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BREAKING: Pete Hegseth Has Reportedly Been Seen Trying to Leave the Country After Rep. Shri Thanedar Filed the First Article Against Him — and He’s Now Allegedly Demanding the Release of the Full, Unedited Boat-Strike Tape
BREAKING: Pete Hegseth Has Reportedly Been Seen Trying to Leave the Country After Rep. Shri Thanedar Filed the First Article Against Him — and He’s Now Allegedly Demanding the Release of the Full, Unedited Boat-Strike Tape
## “Alleged Exile Attempt” Claim Surfaces Online
A post on a Facebook group — widely circulated on social media — claims that Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth was recently “seen trying to leave the country” after Representative Shri Thanedar filed what is described as the “first article” against him. According to the post’s author, Hegseth allegedly made plans to depart the U.S. ahead of possible impeachment proceedings, though no flight records, travel logs, or credible witnesses have publicly corroborated the claim. So far, major international news outlets have **not** reported any evidence to support the assertion.
## Background: Impeachment Pressure on Hegseth
In recent days, Rep. Shri Thanedar — a Democrat from Michigan — announced he intends to introduce articles of impeachment against Hegseth. ([Axios][2]) The impetus: explosive allegations over a controversial Caribbean boat strike in September 2025, in which U.S. forces — under the administration’s narco-trafficking crackdown — sank a suspected drug boat, then reportedly launched a second strike after two survivors emerged.
That second strike, critics say, may have resulted in the deaths of survivors and could amount to an unlawful “no-quarter” order — potentially a war crime under international law. ([AP News][4])
Additionally, Hegseth is under scrutiny for what some call the “Signalgate” scandal — a case in which a watchdog report recently faulted him for sharing sensitive military strike plans via a non-secure messaging app
These developments have fueled calls for accountability, intensified legal and political pressure, and prompted renewed debate over U.S. military conduct against suspected drug traffickers.
## Why the Exile Claim Remains Unconfirmed
* None of the mainstream media outlets currently covering the Hegseth controversies — including those reporting on impeachment threats — mention any credible sighting, travel, or official documentation indicating that Hegseth attempted to leave the country.
* The claim seems to stem from a social-media post in a private or semi-private community, which means it lacks verification or sources that could be independently confirmed.
* In high-stakes cases involving impeachment or national security officials, typically multiple outlets would investigate and attempt to corroborate anything serious like a flight abroad. That has not happened.
Because of these gaps, the claim remains **rumour-level** rather than confirmed fact.
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## What Could Happen Next
* If Rep. Thanedar formally introduces impeachment articles against Hegseth, congressional hearings or subpoenas could shed light on Hegseth’s recent movements — which in turn might confirm or refute the claim about his departure attempts.
* Journalistic investigations may attempt to trace travel records, passport/immigration data, or other documents — though such information may be classified or otherwise inaccessible.
* Until then, the exile claim should be treated with skepticism: it remains uncorroborated and should be reported as what it is — an allegation, not a confirmed event.
