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SEAL Team 6 Member Invited to Bohemian Grove Three Times During Capitol Hill Career

Julian Dorey Daily · Navy SEAL who K*lled Bin Laden on Bohemian Grove Invitation, Rescuing Marcus Luttrell, & DEVGRU · July 10, 2026
SEAL Team 6 Member Invited to Bohemian Grove Three Times During Capitol Hill Career
Julian Dorey Daily
Julian Dorey Daily
Navy SEAL who K*lled Bin Laden on Bohemian Grove Invitation, Rescuing Marcus Luttrell, & DEVGRU
"I was invited to, uh, um, Bohemian Grove 3 times and I didn't go just because I didn't go. I totally would now. Wear a GoPro. I didn't know. Oh dude, I'd love to get in there now. But no, I got— I didn't know anything about it. I'm like, yeah, I did be a cool party. I didn't know I'd be, uh, potentially a senator. Who invited you to Bohemian Grove? Uh, I was invited by, uh, musicians through a Democrat Senator, maybe."
Robert O'Neill reveals he was invited three times to the secretive Bohemian Grove gathering while working on Capitol Hill after leaving the Navy. He describes being invited by musicians connected to a Democratic senator and admits he didn't understand the significance at the time but would now attend to expose what happens there.

About this episode

Robert O'Neill, the Navy SEAL who killed Osama bin Laden, sits down for an extensive conversation covering his 16-year career from an accidental Navy recruitment to becoming one of the most decorated operators in SEAL Team 6 history. The discussion reveals O'Neill's journey through multiple Iraq deployments during the height of the surge, his role in the Marcus Luttrell rescue operation, and intimate details about the bin Laden raid that have never been publicly disclosed. Most significantly, O'Neill reveals he did not personally witness bin Laden's burial at sea and was only told it happened, challenging the official narrative. He also discloses being invited three times to Bohemian Grove by a Democratic senator during his Capitol Hill career and describes witnessing systematic kompromat operations targeting young politicians at Washington parties. O'Neill criticizes how bureaucratic overreach lost the Afghanistan war, recounting being ticketed for not wearing a reflective belt after a gunfight, and reveals he wrote goodbye letters to his daughters before the bin Laden raid expecting to die. The conversation explores his philosophical approach to combat, his use of humor as a coping mechanism, and his evolution from someone who never considered taking a life to leading some of the most consequential special operations missions in U.S. history. O'Neill also discusses the intense selection process for DEVGRU, losing 17 friends in the Extortion 17 helicopter shootdown, and his current perspective on power, politics, and the military-industrial complex.

Key takeaways

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