Trump's Surgeon General Nominee Linked to Childhood Gun Accident That Killed Her Father
Dr. Janette Nesheiwat, President-elect Trump's pick for surgeon general, has faced renewed scrutiny after reports revealed her father's death in 1990 resulted from an accidental gun discharge she caused as a teenager.
- Dr. Janette Nesheiwat, nominated by President-elect Donald Trump to be the next U.S. surgeon general, was involved in a 1990 incident where a gun accidentally discharged, fatally injuring her father.
- At 13 years old, Nesheiwat accidentally knocked over a tackle box containing a handgun while searching for scissors, causing the gun to fire and strike her father in the head while he was sleeping.
- Nesheiwat has previously cited her father's death as a key inspiration for her career in medicine but did not publicly disclose her involvement in the accident until recent reports brought it to light.
- Her memoir, set to be released later this month, references her father's death as a formative event but omits details about the gun accident, which police ruled as an unintentional shooting.
- Nesheiwat's professional background includes work as an urgent-care doctor, medical director, and Fox News contributor, with her nomination drawing attention for its departure from traditional public health leadership profiles.