Hulk Hogan's Widow Sky Daily Plotting Lawsuit After His Death

The news has set off a wave of controversy online, with fans stunned that a legal battle could be brewing so soon.
Hulk Hogan died suddenly last month at 71, and the fallout has gotten messy fast. His widow, Sky Daily, is reportedly gearing up to sue several of the doctors who treated him, with a theory forming around a neck surgery he had a few months before he passed. It is a strange, rumor-fueled situation with a lot of moving parts, so here is what is actually being said and by whom.
- Sky Daily is considering a malpractice lawsuit against multiple medical professionals, according to the Daily Mail.
- The focus, per the outlet, is a neck operation Hogan had in May and whether there was damage to the phrenic nerve — the nerve that tells your diaphragm to move so you can breathe.
- TMZ reported that in the 911 calls from the day Hogan died, Sky told dispatchers: "My husband is not breathing. He just stopped breathing." A therapist who was at their home reportedly told responders Hogan had phrenic nerve damage.
- A medical examiner ruled Hogan died following a heart attack.
- Sky requested a private autopsy, though the results have not been made public. If she files suit, expect that report to become a key piece of the story.
- Days before these lawsuit reports surfaced, Hogan's estranged daughter, Brooke, said she found closure after viewing his body.
The phrenic nerve detail is a little inside baseball, but it matters: if that nerve is damaged, your breathing can be compromised over time. That is the thread connecting the May surgery to what happened later, at least in the theory Sky is exploring. It does not automatically contradict the medical examiner's heart attack finding, but it could point to a chain of events rather than one isolated cause — again, if proven.
"We are investigating for possible malpractice. If you have shortness of breath for a long time, that makes you very sick. It is not something that is an alarming (sudden) cause of death. It is something that wears on you, makes you weak."
To be clear: as of now, this is all reportedly in motion. No lawsuit has been filed publicly, and Sky has not released the private autopsy. But the combination of the 911 call details, the medical examiner's report, and the surgery timeline is exactly the kind of cocktail that turns grief into litigation. If Sky moves forward, expect the legal case to dig into surgical notes from May, any follow-up care, and whether anyone missed signs of respiratory trouble in the weeks after.