The soil at the Charlie Kirk crime scene was excavated 10 inches deep and repaved by Saturday, just three days after Kirk died on a Wednesday, with pavers installed by Sunday.
Charlie’s “Freedom” Shirt Disappears. Another Witness Recalls Erika & Epstein. | Ep 354
A second witness has come forward placing Erika Kirk inside Jeffrey Epstein's modeling orbit at Next Model Management — and TPUSA has never responded to the allegation.
Candace
Charlie’s “Freedom” Shirt Disappears. Another Witness Recalls Erika & Epstein. | Ep 354
A second witness has come forward placing Erika Kirk inside Jeffrey Epstein's modeling orbit at Next Model Management — and TPUSA has never responded to the allegation.
TL;DR
Candace Owens continues her investigation into Charlie Kirk's death, focusing on three explosive developments: Brian Harpole's implausible hospital story about cutting off Charlie's Freedom shirt [1] — Candace Owens "Brian Harpole told Sean Ryan he wheeled Charlie Kirk into a hospital room himself, jumped on top of him, cut off his white Freedom shirt, d…" 05:57 , conflicting eyewitness testimony from a student who changed her account of where Kirk was shot within 51 minutes [2] — Candace Owens "Student Sarah Tewell gave three separate interviews on the day of the shooting. In the first she graphically described Kirk being hit in th…" 19:00 , and a second witness confirming Erika Kirk's connection to Jeffrey Epstein's modeling network at Next Model Management [3] — Candace Owens "Next Model Management was run by Faith Cates, who appears throughout Jeffrey Epstein's released emails and was his loyal public defender. A…" 32:10 . The episode also floats dissociative identity disorder as an explanation for Erika's contradictory behavior. Key takeaway: the shirt — a potential explosive-residue goldmine — appears to have been quietly disposed of.
Candace Owens investigates Brian Harpole's implausible account of cutting off Charlie Kirk's Freedom shirt, conflicting eyewitness statements about the shooting, the denial of Lance Twiggs's subpoena in the Tyler Robinson case, a second witness confirming Erika Kirk's connection to Jeffrey Epstein's Next Model Management, and a theory that Erika suffers from dissociative identity disorder. Closes with Tim Dillon's satirical reading of JD Vance's book.
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Candace opens the show with characteristic self-aware humor, announcing she's pregnant and invoking Dana Loesch's name in a comedy bit about WWF-style intros. She quickly pivots to the episode's substance: last week she asked what happened to Charlie Kirk's white Freedom shirt — the shirt Turning Point USA tried to sell for $59.99 immediately after his death. She explains why the shirt matters above almost any other piece of evidence: explosive residue would definitively prove or disprove the rigged-mic theory. She runs through the troubling chain of evidence already accounted for — soil paved over in three days, necklace given to Erika, handheld mic encased in glass for a Mar-a-Lago fundraiser — and sets up the reveal that the shirt's fate has now been explained by Brian Harpole in a Sean Ryan interview she describes as 'a car crash.'
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In what is arguably the episode's most jaw-dropping segment, Candace plays the Brian Harpole clip from the Sean Ryan interview in which Harpole describes himself as essentially running the emergency room. He grabbed the gurney, wheeled it into the room himself, jumped on top of Kirk, cut off the white Freedom shirt with scissors he somehow had, directed medical staff on medications, and then decided — on his own authority — that there were 'enough professionals' so he'd step outside and guard the door. Candace's rebuttal is methodical and devastating: hospitals don't work this way, not even for paramedics, let alone a random civilian. She notes that Kash Patel had to confiscate hospital camera footage — now she understands why, because the footage would have shown a scene 'like a sitcom.' [1] — Candace Owens "Brian Harpole told Sean Ryan he wheeled Charlie Kirk into a hospital room himself, jumped on top of him, cut off his white Freedom shirt, d…" 05:57 Her conclusion: Harpole almost certainly did cut off the shirt, but not heroically — he destroyed the piece of evidence that would have held explosive residue, and he constructed a grandiose false narrative to make it sound justified.
