Antioch school staffer fired, other area education workers face backlash over post on Charlie Kirk’s murder
A Grass Lake school staffer in far north suburban Antioch was fired Friday after posting social media posts critical of Charlie Kirk, the conservative activist gunned down in Utah.
In a screenshot of the now-deleted post circulating online, Cristina Monroy, an administrative assistant to the principal, said she had “absolutely no empathy” for Kirk. In the post, she called the Turning Point USA founder a “white nationalist mouthpiece.”
Grass Lake’s Principal Ryan Wollberg confirmed the termination, but would not offer additional comment. Supt. William Newby could not be immediately reached for comment.
Monroy did not respond to a request for comment.
The episode in Grass Lake mirrors scrutiny faced by multiple other Chicago-area school employees over online speech following Kirk’s murder, as parents, community members and right-wing groups rallied for disciplinary actions.
For example, in Buffalo Grove, middle school Spanish teacher Carolyn Pinta wrote on social media that “the irony is thick” with Kirk’s assassination, given his support of the Second Amendment.
The comment attracted the outrage of the Lake County chapter of Moms for Liberty, a national conservative group.
The group also alleged Pinta works on “activist projects” during school hours. Pinta leads the Pinta Pride Project, which organizes Buffalo Grove’s Pride Parade.
On Sept. 14, the group urged supporters to pressure administrators at Kildeer Countryside School District 96 and attend its next board meeting to demand Pinta’s firing.
Two days later, more than 100 people packed into the meeting. Critics accused Pinta of celebrating Kirk’s death and comparing parents and students who disagreed with her views to Nazis, while her supporters praised her contributions and urged protection of her free speech rights.
The district did not respond to requests for comment. Pinta declined to comment.
The targeting of educators has drawn pushback from labor and civil rights groups. Randi Weingarten, president of the American Federation of Teachers, condemned political violence but said de-escalation must not erode constitutional rights.
“Of course, no one should celebrate another person’s murder. But using this tragedy to encourage the doxxing, censorship and firing of people for their opinions — including educators’ private opinions shared during their personal time — is wrong,” Weingarten said in a statement.
Kevin Fee, legal director for ACLU of Illinois, said it is well established that public employees’ private speech on matters of public concern is protected by the First Amendment.
For school administrators, he said, the ACLU advises them to “resist the temptation to give in to an emotionally charged moment” and risk running afoul of the Constitution.
Fee said the ACLU is closely monitoring the current nationwide campaign to punish speech. After Kirk’s killing, Trump and Vice President JD Vance were among Republican leaders who called for those who spoke negatively about Kirk online to be fired.
It’s uncommon “for high-ranking government officials to throw the weight of the states behind a campaign to punish viewpoints,” Fee said. “And not only that, but to selectively punish only those viewpoints coming from one side of the political aisle.”