A TikTok creator with nearly 900,000 followers posted a video this week claiming someone who worked at Alo Yoga had sent him a receipt that he said showed Erika Kirk spent over $1,000 at the store less than 24 hours after her husband, Charlie Kirk, was assassinated. The video framed it as proof she wasn’t grieving. “That is not how shock works,” the creator said. “That is not how grief works for a normal person.”
The video hit over 8 million views.
Then TPUSA staffer Elizabeth McCoy explained what actually happened. When the team got the call that Charlie had been shot at Utah Valley University, they rushed to the airport and flew to Utah with nothing but the clothes they were wearing. They slept in those clothes at the hospital. The next morning, a friend handed McCoy a credit card and she walked to the Alo down the street to buy basics for the team and for Erika. McCoy called the TikTok “a planned, manufactured attack.”
I posted this on Instagram yesterday. Posting here today so that everyone can see how ridiculous this situation is. I was the one who made the Alo purchase, in person, in Utah.
When we got the call that Charlie had been shot, we rushed from the office and into the airplane. We… https://t.co/twbfMVKugL
— Elizabeth McCoy (@elizakmccoy) March 20, 2026
The TikTok: 8 million views. The correction: buried in replies and staffer posts that most of those 8 million people will never see.
The Legal Letters Nobody’s Obeying
The Alo leak is the most recent chapter, but it’s not the worst. On March 18, Erika Kirk’s legal team sent a cease-and-desist letter to Collin Scott Campbell of Project Constitution, accusing him of defamation over claims that she was involved in her husband’s murder and in sex trafficking tied to Jeffrey Epstein.
This was the third cease-and-desist Kirk’s team has sent. Previous letters went to Zach De Gregorio, a video podcaster who operates under the name Wolves and Finance, and to Candace Owens, who has spent months building a multi-part docuseries called “Bride of Charlie” around Erika Kirk. Both recipients publicly rejected the letters. Owens told her audience: “It’s gay to send a legal letter. You shouldn’t do it — especially when you can just pick up the phone and call someone.”
The Campbell letter also addressed a “leaked DOJ wiretap audio” clip that Project Constitution claimed captured Erika Kirk scheduling underage girls for Epstein. That post racked up 12,000 reposts and 37,000 likes before it was hit with a Community Note and later retracted. The debunk said the audio was actually a controlled call from the mid-2000s — when Kirk would still have been in high school.


What Months of Restraint Bought Her
For months after Charlie Kirk’s assassination, Erika Kirk’s public response to the conspiracy theories was narrow and intermittent, not expansive. In December, she told Fox that her silence should not be read as complacency. Later, when she was asked about Candace Owens directly, her public answer was just two words: “Just stop.” The strategic logic was obvious: don’t dignify it, don’t amplify it, don’t feed the machine.
The machine didn’t need feeding. It fed on the restraint itself. Every gap in response was repackaged as “she still hasn’t denied it.” The absence of a full-throated rebuttal became its own kind of evidence. By the time the cease-and-desists started flying, the theories had calcified into a parallel reality with its own docuseries, its own leaked audio, and its own receipt.
The Two Camps


The people who believe something is wrong with Erika Kirk’s story point to the cease-and-desist letters themselves. Three letters, zero lawsuits. If the claims are defamatory, why not file suit? The theory circulating in the Owens and Project Constitution audience is that Kirk and TPUSA are afraid of discovery — that a lawsuit would open the organization’s books and communications to scrutiny they can’t afford.
The people defending Kirk point to the Alo leak as proof of how the machine works: an employee allegedly violated a customer’s privacy, a TikToker turned it into a narrative, the narrative got 8 million views, and the actual explanation — a colleague buying emergency clothes after the team flew to Utah with nothing — arrived after the damage was done. McCoy noted the receipt screenshot was taken on March 10, a full week before the video dropped. “That’s not a coincidence,” she wrote. “It’s a clear sign this was a planned, manufactured attack.”
Alo Yoga locked its X account amid the backlash. The company has not responded to questions about whether it will investigate the leak.
When the Correction Can’t Catch the Lie
Kirk’s legal team has now sent three cease-and-desist letters. All three recipients have publicly pushed back. Owens mocked the tactic on air. Others turned the letters into more content. The receipt claim was publicly disputed. The Bride of Charlie series is still running. And even after the Campbell audio post was retracted, the allegation had already traveled.
The question this story leaves isn’t whether Erika Kirk is guilty or innocent. It’s whether a correction can ever catch a lie that has a six-month head start and 8 million views — and whether cease-and-desist letters are a legal strategy or just a receipt that the smear already worked.