We searched the Nexis news database and found no news reports about Erika Kirk being banned from Romania or that her charity, Everyday Heroes Like You, or its project, Romanian Angels, were accused of child trafficking.
The news reports some social media users shared to support the claims against Kirk did not pertain to her charity work; one was published when Kirk was 13 years old.
From at least 2012 to 2014, Kirk worked on a project called Romanian Angels which allowed people to sponsor Romanian children and send them gifts, according to archived sites and news reports. The project didn’t involve child adoption.
As conservative activist Erika Kirk publicly mourned her husband Charlie Kirk, social media users targeted her work on a Romanian charity project.
"Did ya’ll know Erika Kirk is banned from Romania because her Evangelical group was accused of trafficking children out of Romanian villages?" one self-described "leftist" X user wrote Sept. 23.
Another post from an X user whose bio encouraged people to "vote blue" said, "Erika Kirk is banned from Romania due to sex trafficking allegations — Just saying…"
A PolitiFact reader also texted us to ask if a charity Kirk ran was "accused of child trafficking in Romania."
Kirk, whose maiden name is Frantzve, founded the nonprofit organization Everyday Heroes Like You, which aimed to assist other charities. That work included an international Romanian Angels project that teamed up with the U.S. Marine Corps to sponsor a Romanian orphanage, Kirk once told Arizona Foothills Magazine.
What’s the evidence for these claims? There isn’t any.
Some posts repeated the baseless narrative without giving any hint about where it originated.
One of the earliest posts we found, dated Sept. 16, said Kirk’s organization had links to missing Romanian children and trafficking and included screenshots of two articles.
The first, a 2001 report from the Israeli newspaper Haaretz, was about a Romanian investigation into Israeli adoption agencies and an international conspiracy to sell children’s organs for transplants. The report did not mention Kirk, Romanian Angels or Everyday Heroes Like You. Kirk was about 13 years old when that news report was published.
The second was a 2023 article from Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty, a media organization founded by the U.S. that reports internationally, including in Romania. It detailed the stories of Romanian children, now adults, who were adopted internationally and who’ve sought information on their Romanian birth families — including some people who concluded they were trafficked as children. This report also did not mention Kirk, Romanian Angels or Everyday Heroes Like You.
Another Sept. 18 post included a screenshot of a Jan. 23, 2022, BBC video titled, "Sex trafficking: Children groomed in Romania sent to UK." The nine-minute BBC piece focused on young Romanian girls who it reported were groomed in Romania to be trafficked to the United Kingdom. It didn’t mention Kirk or either of her organizations.
Both X posts also contained a low-resolution image with a Romanian Angels banner that encouraged people to "join the movement." Using a reverse image search, we found a higher resolution version of what looks like a flier with details for a fundraiser organized by Everyday Heroes Like You. The flier, other documents, and Kirk’s social media posts show her traveling to Romania and discussing the project from 2012 to 2014.
The flier says people can "change the life of a Romanian orphan this holiday season" by "adopting" a child, which involved selecting their name from a list, purchasing their "wish list item," and then bringing it to pack as a gift that would be sent to Orphanage Antonio in Constanta, Romania. An archived version of Everyday Heroes Like You’s website says the project involved a partnership with U.S. service members and United Hands Romania.
We contacted the U.S. Marine Corps and U.S. Army to ask about the partnerships and did not hear back.
Oana Prisecariu, United Hands Romania’s vice president, told us the organization had collaborated with Kirk — then Erika Frantzve — who personally sponsored gifts for children at Antonio Placement Center. After visiting Constanta with her mother, Kirk sent a shipment of gifts for children and that was the extent of the collaboration between the groups, Prisecariu said.
"We never heard or received any bad reports about her personally," Prisecariu said.
We emailed press contacts at Romania’s Ministry of Internal Affairs, the Romanian Police, the General Inspectorate of Border Police and the National Agency Against Trafficking in Persons. We received no response.
The news organization Lead Stories said its Romanian staff reviewed media reports and court records and found only positive mentions of work by Romanian Angels and Everyday Heroes Like You.
"Romanian media reported Erika Kirk's ‘Everyday Heroes like You’ made donations in the form of gifts to Antonio Placement Center in Constanța, as well as to the local hospital, between 2011 and 2015," Lead Stories reported. "There is no evidence that the ministries were involved in actual international adoptions. A local newspaper article documented the gift donations to the orphans."
We also searched using the Nexis news database for reports about Kirk being banned from Romania and found none.
We rate the claim that "Erika Kirk is banned from Romania because her Evangelical group was accused of trafficking children out of Romanian villages" False.
PolitiFact Researcher Caryn Baird contributed to this report.
Editor’s note: Google translations of Romanian government websites were used when reporting this article.
UPDATE, Sept. 28, 2025: This fact-check was updated to include a post-publication statement provided by United Hands Romania.
Emailed statement from Oana Prisecariu, United Hands Romania’s vice president, Sept. 26, 2025
@cosmepolitics’ X post, Sept. 23, 2025
@princess_kim_k’s X post, Sept. 24, 2025
Lead Stories, Fact Check: No Evidence Erika Kirk's 'Romanian Angels' Evangelical Ministry Was Accused Of Trafficking Children Or Banned From Romania | Lead Stories. Sept. 23, 2025
The New York Times, For Erika Kirk, a Husband’s Life Cut Short by Violence He Seemed to Foresee - The New York Times Sept. 25, 2025
NPR, Erika Kirk says she forgives the man accused of killing her husband, Sept. 21, 2025
Arizona Foothills Magazine, Erika Frantzve: more than just a pretty face, accessed Sept. 25, 2025
Arizona Foothills Magazine, AZ Giving Spotlight: Erika Frantzve of Everyday Heroes Like You, accessed Sept. 25, 2025
CNN, Erika Kirk named CEO of Turning Point USA | CNN Politics, Sept. 18, 2025
AZ Central, Who is Erika Kirk, wife of slain conservative activist Charlie Kirk?, Sept. 11, 2025
Erika Kirk, Past & Present, accessed Sept. 25, 2025
The 19th, Where Turning Point USA's Erika Kirk stands on gender roles, marriage and motherhood, Sept. 23, 2025
Every Day Heroes Like You’s website, accessed Sept. 25, 2025
@kathyw412’s X post, Sept. 16, 2025
Haaretz, Romania Probes Israeli Adoption Agency Link in Organ Trafficking, Dec. 12, 2001
Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty, 'I Was Definitely Trafficked': Romanians Adopted As Kids Now Seek Justice, Answers As Adults, Jan. 7, 2023
Poynter, EU offers support to Radio Free Europe, an outlet targeted by the Trump administration, May 23, 2025
@EscanorReloaded’s X post, Sept. 18, 2025
Snopes, No evidence Erika Kirk was involved with child trafficking in Romania | Snopes.com, Sept. 25, 2025
Erika Kirk’s Instagram post, April 23, 2013
Arizona Foothills Magazine, Romanian Angel flier, Dec. 19, 2013
Erika Kirk’s Instagram post, March 31, 2014
Erika Kirk’s Instagram post, Dec. 3, 2014
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