Nurse Lexi Kuenzle says she never expected to lose her job security over one comment. Yet after she confronted a doctor who allegedly celebrated the assassination of conservative activist Charlie Kirk, she found herself suspended and facing career-ending retaliation. Her story is now at the center of a lawsuit that is drawing attention far beyond her workplace.
According to Kuenzle, the incident unfolded on September 10, just hours after news broke that Charlie Kirk had been fatally shot at Utah Valley University.
Kuenzle, 33, recalls a moment she describes as surreal: bariatric surgeon Dr. Matthew Jung allegedly “cheered”
Kirk’s death in front of staff and even a patient. When Kuenzle responded, “I love him,” Jung allegedly retorted,
“I hate Charlie Kirk. He had it coming. He deserved it.” Shocked, she pressed him: “You’re a doctor. How could you say someone deserved to die?” Those words, she says, still echo in her mind.
Instead of letting it pass, Kuenzle reported the incident to supervisors and shared her account online.
According to her lawsuit, Jung tried to play it off by offering to buy lunch for staff, but Kuenzle felt no gesture could erase what she had heard.
By the next day, she claims, she was suspended without pay and warned she might soon be terminated. The sudden punishment, she argues, wasn’t about policy — it was about silencing her for daring to call out conduct she found unprofessional and alarming.