Candace Owens’ long-running commentary about the killing of conservative activist Charlie Kirk has taken a sharper — and more personal — turn, according to a March 1 column in the Washington Examiner.

The writer, Brad Polumbo, says Owens originally framed her coverage as an “investigation” and publicly suggested she would stop if Kirk’s widow, Erika Kirk, asked her to. Polumbo notes Erika eventually did make that request — but Owens continued anyway, later escalating from broad theories about the case to insinuations that Erika may have betrayed her husband or played a role in what happened, or in an alleged cover-up.

Polumbo argues this shift came after earlier, dramatic claims circulating in Owens’ orbit were discredited. He lists examples of past speculation involving secret meetings at military bases and far-fetched surveillance claims. In the columnist’s telling, Owens then pivoted to making Erika the central target, including a high-profile episode in February in which Owens said Erika should be questioned by police and claimed evidence was “piling up.”

Last week, Owens released a trailer for a new series aimed specifically at “exposing” Erika Kirk. The preview, titled “Bride of Charlie,” quickly traveled online — in part because of its ominous tone and the way it portrayed the widow, Polumbo writes.

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But when the first full episode dropped, Polumbo says it failed to deliver what the marketing implied. He contends the hour-long installment offered no concrete proof tying Erika to any wrongdoing connected to her husband’s death and largely avoided discussing the killing itself. Instead, the episode, as described in the column, focused on tangents about Erika’s upbringing, family history, and assorted personal details — the kind of material the author portrays as gossip rather than reporting.

Among the examples Polumbo highlights are attempts to fact-check Erika’s past statements by consulting a yearbook, discussions of relatives’ legal or gambling-related histories, claims about a family relationship, and other insinuations he characterizes as irrelevant to the central question Owens says she is trying to answer. He also points to digressions into unrelated conspiracy themes, describing the presentation as scattered and sensational.

The column further criticizes the monetization of the series, noting the video included numerous ad reads and arguing that the financial incentives behind such content can be significant. Polumbo suggests this dynamic helps explain why Owens would continue attacking Erika publicly while still presenting the project as a serious pursuit of truth.

Polumbo closes by warning that the larger issue is not only Owens’ approach, but the size of the audience willing to reward it — even after what he describes as repeated errors and ethical boundary-crossing in the coverage.