Lindsey Graham Dies in South Carolina
The Pure Report account · 4 sources · as of Jul 13, 15:46 UTC
Lindsey Graham died on Saturday of an aortic dissection due to arteriosclerotic cardiovascular disease. He was pronounced dead at George Washington University Hospital at 10:23 p.m. Saturday. An autopsy was performed Sunday.
What we know
- Lindsey Graham died of an aortic dissection due to arteriosclerotic cardiovascular disease.
receipt
“Sen. Lindsey Graham (R-S.C.) died on Saturday of an aortic dissection due to arteriosclerotic cardiovascular disease, the office of the Washington, D.C., chief medical examiner said Sunday.” — verbatim from The Hill · article - Lindsey Graham was pronounced dead at George Washington University Hospital at 10:23 p.m. Saturday.
receipt
“Graham, 71, was pronounced dead at George Washington University Hospital at 10:23 p.m. Saturday, according to a joint statement from the Metropolitan Police Department and the District of Columbia's Office of the Chief Medical Examiner.” — verbatim from Fox News — Latest · article - An autopsy was performed Sunday.
receipt
“An autopsy was performed Sunday.” — verbatim from Fox News — Latest · article
Attributed reporting
- According to The Daily Beast, Lindsey Graham died of a rare cardiovascular condition, according to preliminary findings from the D.C. Medical Examiner’s office.
receipt
“Lindsey Graham died of a rare cardiovascular condition, according to preliminary findings from the D.C. Medical Examiner’s office.” — verbatim from The Daily Beast · article
Framing spectrum · 4 outlets
Coverage patterns
Earliest report in our feed set (publisher timestamps): among the earliest were The Daily Beast and The Hill — stamps within 90 minutes.
| Lean | Outlets | Articles | Who |
|---|---|---|---|
| Left | 1 | 1 | The Daily Beast |
| Center | 1 | 1 | The Hill |
| Right | 1 | 2 | Fox News |
Report-by-report timeline · 4
Coverage patterns reflect only the ~50 feeds Pure Report ingests — not the full media universe. Timestamps are publisher-reported. Lean labels are Pure Report's classification. Articles are grouped by automated clustering, and counts include syndicated wire copies.