On March 28, 2026, two AH-64 Apache helicopters from the 101st Combat Aviation Brigade at Fort Campbell flew in the Nashville area and were filmed flying low/hovering near Kid Rock’s home. ([abcnews.com](https://abcnews.com/Politics/army-reviewing-attack-helicopters-flying-low-hovering-kid/story?id=131553036))
Kid Rock posted video of the helicopters and commentary on X; the incident went viral and drew public/media scrutiny. ([abcnews.com](https://abcnews.com/Politics/army-reviewing-attack-helicopters-flying-low-hovering-kid/story?id=131553036))
On March 31, an Army spokesperson said the service had opened an Army Regulation 15-6 administrative investigation and had suspended the involved personnel from flight duties while reviewing FAA compliance, safety protocol, and approval requirements. ([politico.com](https://www.politico.com/news/2026/03/31/army-suspends-kid-rock-flyby-crew-00853101))
Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth then announced on X that the suspensions were lifted and that there would be no punishment and no investigation. ([cnbc.com](https://www.cnbc.com/2026/03/31/kid-rock-army-helicopter-suspended.html))
Other reporting indicates the same aircrews/aircraft were also tied to flights over local “No Kings” protests in Nashville, adding a separate public-safety/civil-military sensitivity the Examiner story does not foreground. ([newschannel5.com](https://www.newschannel5.com/news/newschannel-5-investigates/u-s-army-suspends-apache-helicopter-flight-crews-involved-in-kid-rock-no-kings-flybys))
Key missing factual context across coverage: what the mission was, whether it was authorized, what airspace/altitude constraints applied in that area, and what findings (if any) existed before the investigation was reportedly ended. ([politico.com](https://www.politico.com/news/2026/03/31/army-suspends-kid-rock-flyby-crew-00853101))