re dealing with total nut cases. The DemocRATs and stupid gullible kids

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