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A viewer email pointed out something the team had missed: several of the black ABS shards photographed on the SUV floorboard appear to have white markings on them, consistent with the white printed text — 'Rode' — on the Rode Wireless Pro microphone Charlie Kirk used. Candace walks through the viewer's reasoning: iPhones use glass backs for antenna purposes, and the Rode Wireless Pro similarly uses an ABS glass shell that shatters into small black fragments with predictable white edges. [1] — Candace Owens "A viewer noticed white markings on the black ABS shards photographed on the SUV floorboard — consistent with the white 'Rode' branding prin…" 13:50 To test this, the team found a YouTube video of someone deliberately destroying an identical Rode Wireless Pro 'for fun,' and the shard pattern they produce matches what appears in the SUV images. Candace declares herself now 'confidently' convinced the shards are the remains of the road mic, and that the white markings are not sun glints or incidental reflections.
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This segment is the episode's most viscerally compelling sequence. Candace plays three successive interviews given by Sarah Tewell on the day of the shooting. In the first, recorded at 1:17 PM, Tewell gives a graphic, confident account: she watched Kirk get hit directly in the chest, 'blood gushing right out where his heart is,' and she was in the fourth row with her mother. [1] — Candace Owens "Student Sarah Tewell gave three separate interviews on the day of the shooting. In the first she graphically described Kirk being hit in th…" 19:00 In the second interview, just 51 minutes later, the wound location has moved entirely — 'it was in the neck.' By the third interview with ABC News, Tewell has somehow become an expert in sound ballistics, estimating the shooter was 'about 200 yards away,' a figure that precisely matches the Pelosi Center distance. Candace notes no one around Tewell disputes her original account, no obvious external pressure is visible, and there is no logical reason for a genuine eyewitness to improve her testimony this dramatically in a matter of hours — unless the original account was coached and then had to be revised when the official narrative changed.
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This segment is the episode's most viscerally compelling sequence. Candace plays three successive interviews given by Sarah Tewell on the day of the shooting. In the first, recorded at 1:17 PM, Tewell gives a graphic, confident account: she watched Kirk get hit directly in the chest, 'blood gushing right out where his heart is,' and she was in the fourth row with her mother. [1] — Candace Owens "Student Sarah Tewell gave three separate interviews on the day of the shooting. In the first she graphically described Kirk being hit in th…" 19:00 In the second interview, just 51 minutes later, the wound location has moved entirely — 'it was in the neck.' By the third interview with ABC News, Tewell has somehow become an expert in sound ballistics, estimating the shooter was 'about 200 yards away,' a figure that precisely matches the Pelosi Center distance. Candace notes no one around Tewell disputes her original account, no obvious external pressure is visible, and there is no logical reason for a genuine eyewitness to improve her testimony this dramatically in a matter of hours — unless the original account was coached and then had to be revised when the official narrative changed.
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News broke that Judge Graf denied the defense's request to compel Lance Twiggs — whose recorded statement and alleged discovery of a handwritten confession are the pillars of the prosecution's case — to appear at the July 6th preliminary hearing. [1] — Candace Owens "Tyler Robinson's defense asked to cross-examine Lance Twiggs — the man whose recorded statement and alleged discovery of a handwritten conf…" 27:00 The defense had argued this was fundamental hearsay: the prosecution plans to play a recording of Twiggs making accusations Robinson cannot cross-examine. The judge ruled the preliminary hearing's purpose is not to adjudicate guilt but to determine if enough evidence exists to proceed, and that the recorded statement clears that bar. Candace is unambiguous: this is a show trial. She walks listeners through the absurdity of the scenario — being held in prison on a murder charge where the accusing witness lives out of state, has never been questioned by the FBI, and whose text printouts and handwritten note (since destroyed) the defense cannot authenticate. The segment ends with Candace promising to watch the hearing live despite being on vacation.
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In what Candace describes as a significant new development, she reports that a second vetted witness has come forward confirming that Erika Kirk managed model apartments on New York's Upper East Side connected to Faith Cates's Next Model Management. [1] — Candace Owens "Next Model Management was run by Faith Cates, who appears throughout Jeffrey Epstein's released emails and was his loyal public defender. A…" 32:10 Candace recaps the background: Next Model Management was born from the Rothschild dynasty, owned by Faith Cates, and Jeffrey Epstein was a regular visitor to the office. Young Eastern European girls were brought through as models, housed in apartments, and 'suits' would come through and decide which girls to spend time with. The original tip alleged Erika managed a white apartment building in the 60s block of the Upper East Side — possibly owned by Mark Epstein, Jeffrey's brother, though this has not been confirmed. Candace notes that TPUSA is swift to respond to minor insults about Erika but has never issued a statement about the Epstein allegation — which she argues is itself damning given the sensitivity of any Epstein connection. She invites former Next Model Management models to come forward and email [email protected].
