Candace Owens has accusedTurning Point USAof helping to manufacture a viral, allegedly 'staged'video of Erika Kirk leaving the White House Correspondents' Dinnerin Washington, DC, on Thursday 25 April, saying on her show that a political operative filmed the moment so it would spread online. Owens has not provided documents, messages or on‑record witnesses to support the allegation, and no official investigation has described the clip as orchestrated, so nothing is confirmed yet and everything should be taken with a grain of salt.

For context, the footage showsErika Kirk, 37, crying as she is escorted away from the high‑profile event after shots were fired. CNN journalist Sara Sidner posted the short video on Instagram, where Kirk can be heard saying that she wants to go home while being guided from the venue by security or staff. The recording does not reveal who is holding the camera or when the filming began in relation to the gunfire. Sidner did not identify the original recorder in her caption, and has not issued a public statement clarifying who actually shot the clip.

The news came after Owens used the Thursday 7 May episode of her show to outline what she said she had been told about how the Erika Kirk video was made. She told viewers that an unnamed 'political operative' had approached her and claimed they had been 'positioned in advance with the specific instruction to take that exact video at that exact place at that exact time.' Owens did not name the operative, specify which organisation they worked for or explain how or when the conversation took place.

Owens, 37, added that the operative 'was allegedly in communication with digital media teams and the entire moment was staged, captured and then intentionally shared amongst those digital media teams and their operatives, whereupon it was made to go viral.' She did not present emails, screenshots or other records to demonstrate that such co-ordination occurred, and no independent outlet has published corroborating material about these communications.

She then moved from relaying what the anonymous figure allegedly said to her own judgement of the situation, telling her audience that 'every instinct is [telling me] the video was staged.' She also said she 'didn't buy that Sara Sidner of CNN, who initially put the video online, recorded it.'

Owens did not provide a transcript, audio clip or direct message from Sidner to support that claim. Sidner has not publicly admitted to staging the moment or misrepresenting how the footage was obtained, and CNN has issued no statement endorsing Owens' account.

Sidner's post shows Kirk leaving the dinner in clear distress after the shooting interrupted the event. The CNN correspondent has said she was near the area when Kirk came through the exit, a detail Owens has seized on as leaving room for the possibility that Sidner received the clip from someone else and uploaded it. No independent reporting has verified that Sidner was sent the video by a third party rather than recording it herself, and there is no public evidence of a pre-arranged handover of the footage.

For starters, the emotional weight of the clip is central to the argument now raging around it. Erika, described as the widow of slain right-wing activist Charlie Kirk and a mother of two, can be heard saying 'I just want to go home' as she is led away. That line has been frequently highlighted in posts sharing the video, turning what appears to be an intensely personal moment into widely circulated content. Kirk has not issued a detailed public statement about how she felt that night or about her reaction to seeing the moment replayed and debated online.

Owens has suggested that this raw display of fear and shock is exactly what would have made the footage attractive to political media staff. On her show she raised the possibility that a spokesperson for Charlie's nonprofit, Turning Point USA, could have been responsible for ensuring the scene was captured and pushed out across social channels. She pointed at the organisation's orbit and questioned whether the recording had been taken and amplified from within that network rather than by an uninvolved passer‑by. Owens did not produce internal Turning Point USA communications, planning notes or financial records to link the group directly to the filming or release of the video.

At one point, Owens mentioned a specific name, saying 'Maybe it was Andrew Kolvet' while talking about who might have been behind the camera, and added that Erika might have had 'no idea' she was being filmed. She went on to tell viewers that 'Someone did it without her knowledge or did it without her consent. Someone sold her grief. How terrible would that be?'

Source: International Business Times UK