100percentfedup.com
Sen. Tommy Tuberville Reveals Lindsey Graham’s Final Phone Call Before Tragic Death
It was the kind of call no staffer ever expects to receive.
Sen. Lindsey Graham was experiencing chest pains. He knew he needed help.
But instead of calling 911 himself, he reached for the person he trusted to get it done.
Now, Sen. Tommy Tuberville is revealing the frightening exchange that sent emergency responders racing to Graham’s Washington home during the final hours of his life.
And the most chilling line may have been Graham’s answer when his scheduler asked whether he had already called 911.
Watch Tuberville recount what happened:
Sen. Tommy Tuberville (R-AL) says his former staffer called 911 on behalf of Sen. Lindsey Graham after Graham said he was experiencing chest pains.
“By the time she got there, 911 had knocked the door down,” Tuberville said. “They were working on him.” pic.twitter.com/1qZqn5obDh
— CBS News (@CBSNews) July 13, 2026
According to Fox News, Tuberville explained that his former scheduler had gone on to work as Graham’s scheduler. One of Tuberville’s current staff members happened to be with her on Saturday night when Graham called, giving Tuberville a detailed staff-to-staff account from the people who witnessed the emergency unfold in real time.
Tuberville said Graham told the scheduler he was having chest pains and needed to do something. She immediately asked whether he had called 911.
Graham’s reply was painfully direct: “No, that’s the reason I called you.”
The scheduler placed the emergency call and headed toward Graham’s home. By the time she arrived, responders had already forced their way inside and were working to save him.
The call went to Graham’s scheduler, while Tuberville learned the details from staffers connected to both Senate offices. That close connection explains how he was able to recount the exchange so specifically and with such confidence.
Emergency crews transported Graham to George Washington University Hospital, where he was pronounced dead. The call came after he had returned to Washington from another overseas trip.
That short exchange is haunting precisely because it sounds so ordinary. A man in distress called someone he trusted.
She recognized the danger, summoned help and moved as quickly as she could.
Lindsey Graham's final phone call is being revealed, as he dialed one senator's staffer in desperate need of help.
Sen. Tommy Tuberville is sharing new details about Sen. Lindsey Graham's final moments, revealing Graham called his scheduler after returning from an overseas trip… pic.twitter.com/K1vjSfCLXH
— Fox News (@FoxNews) July 14, 2026
The Associated Press reported that a preliminary finding from the Washington medical examiner identified an aortic dissection related to arteriosclerotic cardiovascular disease. The finding connected the sudden collapse to a tear in Graham’s aorta and hardening in the senator’s arteries.
An aortic dissection occurs when a tear develops in the inner layer of the aorta, the body’s main artery. It is a life-threatening emergency that can interrupt blood flow or cause catastrophic internal bleeding.
Graham’s office initially described his death as the result of a brief and sudden illness. The preliminary finding supplied the first medical explanation for how quickly the crisis unfolded.
The finding is not yet the final determination. Graham’s office said the official cause would follow additional toxicology and microscopic testing.
Graham had turned 71 just two days before his death. The speed of the emergency stunned colleagues who had seen him working and traveling only hours earlier.
The AP noted that Graham was a former Air Force lawyer and a four-term South Carolina senator. He had served in Congress for more than three decades and remained one of Washington’s most active voices on foreign policy.
A second video post lays out the sequence Tuberville described:
“I’m Having Chest Pains” — Tuberville Reveals Lindsey Graham’s Last Call Before His Death
According to Tuberville:Graham’s former scheduler (who used to work for Tuberville) was with one of Tuberville’s staff members that night.
Graham called and said he was having chest… https://t.co/CHd5lxEDDv pic.twitter.com/cTLoiz4o9Y
— MJTruthUltra (@MJTruthUltra) July 14, 2026
Tuberville also offered a deeply personal assessment of the pace Graham kept until the end.
As the Washington Examiner reported, Tuberville said Graham had effectively “worked himself to death.” That was Tuberville’s emotional description of his colleague’s relentless schedule, not the medical examiner’s formal conclusion.
Graham had returned from overseas shortly before his death. While other senators might use a rare break to go home to their families, Tuberville said Graham would head to the airport and travel somewhere in hopes of solving another problem for the country.
He had just turned 71. He had spent more than three decades in Congress, first in the House and then in the Senate, and remained deeply involved in foreign-policy fights right up to his final days.
Tuberville later said Graham loved the country and fought hard for what he believed. Their voting records and political instincts sometimes diverged, yet Tuberville’s account carried unmistakable respect for Graham’s stamina and commitment.
Graham was famous for running toward the next argument, the next negotiation and the next flight. Friends and critics alike knew him as a man who rarely slowed down.
That work ethic made Graham one of the Senate’s most recognizable figures. It also made Tuberville’s description land with unusual force: even Graham’s rare days away from the Capitol often became another trip, another meeting or another attempt to move a difficult issue.
But Tuberville’s account strips away the public persona and leaves a much more human picture: a man alone at home, frightened by chest pain, calling the person he believed would answer.
She did, and she called 911. Responders broke through the door and fought to save him.
For all the speeches, hearings and international trips that defined Graham’s public life, that may be the detail people remember most about his final hours.
There was no grand stage and no television camera. There was only an urgent call, a trusted staffer on the other end and a desperate race to get help through the door.
This is a Guest Post from our friends over at WLTReport. View the original article here.
The post Sen. Tommy Tuberville Reveals Lindsey Graham’s Final Phone Call Before Tragic Death appeared first on 100PercentFedUp.com.