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In what Candace describes as a significant new development, she reports that a second vetted witness has come forward confirming that Erika Kirk managed model apartments on New York's Upper East Side connected to Faith Cates's Next Model Management. [1] — Candace Owens "Next Model Management was run by Faith Cates, who appears throughout Jeffrey Epstein's released emails and was his loyal public defender. A…" 32:10 Candace recaps the background: Next Model Management was born from the Rothschild dynasty, owned by Faith Cates, and Jeffrey Epstein was a regular visitor to the office. Young Eastern European girls were brought through as models, housed in apartments, and 'suits' would come through and decide which girls to spend time with. The original tip alleged Erika managed a white apartment building in the 60s block of the Upper East Side — possibly owned by Mark Epstein, Jeffrey's brother, though this has not been confirmed. Candace notes that TPUSA is swift to respond to minor insults about Erika but has never issued a statement about the Epstein allegation — which she argues is itself damning given the sensitivity of any Epstein connection. She invites former Next Model Management models to come forward and email [email protected].
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Candace introduces a Tim Dillon clip as both comedy relief and cathartic release. Dillon performs a mock 'reading' from a fictional JD Vance book called 'God Chose Me,' in which Vance paces the Vice President's residence wondering whether his sacrifice of Charlie Kirk to the entity Baal will be sufficient, whether Baal likes America, and whether he could get a one-on-one meeting with Baal. [1] — Tim Dillon "Tim Dillon performs a mock reading of a JD Vance book in which Vance worries whether sacrificing Charlie Kirk to the deity Baal will be eno…" 48:20 Candace laughs but contextualises the bit seriously: she doesn't hold personal resentment toward Vance, but finds it dizzying that the administration is releasing autobiographies about Catholicism while, in her view, lying about Charlie Kirk's assassination, covering up Epstein files, and gaslighting the public about Iran. She describes the Dillon bit as 'the essence of the administration.' A brief Priceline ad is accidentally woven into the audio, which becomes part of the comedic texture of the segment.
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The closing comments segment is a mix of investigative corroboration and genuine emotional resonance. A former towing company operator who held evidence contracts confirms what any industry professional would know: you never release, clean, or auction a crime-scene vehicle until the case closes. [1] — Candace Owens "A viewer who worked for a towing company holding evidence contracts explained that any vehicle involved in a crime or used to transport a b…" 55:40 A viewer with government information-operations experience writes that whoever designed the Kirk narrative failed the primary test of a good cover story — it induces questions rather than preventing them. Candace agrees, theorising the original plan assumed the blast would hit Kirk's chest, and that Charlie's posture caused it to hit his neck instead, unravelling everything. She reads a heartbreaking message from a woman who lost a pregnancy and whose rainbow baby heartbeat was just confirmed, offers warm congratulations, and encourages struggling fertility patients. She closes with a commercial for the Candace merch store and a self-deprecating sign-off about her 'Stop Anti-Candaceism' mug.
- ABS (Acrylonitrile Butadiene Styrene)
- A common rigid plastic used in consumer electronics casings; in this episode it refers to the black plastic shell of the Rode Wireless Pro microphone that allegedly shattered in the SUV.
- Shaped charge
- An explosive device engineered to focus its blast energy in a specific direction; Candace Owens's theory holds that the road microphone was modified into one to direct force at Charlie Kirk.
- Rode Wireless Pro
- A professional wireless lavalier/handheld microphone system retailing around $1,500, identified in the episode as the potential explosive device used to kill Charlie Kirk.
- Dissociative Identity Disorder (DID)
- Formerly called multiple personality or split personality disorder; a condition involving two or more distinct identities, each with different behaviors, memories, and expressions, often caused by childhood trauma.
- Patsy
- A person set up to take the blame for a crime they did not commit; used in the episode to describe Candace Owens's theory about Tyler Robinson's role in the Charlie Kirk case.
