In New Interview, Megyn Kelly Presses Tim Sheehy On “Confusing” Gunshot Wound Lies
November 2, 2024
As Sheehy digs himself deeper and deeper into a hole, conservative commentator Megyn Kelly looks visibly baffled and describes Sheehy’s explanation as “so confusing”
Helena, MT – In a new interview on the Megyn Kelly Show, Tim Sheehy is pressed for the first time in seven months about the gunshot wound he claims was from combat, but records show was self-inflicted in Glacier National Park.
The result was an evasive, catastrophic, “confusing,” failed attempt at damage control where Sheehy repeatedly lied and created new holes in his version of the story, creating a new wave of questions with just three days left until Election Day.
Here’s everything NEW you need to know from Sheehy’s failure to explain his lies in a rehearsed, supposedly friendly interview:
Sheehy claims the medical records from his Kalispell hospital visit don’t exist.
- MEGYN KELLY: Are there medical records where the ER could say, “We did not treat a gunshot wound”?
- TIM SHEEHY: Well, there, there isn’t, I mean that’s the point. You go in, you check on it, and you leave. There’s not an extensive medical record for any of this stuff. And unfortunately, that’s the crux of this, is there’s just not a whole lot to talk about. They’ve decided to take this one report from a park ranger, that I gave them that report, I stood in the parking lot and said “Hey, this is what happened,” you know, and, five minutes, you know, we go on our way, and they’ve decided to make that the focal point of all this.
- MEGYN KELLY: So confusing.
Sheehy stumbles when asked if he was injured in the park, then claims he went to the hospital after falling on a hike to investigate “internal bleeding” – inconsistent with accounts from the park ranger that Sheehy had a bandaged arm when leaving the hospital.
- MEGYN KELLY: But were you wounded? In the park? Did you have a wound, Tim, in the park?
- TIM SHEEHY: No. No. Yes. I fell and injured my arm when we were hiking. So that’s why I went, because, you know, I could feel the bullet get dislodged when I fell and fell on the arm, you could feel the bullet get dislodged, and then went to the ER to say, “Hey, you know, look, you know, I’ve got internal bleeding going on here, I’ve injured my arm, can you take a look at this, make sure there’s nothing serious going on here.”