BY Brenden AckermanMarch 26, 2026
11 hours ago
BY 
 | March 26, 2026
11 hours ago

Catholic school payroll administrator fired after TikTok video fantasizing about Trump assassination

A payroll administrator for the Huron-Superior Catholic District School Board is out of a job after a TikTok video surfaced in which she described fantasizing about the public, televised assassination of President Donald Trump.

According to the Gateway Pundit, Cathy DiFilippo Kiley appeared in the now-deleted video laying out, in specific and chilling detail, exactly how she hoped to see the president killed. Not in the abstract. Not as dark humor. As a wish list.

SooToday reported Wednesday that, the board quietly sent an internal memo to staff confirming DiFilippo Kiley is no longer employed.

What She Actually Said

The video didn't leave much room for charitable interpretation. DiFilippo Kiley described her vision in granular terms:

"I know we're all waiting for it to happen, but here's what I want to see occur when it happens… I think it should be an infliction like he has done to others in the United States and around the world from a distance, publicly, while maybe he's on stage at a rally or a press conference… publicly and televised…"

She wasn't finished.

"I think the majority will be cheering. I know I will be cheering. So, karma is a bitch, and I think that is how this should go down. I don't think it should be peaceful, compassionate, uh, quick and easy… I'm not sorry about it."

Read those words again. This wasn't a vague political rant or an offhand comment taken out of context. She specified the setting: a rally or press conference. She specified the method: painful, not quick. She specified the audience: televised. And she specified her own reaction: cheering.

This is a person who worked inside a Catholic school system.

The Apology Tour

After the video went viral and the backlash arrived, DiFilippo Kiley offered a statement to SooToday that read like it was drafted with one eye on a lawyer's notepad:

"All I can really say is that I truly feel terrible about everything. I deeply regret what I said, and I meant no harm or threat to anybody. That is not who I am, and people who know me, know that I am not a hateful or violent person."

"Meant no harm or threat." She described wanting to watch the president of the United States be killed on live television in a manner that was neither "peaceful" nor "quick and easy." The words are right there.

She continued by blaming the platform itself:

"I let the influence of social media get the better of me and honestly, I became obsessed with it for the past year. It wasn't good for my mental health, and I upset a lot of people, and for that I am deeply remorseful."

Social media didn't write her script. Social media didn't stare into a camera and describe, scene by scene, how a sitting president should be publicly executed. Social media gave her a microphone. What she said into it was entirely her own.

The "social media made me do it" defense has become the go-to exit ramp for people caught saying what they actually believe. It reframes the speaker as the victim and the platform as the villain, which conveniently sidesteps the only question that matters: Do you believe what you said, or don't you?

The Environment That Produces This

It would be comforting to treat this as an isolated incident, one unhinged person who took political anger too far. But the comfort doesn't hold.

The temperature of political rhetoric on the left has been escalating for years. Assassination fantasies about Trump have migrated from the darkest corners of the internet to comedy specials, art installations, and now, apparently, the TikTok accounts of Catholic school employees. At some point, the pattern stops being a series of one-offs and starts being a culture.

Consider the contradiction embedded in DiFilippo Kiley's own apology. She insisted she "certainly would not want to incite violence" and that "we have enough of that in the world." She said this after recording a video in which she explicitly hoped for a violent, public, non-peaceful assassination and declared she was "not sorry about it." These two positions do not coexist. One of them is true, and the other is reputation management.

The institutional question matters too. DiFilippo Kiley worked for a Catholic school board. Catholic social teaching holds the dignity of every human life as a foundational principle, not a suggestion. Whatever her role in payroll, she represented an institution built on a moral framework that her video didn't just violate but inverted. The board's decision to part ways with her was the only serious option available.

Accountability Without Spectacle

To its credit, the Huron-Superior Catholic District School Board acted. It didn't issue a lukewarm statement about "reviewing the matter" or launch a months-long investigation designed to wait out the news cycle. DiFilippo Kiley is gone.

That's how institutions are supposed to work. When someone representing your organization publicly fantasizes about political murder, you don't convene a committee. You act.

DiFilippo Kiley closed her apology with a plea: "I hope someday people will be able to find it in their hearts to forgive me."

Forgiveness is a deeply personal matter, and in the Catholic tradition she nominally served, it begins with genuine contrition. Whether her remorse is real or performative is something only she knows. But the public record is clear: she said what she said, she meant it when she said it, and the apology arrived only after the consequences did.

That sequence tells you everything.

Written by: Brenden Ackerman
Brendan is is a political writer reporting on Capitol Hill, social issues, and the intersection of politics and culture.

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