Caught on Video: Sisters Accused in Charlie Kirk Memorial Vandalism Turn to Strangers for Help

Two Arkansas sisters smashed a memorial to assassinated conservative firebrand Charlie Kirk. Now they’re online, begging strangers to save them. Jobs gone. Relationships shattered. A nation already on edge is watching, judging, donating — or cursing. Their GoFundMe is filling fast, but so is the fury. This isn’t just backlash. It’s a batt… Continues…

 

What began as a late-night act of rage outside the Benton County Courthouse has become a national morality play. As candles flickered for a murdered father of two, cameras caught Kerri Rollo cursing Kirk’s name and mocking the grief around her. Within days, the fallout was brutal: a lost job, a broken relationship, and a community that wanted them gone. Local officials framed it not as politics, but as an assault on the basic human right to mourn in peace.

Yet the sisters’ GoFundMe tells a different story — one of “free speech,” “doxxing,” and a system stacked against them. Donors have turned the page into a public pillory, some giving the minimum just to leave insults, others quietly contributing to their defense. As the total climbs toward their legal target, the episode exposes a raw truth: in a country torn apart by ideology and grief, even a pile of candles and notes can become a battlefield.