- Preliminary hearing
- A court proceeding to determine whether sufficient evidence exists to hold a defendant for trial; in this episode it refers to the July 6th hearing in the Tyler Robinson case.
- Hearsay
- An out-of-court statement offered to prove the truth of the matter asserted; Candace argues Lance Twiggs's recorded statement constitutes inadmissible hearsay that Robinson cannot cross-examine.
- GSR (Gunshot Residue) test
- A forensic test detecting microscopic particles expelled from a firearm upon discharge; Candace notes investigators did not administer a standard GSR test when Tyler Robinson was apprehended.
- Compel (legal context)
- To force a witness to appear or produce evidence via a court order or subpoena; the judge declined to compel Lance Twiggs to appear at the Robinson preliminary hearing.
- Next Model Management
- A New York modeling agency owned by Faith Cates, described in the episode as having direct ties to Jeffrey Epstein and as the alleged workplace connection between Erika Kirk and Epstein's network.
- Alters
- In DID terminology, the distinct alternate personality states or identities a person with the disorder may inhabit; Candace uses the clinical language when describing Erika Kirk's apparent personality shifts.
- Crisis actor
- A conspiracy-theory label for people alleged to be paid performers who appear at staged events to shape public narrative; referenced by Candace when discussing the early eyewitnesses who set the narrative after Kirk's shooting.
- Baal
- An ancient Semitic deity; used satirically by Tim Dillon in his mock-reading of JD Vance's book to imply the administration is engaged in occult sacrifice.
- Provenance
- The origin or chain of custody of an object or document; relevant in the episode when discussing whether Charlie Kirk's text confession printouts can be authenticated.
- Dissociate
- To mentally separate from one's own thoughts, feelings, memories, or identity; Candace uses it to describe Erika Kirk appearing to have no memory of previous statements or positions she held.
Chapter 2 · 02:10
What Brian Harpole did with Charlie's shirt
In what is arguably the episode's most jaw-dropping segment, Candace plays the Brian Harpole clip from the Sean Ryan interview in which Harpole describes himself as essentially running the emergency room. He grabbed the gurney, wheeled it into the room himself, jumped on top of Kirk, cut off the white Freedom shirt with scissors he somehow had, directed medical staff on medications, and then decided — on his own authority — that there were 'enough professionals' so he'd step outside and guard the door. Candace's rebuttal is methodical and devastating: hospitals don't work this way, not even for paramedics, let alone a random civilian. She notes that Kash Patel had to confiscate hospital camera footage — now she understands why, because the footage would have shown a scene 'like a sitcom.' [1] — Candace Owens "Brian Harpole told Sean Ryan he wheeled Charlie Kirk into a hospital room himself, jumped on top of him, cut off his white Freedom shirt, d…" 05:57 Her conclusion: Harpole almost certainly did cut off the shirt, but not heroically — he destroyed the piece of evidence that would have held explosive residue, and he constructed a grandiose false narrative to make it sound justified.
Claims made here
Charlie Kirk's handheld microphone was encased in glass and given to Erika Kirk for use at a Mar-a-Lago fundraiser rather than preserved as evidence.
Brian Harpole told Sean Ryan's podcast that he personally wheeled Charlie Kirk into a hospital room, got on top of him, cut off his white Freedom shirt, directed medical staff on medications, and then stood guard at the hospital room door.
The crime scene soil where Charlie Kirk died was excavated 10 inches deep and repaved by Saturday — Kirk died on Wednesday — with pavers installed by Sunday.
The handheld microphone from the scene — a potential evidence item — was given to Erika Kirk and encased in glass at a Mar-a-Lago fundraiser rather than preserved as evidence.
Brian Harpole told Sean Ryan he wheeled Charlie Kirk into a hospital room himself, jumped on top of him, cut off his white Freedom shirt, directed medical staff on medications, and then stood guard at the door. No hospital in the world operates this way — Candace argues this fantastical tale is a cover story for destroying the single most important piece of physical evidence.
Brian Harpole claimed he personally cut Charlie Kirk's Freedom shirt off at the hospital — a shirt that would have contained explosive residue if the mic-bomb theory is correct.
