American soccer journalist Grant Wahl died suddenly last week from a burst blood vessel leading from the heart while covering the World Cup in Qatar, his family has revealed.
Wahl’s wife, Dr. Celine Gounder, a leading infectious disease expert who was a member of Joe Biden’s COVID-19 transition team advisory board, insists his death had nothing to do with his vaccination status.
After his untimely and most likely instant death across the Atlantic, an autopsy conducted in New York found that the reporter experienced a “catastrophic rupture in the ascending aorta, which carries oxygenated blood from the heart.”
“I really do feel some relief in knowing what it was,” Dr. Gouder said in a recent interview.
Prior to his death, Wahl felt sick with cold symptoms for a number of days before suddenly collapsing. After the collapse, Wahl and had written in his newsletter and on Twitter that he felt that his body was getting weak and breaking down due to lack of sleep and extensive work hours covering the World Cup.
Wahl, 49, was perfectly healthy before his sudden heart-related death, reports say. Dr. Gouder has also stated that his cold symptoms were probably unrelated to his heart aneurysm.
Both Wahl and his wife were staunch supporters of the COVID-19 vaccines, which have been found to cause heart problems in some people.
“It is awful to talk about this, but giant cell arteritis is both a risk factor for the aneurysm that killed him and a side effect of mRNA jabs,” wrote journalist Alex Berenson.
1/ Dr. Celine Grounder, a leading advocate for mRNA Covid vaccines, is sure they could not have caused her husband Grant Wahl’s death.
It is awful to talk about this, but giant cell arteritis is both a risk factor for the aneurysm that killed him and a side effect of mRNA jabs. pic.twitter.com/PEcAJJQCpL
— Alex Berenson (@AlexBerenson) December 14, 2022
“I hate – HATE – having to talk about this with this death so fresh, but the stakes are too high not to be honest about what we know and don’t know. Governments STILL press these shots; colleges still mandate them; and overall deaths in mRNA nations are still well above normal,” Berenson added in a subsequent tweet.

































