Back in 2012, America’s Got Talent introduced viewers to a man named Timothy Michael Poe. At first, he didn’t seem all that different from other contestants — until he started talking.
He told the judges he was a war veteran who’d been injured in Afghanistan in 2009. According to him, a grenade blast left him with a broken back, a traumatic brain injury, and a noticeable stutter. Then he sang If Tomorrow Never Comes.
It hit people. Not just because of the performance, but because of the story behind it. For a moment, it really did feel like one of those rare, powerful TV moments you remember.
But pretty quickly, things started to unravel.
Not long after his audition aired, questions started coming up about his military story. Officials looked into his records and said they didn’t match what he’d claimed. A spokesperson, Lt. Col. Kevin Olson, said there was no evidence of a grenade injury or a Purple Heart.
The records showed something different: Poe had served from 2002 to 2011 as a supply specialist, with time in Kosovo and only a brief period in Afghanistan.
Then people who said they had served with him began speaking out. One of them claimed Poe had only been in Afghanistan for a few weeks, mostly on base, and hadn’t seen combat. He was sent home early for medical reasons — but not because of a battlefield injury.
That’s when the tone online really shifted, especially among veterans. A lot of people felt like something wasn’t right.
And more details kept surfacing.
His ex-wife said he’d been singing long before the show, which didn’t line up with the idea that music became part of his recovery. There were also accusations that he used someone else’s photo to support his story. Even the stutter — which had been a big part of his identity on stage — started getting questioned by people who knew him personally.
At that point, it wasn’t just skepticism anymore. The whole story was under a microscope.
Poe didn’t immediately back down. At first, he stood by what he said, insisting his injuries were real, even if they weren’t properly documented.
Later on, though, his tone changed. He admitted that things might not have happened exactly the way he originally described them. A lot of people took that as him quietly acknowledging that parts of the story had been exaggerated.
Interestingly, none of this is actually what got him off the show.
He made it past auditions and performed again during the Las Vegas round. But that performance didn’t land the same way, and the judges ended up cutting him — simply because they didn’t think he was strong enough vocally.
One important detail: that episode had already been filmed before the controversy really broke. So at the time, the judges had no idea what was going on behind the scenes. Even Howard Stern later made it clear that lying about military service is something people take very seriously.
And that’s really what stuck.
Almost overnight, Poe went from someone people were rooting for to one of the most controversial contestants the show had seen.
After that, he more or less disappeared. No major music career, no big interviews, no return to TV. The story faded from headlines, but people still remember it — mostly because of how quickly everything turned.
At the end of the day, one thing is clear: he did serve in the National Guard. That part is true.
But the story that made him famous — the grenade blast, the injuries, the emotional comeback — was heavily disputed.
And in the end, his time on America’s Got Talent stopped being about talent at all.
It became about whether people believed him.
