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SHOCKING NEWS: It was no accident. Candace Owens just revealed that the day before Charlie Kirk ded, he told three separate people he thought he was going to be klled. Now, she’s pointing the finger not at a lone gunman, but at the people closest to him. She claims a massive betrayal is happening inside TPUSA, orchestrated by those who stood to gain the most. The official story is a lie, and the real killers are still walking free. We have the full, terrifying story of the alleged plot…
“They’re closing in.”
By sunrise the next morning, Daniel Cross—firebrand speaker, political strategist, and founder of the rapidly growing youth movement American Vanguard—was dead
Official reports called it a tragic shooting carried out by a lone unstable extremist during a campus event in Arizona. Within hours, headlines framed it as yet another act of senseless violence. By nightfall, pundits had dissected his legacy, critics had resurfaced old controversies, and supporters had turned him into a martyr.
Because now, nearly two weeks later, media personality and former Vanguard insider Rebecca Hale has detonated a political bombshell that threatens to shatter the official narrative.
According to Hale, Daniel Cross didn’t believe he would die in some random act of violence.
He believed he would be murdered.
And he believed the danger was coming from inside his own organization.
Hale went live on her independent broadcast channel last night, her voice measured but unmistakably tense.
“I wasn’t going to say anything,” she began. “But after what I’ve learned in the last forty-eight hours, I can’t stay silent.”
She claims that on the day before his death, Cross contacted three separate people—herself included—with a chilling message.
“He told me,” Hale said, pausing, “that he thought he wasn’t going to make it through the week.”
According to her account, Cross described internal meetings that had grown hostile, financial irregularities he couldn’t fully trace, and a sudden shift in power among senior leadership at American Vanguard.
“He used the word betrayal,” Hale said. “More than once.”
The most disturbing claim?
“He said, ‘If anything happens to me, don’t believe the first story you hear.’”
To understand the weight of these allegations, you have to understand what American Vanguard had become.
What began as a scrappy youth leadership network had ballooned into a national political powerhouse. Its annual summit drew tens of thousands. Its media wing generated millions of views daily. Donors poured in funding.