Witch Who Cursed Charlie Kirk Right Before His Death Drops Bomb On Erika Kirk

A chilling revelation has surfaced in the wake of Charlie Kirk’s assassination: a self-described witch who participated in a “curse” targeting the Turning Point USA founder now says she regrets the pain inflicted on his grieving widow, Erika Kirk.

The woman, who goes by Priestess Lilin, told the Daily Mail the curse was never intended to “physically harm” Kirk and insisted she “did not celebrate the loss of life.” But the timeline is disturbing. Just two days before Kirk was fatally shot on September 10 at Utah Valley University, the far-left outlet Jezebel ran an article boasting that it had paid witches on Etsy to hex him.

That article — brazenly titled, “We Paid Some Etsy Witches to Curse Charlie Kirk” — sneered at the idea of purchasing a curse “as easily as I can buy a phone charger.” Its anonymous author even posed the question: “Are you interested in punishing Kirk for the years of regressive rhetoric he’s shouted at America’s youth and anyone within earshot?” The piece was quietly pulled after Kirk’s assassination, but not before fueling outrage across the country.

Conservative commentator Megyn Kelly revealed that Erika Kirk was “genuinely rattled” by the Jezebel stunt. So shaken, in fact, that she and Charlie turned to a Catholic priest for prayer and protection the very night before he was murdered. “Why torture a family like this? A Christian, believing family. Why do this vile thing to a young couple?” Kelly asked on her program.

According to Lilin, it was her “sister,” identified as a so-called High Priestess Leamashtu, who performed the spell, allegedly burning a photo of Kirk as part of the ritual. Lilin claimed her craft typically centers on “protection and healing,” while disturbingly defending the act of “summoning demons” as not necessarily evil. She told the Daily Mail:

“We regret any distress experienced. What we do is done based on an impartial perspective and at a professional level. We respect the widow’s feelings and welcome a private conversation to address her concerns.”

Despite her insistence that no physical harm was intended, Lilin admitted that “the magic we work with in our daily lives is very real.” She also claimed she and her partner have faced death threats since the Jezebel article and were banned from Etsy.

Before their ban, the witches’ online shop openly peddled grotesque services like “Infernal Justice Black Magick Spells” and “Generational Black Magic Curses,” alongside images of skulls and voodoo dolls. Other spells promised to “destroy their friendship” or “make them lose their job.”

Kelly said she debated whether to even share the Jezebel episode because it was “so vile and off and odd.” But she confirmed Erika Kirk’s fear was real:

“She knew Christian teaching on this subject. She loved Charlie absolutely. She was scared when she heard of the curses Jezebel had culled up. So much so that she and Charlie contacted a friend – who I believe she said was a Catholic priest – and asked him to pray with them and over Charlie, the night before he was murdered.”

In the days following the tragedy, Erika drew strength from her faith, telling Kelly, “Weapons will form but not prosper, that satan and those witches have no power.”

After Kirk’s death, Jezebel attempted damage control, issuing a statement claiming it “condemns the shooting of Charlie Kirk in the strongest possible terms” and insisting it does not “endorse, encourage, or excuse political violence of any kind.”

For millions of Americans, however, the episode highlights just how depraved the left has become in its obsession with silencing conservative leaders — stooping so low as to celebrate witchcraft against one of the most influential voices in the conservative movement.

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