Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth on Tuesday abruptly reversed the U.S. Army‘s suspension from flight duties hours earlier of two AH 64 Apache helicopter crews that flew around musician Kid Rock’s home in Nashville, Tenn., over the weekend.
Hegseth’s move, which also quashed an Army investigation of Saturday’s unusual flyby, came shortly after President Donald Trump was asked about the incident by reporters at the White House.
Trump said he liked Kid Rock, who is a prominent supporter of his, even as the president suggested the crews’ conduct was unauthorized.
“Thank you @KidRock,” Hegseth wrote in a post on his personal X social media account shortly after Trump’s comments.
“@USArmy pilots suspension LIFTED. No punishment. No investigation,” the Pentagon chief wrote.
“Carry on, patriots.”
The Army on Monday said that it was investigating the crews for the flyby, which Kid Rock had posted on his X social media account.
Videos posted by the singer show the choppers hovering close to Kid Rock’s pool, with him saluting the crews and pumping his fist while standing close to a miniature Statue of Liberty.
“This is a level of respect that s— for brains Governor of California will never know,” the singer wrote in one post, referring to Gov. Gavin Newsom, a Democrat who is engaged in an ongoing social media feud with Trump. “God Bless America and all those who have made the ultimate sacrifice to defend her.”
The flyby occurred on the same day that Nashville and many other cities around the United States saw “No Kings” demonstrations against Trump.
Apache helicopters, which appeared to be the ones that flew outside Kid Rock’s house, also flew over the protests in Nashville that day.
Article source: https://www.cnbc.com/2026/03/31/kid-rock-army-helicopter-suspended.html