The homicide rate of Black Americans continues to soar despite increasing awareness of their overrepresentation. Given this overrepresentation, Black Americans are especially vulnerable to secondary or co-victimization. Following a homicide in the Black community, loved ones are inconsolable with grief; however, it is frequently the victim’s mother, daughter, sister, aunt, female romantic partner, and grandmother who carry the social, cultural, and legal weight. Black women’s invisibility and hypervisibility as secondary victims of homicide adds to their marginalization and puts them at risk for additional harms. In response to this issue, using a Critical Race Feminism and Intersectionality theoretical lens, this paper explores three distinct types of homicide and their impacts on Black women: firearm homicide; police brutality; and intimate partner homicide (IPH). Furthermore, focusing on the often-overlooked racialized and gendered trauma following a violent death in the Black community, research, policy, and practice measures to support Black women are introduced. Overall, this paper presents a cumulative review and a springboard agenda for advancing and elevating knowledge on Black women’s experiences in the aftermath of homicide.