Chapter 3 · 12:20
Email about potential ABS shattered glass in the car
A viewer email pointed out something the team had missed: several of the black ABS shards photographed on the SUV floorboard appear to have white markings on them, consistent with the white printed text — 'Rode' — on the Rode Wireless Pro microphone Charlie Kirk used. Candace walks through the viewer's reasoning: iPhones use glass backs for antenna purposes, and the Rode Wireless Pro similarly uses an ABS glass shell that shatters into small black fragments with predictable white edges. [1] — Candace Owens "A viewer noticed white markings on the black ABS shards photographed on the SUV floorboard — consistent with the white 'Rode' branding prin…" 13:50 To test this, the team found a YouTube video of someone deliberately destroying an identical Rode Wireless Pro 'for fun,' and the shard pattern they produce matches what appears in the SUV images. Candace declares herself now 'confidently' convinced the shards are the remains of the road mic, and that the white markings are not sun glints or incidental reflections.
A viewer noticed white markings on the black ABS shards photographed on the SUV floorboard — consistent with the white 'Rode' branding printed on the Rode Wireless Pro microphone. Candace enhanced the images and showed a YouTube video of someone shattering the same mic model, finding the breakage pattern matches exactly what was found in the vehicle.
A viewer tip pointed out white markings on black shards found on the SUV floorboard — consistent with the white 'Rode' branding on the Rode Wireless Pro microphone.
Chapter 4 · 17:36
Conflicting eye witness statements
This segment is the episode's most viscerally compelling sequence. Candace plays three successive interviews given by Sarah Tewell on the day of the shooting. In the first, recorded at 1:17 PM, Tewell gives a graphic, confident account: she watched Kirk get hit directly in the chest, 'blood gushing right out where his heart is,' and she was in the fourth row with her mother. [1] — Candace Owens "Student Sarah Tewell gave three separate interviews on the day of the shooting. In the first she graphically described Kirk being hit in th…" 19:00 In the second interview, just 51 minutes later, the wound location has moved entirely — 'it was in the neck.' By the third interview with ABC News, Tewell has somehow become an expert in sound ballistics, estimating the shooter was 'about 200 yards away,' a figure that precisely matches the Pelosi Center distance. Candace notes no one around Tewell disputes her original account, no obvious external pressure is visible, and there is no logical reason for a genuine eyewitness to improve her testimony this dramatically in a matter of hours — unless the original account was coached and then had to be revised when the official narrative changed.
Claims made here
Eyewitness Sarah Tewell gave her first interview at 1:17 PM saying Charlie Kirk was shot directly in the chest/heart, then gave a second interview at 2:08 PM — 51 minutes later — saying he was shot in the neck.
Student Sarah Tewell gave three separate interviews on the day of the shooting. In the first she graphically described Kirk being hit in the heart. Fifty-one minutes later she said it was the neck. By the third interview with ABC News, she had become a ballistics expert estimating 200 yards — a figure that conveniently matched the Pelosi Center distance.
Eyewitness Sarah Tewell changed her account of where Charlie Kirk was shot from 'directly in the chest/heart' to 'in the neck' within just 51 minutes of her first interview.
Chapter 5 · 22:25
Updated list on why the exploding mic theory could work
This segment is the episode's most viscerally compelling sequence. Candace plays three successive interviews given by Sarah Tewell on the day of the shooting. In the first, recorded at 1:17 PM, Tewell gives a graphic, confident account: she watched Kirk get hit directly in the chest, 'blood gushing right out where his heart is,' and she was in the fourth row with her mother. [1] — Candace Owens "Student Sarah Tewell gave three separate interviews on the day of the shooting. In the first she graphically described Kirk being hit in th…" 19:00 In the second interview, just 51 minutes later, the wound location has moved entirely — 'it was in the neck.' By the third interview with ABC News, Tewell has somehow become an expert in sound ballistics, estimating the shooter was 'about 200 yards away,' a figure that precisely matches the Pelosi Center distance. Candace notes no one around Tewell disputes her original account, no obvious external pressure is visible, and there is no logical reason for a genuine eyewitness to improve her testimony this dramatically in a matter of hours — unless the original account was coached and then had to be revised when the official narrative changed.
Claims made here
In a third interview with ABC News, Sarah Tewell estimated the shooter was approximately 200 yards away — a figure she had not mentioned in either of her previous interviews.
