

Vivek Ramastinky
916 posts







VIDEO | Israeli occupation forces level the historic monastery and school belonging to the Sisters of the Holy Savior in the southern Lebanese border village of Yaroun.








Erika Kirk Hit With Legal Notice Over Wrongful Trademark Grab on Charlie Kirk’s Name Erika Kirk is facing legal notice and pushback over her attempt to personally trademark Charlie Kirk’s name and likeness. On October 4, 2025 she filed two federal trademark applications — Serial Number 99427865 and 99427868 — claiming “CHARLIE KIRK” for education, entertainment, clothing, media, fundraising, the whole commercial package in her own name. This is not about preserving a legacy. It is a straight-up attempt to personally own and monetize the name and image of her late husband for her own benefit. The filings show she is trying to bypass the Kirk Family Trust and secure the financial fruits of Charlie’s life’s work for herself instead of for his minor children. Charlie’s parents, Robert and Kathryn Kirk, are fighting back hard in Maricopa County court. They are the final line of defense against Erika’s personal appropriation of these assets. The trademarks have been suspended by the USPTO and remain under active dispute. The move is as transparent as it gets. While Erika lectures the country about radicalization and plays the grieving widow on camera, she is simultaneously filing paperwork to lock down Charlie’s name as her personal commercial asset. The same leadership that keeps pushing high-profile appearances and coordinated messaging is now trying to cash in on the name itself through legal maneuvering. This kind of action exposes the priorities. The organization Charlie built is supposed to be about the mission, not turning his identity into a private revenue stream for the widow. People came to TPUSA because of Charlie’s conviction and straight talk. Now the focus is on who gets to own the brand and the money that comes with it. The public sees the filings, the court battle with Charlie’s parents, and the pattern. When a CEO files to trademark her dead husband’s name for clothing, media, and fundraising while the family trust and his parents are in court fighting it, the priorities become crystal clear.



