Hulk Hogan’s widow Sky Daily is hitting hit back at her estranged stepchild Brooke’s shocking Scientology claim and other conspiracy theories about her husband’s death.
Referring to ‘misleading media stories created by faceless AI accounts’ and ‘people not close enough to truly know what was happening,’ Daily urged followers to be ‘patient’ as news continues to trickle out about Hogan’s fatal heart attack.
Brooke previously shared an article by radio personality and Hogan friend Bubba the Love Sponge, which read: ‘Quick cremation without autopsy raises questions about Hulk Hogan’s death.’
Brooke responded: ‘Exactly.’
The 71-year-old Hogan previously had leukemia and atrial fibrillation, according to the Pinellas County Medical Examiner.
Bubba even suggested a quick cremation could have been used to destroy evidence in the event a bad actor induced Hogan’s heart attack by injecting something into the wrestler’s dialysis port while he slept.
Hulk Hogan’s widow, Sky Daily, has clapped back at her late husband’s daughter, Brooke

Daily said Brooke’s words about the reason behind her husband’s passing ‘misleading stories’
Bubba, whose real name is Todd Clem, also referenced alleged connections between Daily and Scientology, a religious group with a large facility in Clearwater, Florida, where Hogan was living.
And, as Bubba pointed out, Hogan has an estate supposedly worth upwards of $50 million.
Clem did not offer facts to substantiate his stunning claims, which stem from a report in the Tampa Bay Times from July 31 that says Hogan was ‘doing therapy’ when he collapsed at his home in Clearwater Beach on July 24.
The report says paramedics told staff at Morton Plant Hospital that Hogan had just returned home from surgery and was ‘currently waiting to start dialysis’. Clem claims nobody knew the wrestling icon was due to begin dialysis.
In a bid to revive him, medics reportedly gave Hogan drugs that can treat excessive levels of potassium, a sign of kidney failure. These can lead to cardiac arrest.
Hogan was also given two milligrams of Narcan, the drug that can quickly reverse opioid overdoses. There is no indication that Hogan had overdosed.
However, The Tampa Bay Times also revealed the Pinellas County Medical Examiner did not perform an autopsy on Hogan because his death was not deemed to be suspicious.
‘There were no signs of foul play or suspicious activity,’ Maj. Nate Burnside of the Clearwater Police Department also told reporters.