In a third interview with ABC News, the same witness claimed the shooter was approximately 200 yards away — a figure she did not know in her first two accounts.
Bomb dogs kept away, soil paved over in 3 days, necklace given to the widow, handheld mic encased in glass, no gunshot residue test, footage pulled, no ambulance on standby, witnesses who changed their stories — Candace runs through a growing list of anomalies that all make logical sense only if the murder weapon was a rigged road microphone.
Chapter 6 · 24:45
Lance Twiggs will not be compelled to show up to the preliminary hearing
News broke that Judge Graf denied the defense's request to compel Lance Twiggs — whose recorded statement and alleged discovery of a handwritten confession are the pillars of the prosecution's case — to appear at the July 6th preliminary hearing. [1] — Candace Owens "Tyler Robinson's defense asked to cross-examine Lance Twiggs — the man whose recorded statement and alleged discovery of a handwritten conf…" 27:00 The defense had argued this was fundamental hearsay: the prosecution plans to play a recording of Twiggs making accusations Robinson cannot cross-examine. The judge ruled the preliminary hearing's purpose is not to adjudicate guilt but to determine if enough evidence exists to proceed, and that the recorded statement clears that bar. Candace is unambiguous: this is a show trial. She walks listeners through the absurdity of the scenario — being held in prison on a murder charge where the accusing witness lives out of state, has never been questioned by the FBI, and whose text printouts and handwritten note (since destroyed) the defense cannot authenticate. The segment ends with Candace promising to watch the hearing live despite being on vacation.
Claims made here
Judge Graf denied Tyler Robinson's defense team's request to subpoena Lance Twiggs, ruling that a recorded statement from Twiggs is sufficient evidence for the preliminary hearing without cross-examination.
Tyler Robinson's defense asked to cross-examine Lance Twiggs — the man whose recorded statement and alleged discovery of a handwritten confession form the backbone of the prosecution. Judge Graf denied it. A recorded statement from a man living out of state, who has never been held for questioning, will now be the basis for keeping Robinson in prison through his trial.
Judge Graf denied Tyler Robinson's defense team's request to compel Lance Twiggs to appear at the preliminary hearing, allowing a recorded statement to stand as hearsay evidence.
Next Model Management was run by Faith Cates, who appears throughout Jeffrey Epstein's released emails and was his loyal public defender. A second witness has now confirmed that Erika Kirk personally managed model apartments on the Upper East Side for underage Eastern European girls shuffled through Cates's agency — and TPUSA has never responded to the allegation.
Chapter 8 · 39:05
Erika potential dissociative identity disorder?
In what Candace describes as a significant new development, she reports that a second vetted witness has come forward confirming that Erika Kirk managed model apartments on New York's Upper East Side connected to Faith Cates's Next Model Management. [1] — Candace Owens "Next Model Management was run by Faith Cates, who appears throughout Jeffrey Epstein's released emails and was his loyal public defender. A…" 32:10 Candace recaps the background: Next Model Management was born from the Rothschild dynasty, owned by Faith Cates, and Jeffrey Epstein was a regular visitor to the office. Young Eastern European girls were brought through as models, housed in apartments, and 'suits' would come through and decide which girls to spend time with. The original tip alleged Erika managed a white apartment building in the 60s block of the Upper East Side — possibly owned by Mark Epstein, Jeffrey's brother, though this has not been confirmed. Candace notes that TPUSA is swift to respond to minor insults about Erika but has never issued a statement about the Epstein allegation — which she argues is itself damning given the sensitivity of any Epstein connection. She invites former Next Model Management models to come forward and email [email protected].
Claims made here
A second witness came forward confirming that Erika Kirk personally managed model apartments on the Upper East Side connected to Next Model Management, and says she herself met with Erika Kirk.
Erika Kirk's handwritten signature is completely different today compared to her signature when she was Miss Arizona at age 24.
A second vetted witness came forward stating she personally met Erika Kirk and that Erika managed model apartments on the Upper East Side connected to Next Model Management.
Faith Cates, owner of Next Model Management, appeared throughout Jeffrey Epstein's released emails and remained his public defender even after he was convicted of harming children.
