The GGLF 2023 LLC Life-Insurance Policy (Claims)
:::caution Attributed claims only Buying key-person life insurance on a founder is lawful, ordinary, and prudent nonprofit governance. So is financing the premium with a loan and booking it on a Form 990. Nothing on this page asserts that any person or organization did anything improper. As set out below, the central timing claim is disproved by the very document offered to support it — and this page says so up front rather than at the end. :::
Claim snapshot
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| The claim | A large policy on Kirk was taken out through a Wyoming LLC right after he began questioning October 7 |
| Raised by | An account identified in the notes as Blake, and other open-source researchers working Wyoming filings |
| First surfaced | Undated in source |
| Rests on | Document — a public Wyoming filing, which contradicts the claim it was cited for |
| Evidence rating | THIN — self-refuting on its central timing claim |
The date that undoes the claim
Lead with this, because everything else is downstream of it.
The claim is that the policy was taken out "right after he questions Israel Oct 7th" — that is, after October 7, 2023. The document researchers cite as proof is the Wyoming business filing for GGLF 2023 LLC. That filing shows the entity was created May 15, 2023 — roughly five months before October 7, 2023.
The record offered as evidence of the timing disproves the timing. The vehicle existed before the event it was supposedly created in response to. That does not merely weaken the claim; it removes the causal story the claim is built on. Any version of this item that keeps the "right after October 7" framing is contradicted by its own primary source.
What is alleged
Setting the timing aside, here is the rest of what is claimed. Researchers including Blake raise questions about a life-insurance policy on Charlie Kirk reportedly owned by GGLF 2023 LLC, a Wyoming entity registered at 30 N Gould St Ste R, Sheridan, WY 82801, with a mailing address in Charleston, South Carolina and an organizer listed as Stephanie L. Hooper, LL.M. The further claims: that TPUSA reportedly paid a ~$350,000 loan connected to the policy in the fiscal year ending June 30, 2024; that the potential payout is estimated at $20-50 million; and that Patrick Bet-David may have written the terms — a point the notes themselves record only as a guess ("Patrick Bet David wrote the terms I think").
One more thing is worth stating plainly, because it is the tell. Blake's actual post is a question: "Does anyone know the name of the life insurance company that underwrote & issued the policy on Charlie Kirk that GGLF 2023 LLC owned?" The researchers pressing this item do not know which carrier underwrote the policy. The central fact remains unknown to the people making the claim.
The ordinary explanation
Key-person life insurance on a founder whose personal brand is the organization's principal asset is standard, prudent nonprofit governance. Turning Point USA without Charlie Kirk was a materially different organization, and any competent board or major funder would insure against exactly that risk. Premium-financing loans booked on a Form 990 are an ordinary structure, disclosed in the ordinary way — the $350,000 figure is known because it was reported, which is what disclosure looks like.
Holding the policy in an LLC rather than at the nonprofit directly is likewise a common arrangement, frequently used to keep proceeds outside an estate and to separate the asset from the operating entity. The 30 N Gould St, Sheridan, Wyoming address is one of the best-known commercial registered-agent suites in the United States, used by many thousands of unrelated companies; finding it on a filing is evidence of a registered agent, not of concealment.
The payout figure is an anonymous estimate with no source document. The underwriter is, by the researchers' own admission, still unidentified — which means no beneficiary has been established, and with no beneficiary there is no beneficiary's motive. On the present record, no one has shown who would receive a dollar.
What would settle it
- Identify the carrier that underwrote and issued the policy, and the named beneficiary — the single question the researchers themselves are asking.
- Obtain the actual policy issue date, which is the only date that matters and which the LLC formation date does not establish.
- Pull TPUSA's Form 990 for the fiscal year ending June 30, 2024 and read the $350,000 loan disclosure in context — what was it for, and was it repaid?
- Determine who the members of GGLF 2023 LLC are, beyond the listed organizer.
Sources
- Wyoming business filing for GGLF 2023 LLC, eFNum 139070249185027175066103125135076044249251222118 — wyobiz.wyo.gov. Shows entity created 5/15/2023.
- Investigation notes recording Blake's open question about which insurer underwrote the policy, and the "Patrick Bet David wrote the terms I think" speculation.
- Investigation notes recording the "taken out right after he questions Israel Oct 7th," the $350,000 TPUSA loan, and the $20M-$50M estimated payout — none of which is accompanied by a source document.
- See also the site's dedicated entity page: GGLF 2023 LLC.