Chiefs CEO's wife slams critics celebrating Charlie Kirk's assassination
Rep. Mike Lawler R-N.Y. joins 'Sunday Night in America' to discuss Charlie Kirk's impact and legacy following his death and the state of political violence in America.
Tavia Hunt, the wife of Kansas City Chiefs CEO Clark Hunt and the director of the Chiefs Women’s Organization, slammed those who celebrated Charlie Kirk’s assassination.
Hunt shared a post from Libs of TikTok, which pointed out that a University of Kansas employee avoided discipline for comments about Kirk. The conservative influencer was shot and killed at a Utah Valley University event nearly two weeks ago.
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Kansas City Chiefs owner Tavia Hunt against the Arizona Cardinals during a preseason NFL game at State Farm Stadium on Aug. 9, 2025. (Mark J. Rebilas/Imagn Images)
"When a man’s life ended in public for having different beliefs, leaving a wife without a husband and 2 children without a father and you dismiss it or celebrate it, that has nothing to do with who he was, that is a reflection of who you are," she wrote on her Instagram Stories.
Hunt’s post came as a memorial service for Kirk took place at State Farm Stadium in Glendale, Arizona.
Erika Kirk stepped up to the podium and told the crowd that she would forgive her husband’s alleged killer, Tyler Robinson, and said that the conservative influencer’s mission was reaching young men in search of direction.
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"Charlie passionately wanted to reach and save the lost boys of the West. The young men who feel like they have no direction, no purpose, no faith, and no reason to live. The men wasting their lives on distractions and the men consume with resentment,