During her New York years, Erika Kirk simultaneously claimed to be a casting director, real estate agent, pageant model, charity director for Romanian Angels with the US Marine Corps, clothing designer, and reality TV star. Not one of those careers is well-documented. Candace's verdict: there is no such thing as a jack of all trades — there is such a thing as a liar.
Erika Kirk simultaneously claimed to be a casting director, real estate agent, pageant model, charity founder, clothing designer, and reality TV star — all in New York City at the same time.
Erika Kirk's signature today is entirely unlike her signature when she was Miss Arizona at 24. People don't change their signatures any more than they change their fingerprints — yet hers is unrecognizable. Candace argues this, combined with radical political reversals and memory gaps, fits the clinical profile of dissociative identity disorder.
Erika Kirk's signature changed entirely between her Miss Arizona years at age 24 and today — an extremely unusual occurrence that Candace Owens links to dissociative identity disorder.
Chapter 9 · 47:07
Tim Dillon's reading of JD Vance's new book
Candace introduces a Tim Dillon clip as both comedy relief and cathartic release. Dillon performs a mock 'reading' from a fictional JD Vance book called 'God Chose Me,' in which Vance paces the Vice President's residence wondering whether his sacrifice of Charlie Kirk to the entity Baal will be sufficient, whether Baal likes America, and whether he could get a one-on-one meeting with Baal. [1] — Tim Dillon "Tim Dillon performs a mock reading of a JD Vance book in which Vance worries whether sacrificing Charlie Kirk to the deity Baal will be eno…" 48:20 Candace laughs but contextualises the bit seriously: she doesn't hold personal resentment toward Vance, but finds it dizzying that the administration is releasing autobiographies about Catholicism while, in her view, lying about Charlie Kirk's assassination, covering up Epstein files, and gaslighting the public about Iran. She describes the Dillon bit as 'the essence of the administration.' A brief Priceline ad is accidentally woven into the audio, which becomes part of the comedic texture of the segment.
Claims made here
Dissociative Identity Disorder (DID), formerly called multiple personality disorder, involves two or more separate identities with different behaviors, memories, and thought patterns, often caused by childhood trauma.
Tim Dillon performs a mock reading of a JD Vance book in which Vance worries whether sacrificing Charlie Kirk to the deity Baal will be enough, and wonders if he could get a meeting with Baal. Candace says it's not just comedy — it's the essence of an administration that is gaslighting the country while Kirk's family waits for answers.
Dissociative Identity Disorder (DID), formerly known as split personality disorder, involves two or more separate identities with different behaviors, memories, and thought patterns.
Candace walked through Erika Kirk's documented personality reversals: radically anti-Israel before Charlie's death, radically pro-Israel after; presenting as Catholic to a parishioner, then a Judeo-Christian at Mar-a-Lago. Ex-boyfriends say they literally didn't recognize her. Clinically, DID involves separate identities with different memories — gaps that explain why Erika seems not to remember what she says.
Chapter 10 · 52:12
Comments
The closing comments segment is a mix of investigative corroboration and genuine emotional resonance. A former towing company operator who held evidence contracts confirms what any industry professional would know: you never release, clean, or auction a crime-scene vehicle until the case closes. [1] — Candace Owens "A viewer who worked for a towing company holding evidence contracts explained that any vehicle involved in a crime or used to transport a b…" 55:40 A viewer with government information-operations experience writes that whoever designed the Kirk narrative failed the primary test of a good cover story — it induces questions rather than preventing them. Candace agrees, theorising the original plan assumed the blast would hit Kirk's chest, and that Charlie's posture caused it to hit his neck instead, unravelling everything. She reads a heartbreaking message from a woman who lost a pregnancy and whose rainbow baby heartbeat was just confirmed, offers warm congratulations, and encourages struggling fertility patients. She closes with a commercial for the Candace merch store and a self-deprecating sign-off about her 'Stop Anti-Candaceism' mug.
Claims made here
American Financing customers are saving an average of $800 a month by refinancing to eliminate high-interest debt at mortgage rates in the 5s.
A viewer who held towing evidence contracts confirmed that any vehicle involved in a crime or used to transport a body is stored until the case closes and is never released, cleaned, or sold.
A viewer who worked for a towing company holding evidence contracts explained that any vehicle involved in a crime or used to transport a body is stored until the case closes — it is never released, cleaned, or sold. Charlie Kirk's SUV was towed, cleaned, and auctioned with extraordinary speed.
