Us Weekly

Kyle Busch's Attorney Slams ‘False Narrative' Surrounding Shocking Death

An attorney for late NASCAR driver Kyle Busch slammed speculation that his wife and children were left without proper life insurance in the wake of his sudden death.

"Some on this platform, in the media, and elsewhere are pushing a false narrative about the Busch IUL [Indexed Universal Life] matter," lawyer Robert Rikard wrote via LinkedIn on Sunday, May 24. "It needs to be stopped, and those publishing false statements are on notice to correct them."

After his death on May 21, Busch had two policies with "no value prior to litigation" that were terminated, per Rikard.

"The remaining policies were handled responsibly," he explained. "The Busch family retained an independent insurance specialist - a senior executive at a major national financial institution - who evaluated the entire portfolio and recommended a structured transition to replacement coverage that provides a substantial lifetime death benefit. The Busch family did not walk away from their coverage. They replaced it with better coverage."

Rikard added, "The suggestion that they were advised by anyone to abandon tens of millions in death benefit protection is a fabrication, and those repeating it know it is. To continue to do so is at your own peril."

Busch is survived by his wife, Samantha, and their two children: son Brexton, 11, and daughter Lennix, 4.

After his death, Rikard remembered the motorsports icon with a touching tribute.

"Kyle was not just a client to me," the attorney shared via LinkedIn. "Over the course of working together, he became a friend. He was someone I genuinely respected and cared about, and this news is incredibly difficult to process. My heart goes out to Samantha, his children, his family, and all of those who knew and loved him. There are no words that truly ease the pain of a loss like this, especially for those closest to him."

He continued, "I will always be grateful for the trust he placed in me, the conversations we shared, and the friendship that grew along the way. He will be deeply missed."

Busch died at age 41 after "becoming unresponsive" while training in a Chevrolet racing simulator in North Carolina.

According to his death certificate, obtained by Us Weekly exclusively on Wednesday, May 27, Busch died of pneumonia that progressed into sepsis.

The sepsis led to disseminated intravascular coagulation, or small clots that form in the bloodstream and block blood flow. Busch then suffered hemorrhagic shock, which is caused by severe internal or external blood loss.

Copyright 2026 Us Weekly. All rights reserved

This story was originally published May 28, 2026 at 10:33 AM.

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