A routine policy discussion in Salt Lake City veered sharply off script last week when former Sen. Kyrsten Sinema found herself at the center of a bizarre public spectacle — one that echoed fresh legal trouble unfolding offstage.
According to the New York Post, Sinema, an independent from Arizona, was appearing alongside Republican Utah Gov. Spencer Cox at a hotel forum focused on politics, the economy, and technology.
The conversation had been calm and cordial until a lighthearted aside about Brigham Young University — Sinema’s alma mater — prompted an unexpected interruption.
After noting that BYU’s mascot is a cougar, Sinema joked, “I get called that a lot.”
Moments later, a man stood up in the audience and loudly declared, “Ladies and gentlemen, I have a confession to make: I am actually having an affair with Kyrsten Sinema,” according to the Salt Lake Tribune.
Event staff quickly moved to remove the heckler, but before the room could fully settle, a second man rose and made similar claims.
“I’m happy to call her my lover … My wife is leaving me because of you. She’s taking the kids,” he shouted.
Neither man was arrested or cited, and it was unclear whether the disruptions were meant as a prank or a protest.
Once order was restored, Sinema addressed the audience directly, quipping, “I promise I didn’t plan that.”
The awkward episode came just days after Sinema was named in a civil lawsuit filed by Heather Ammel, the ex-wife of Sinema’s former bodyguard. Ammel alleges that Sinema carried on an affair with her husband, ultimately leading to the collapse of their 14-year marriage.
“Prior to [Sinema’s] actions, Plaintiff and Mr. Ammel were happily married and genuine love and affection existed between them,” the lawsuit claims. “As a direct and proximate result of [Sinema’s] intentional and unlawful actions, such marital love and affection was alienated and destroyed.”
Ammel, a mother of three, is seeking more than $25,000 in damages. The suit was initially filed in September and was moved to federal court last week. It originated in North Carolina, one of a small number of states that still allow so-called “homewrecker” or alienation-of-affection claims.
The complaint further alleges that Sinema suggested her bodyguard experiment with MDMA to address mental health struggles stemming from PTSD and traumatic brain injuries sustained during military deployments, and that she offered to “guide” him through the experience.
Sinema has not publicly responded to the lawsuit.














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