No indexed bits in this chapter.
Show stoppers
Snapshots ()
Key Quotes ()
This episode
Cast
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Conservative commentator and founder of Turning Point USA, whose death is the central subject of Candace Owens's ongoing investigation.
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Charlie Kirk's widow, whose background, personality changes, and alleged connection to Jeffrey Epstein's modeling network are extensively investigated.
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Convicted sex trafficker whose alleged modeling agency network is linked to Erika Kirk through Next Model Management and Faith Cates.
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Man charged with Charlie Kirk's murder whom Candace Owens argues is a patsy set up by a federal asset.
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Man who claimed to have directed medical staff and cut off Charlie Kirk's shirt at Timpanogos hospital; Candace calls his account a fabrication.
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Tyler Robinson's alleged boyfriend whose recorded statement and claimed discovery of a handwritten confession form the core prosecution evidence; judge denied subpoena to compel his attendance.
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Owner of Next Model Management, appeared extensively in Jeffrey Epstein's released emails and publicly defended him after his conviction.
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US Vice President whose memoir about Catholicism is the subject of Tim Dillon's satirical reading, with Candace using it to reflect broader disillusionment with the administration.
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Comedian who performed a satirical 'reading' of JD Vance's book inserting references to Baal sacrifice and Charlie Kirk.
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Pastor who was present in the vehicle with Charlie Kirk; Brian Harpole claimed he was praying in the back seat and later needed to change clothes at the hospital.
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FBI director referenced by Candace as having ordered hospital cameras removed and for not preserving the road microphone as evidence.
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New York modeling agency owned by Faith Cates with documented ties to Jeffrey Epstein; alleged employer of Erika Kirk who managed model apartments there.
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Conservative organization founded by Charlie Kirk; Candace Owens is in ongoing conflict with its leadership and notes it never responded to allegations about Erika Kirk.
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Referenced by Candace Owens as the dynasty out of which Next Model Management allegedly grew.
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Professional wireless microphone system that Candace Owens theorizes was rigged as an explosive device to kill Charlie Kirk.
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Utah hospital where Charlie Kirk was taken after the shooting; Candace argues its alleged operation as described by Brian Harpole would make it dangerously insecure.
Stats
This episode
Claims & Sources
Factual claims made this episode, and whether a source was named.
The soil at the Charlie Kirk crime scene was excavated 10 inches deep and repaved by Saturday, just three days after Kirk died on a Wednesday, with pavers installed by Sunday.
Charlie Kirk's handheld microphone was encased in glass and given to Erika Kirk for use at a Mar-a-Lago fundraiser rather than preserved as evidence.
Brian Harpole told Sean Ryan's podcast that he personally wheeled Charlie Kirk into a hospital room, got on top of him, cut off his white Freedom shirt, directed medical staff on medications, and then stood guard at the hospital room door.
Eyewitness Sarah Tewell gave her first interview at 1:17 PM saying Charlie Kirk was shot directly in the chest/heart, then gave a second interview at 2:08 PM — 51 minutes later — saying he was shot in the neck.
In a third interview with ABC News, Sarah Tewell estimated the shooter was approximately 200 yards away — a figure she had not mentioned in either of her previous interviews.
Judge Graf denied Tyler Robinson's defense team's request to subpoena Lance Twiggs, ruling that a recorded statement from Twiggs is sufficient evidence for the preliminary hearing without cross-examination.
A second witness came forward confirming that Erika Kirk personally managed model apartments on the Upper East Side connected to Next Model Management, and says she herself met with Erika Kirk.
Jeffrey Epstein regularly visited the Next Model Management office when he was in town, and his emails — which have been released — reference Faith Cates extensively.
Erika Kirk's handwritten signature is completely different today compared to her signature when she was Miss Arizona at age 24.
Dissociative Identity Disorder (DID), formerly called multiple personality disorder, involves two or more separate identities with different behaviors, memories, and thought patterns, often caused by childhood trauma.
A viewer who held towing evidence contracts confirmed that any vehicle involved in a crime or used to transport a body is stored until the case closes and is never released, cleaned, or sold.
American Financing customers are saving an average of $800 a month by refinancing to eliminate high-interest debt at mortgage rates in the 5s.