A fiery young conservative, Sophia Hutchins, met a tragic end in a Malibu ravine, leaving a void in the MAGA movement.
The New York Post reported that Hutchins, 29, died July 2, 2025, after an ATV crash near Caitlyn Jenner’s home, colliding with a car and plummeting 350 feet to her death. No one else was injured. Her death shocked those who knew her as a bold transgender voice in a progressive-dominated culture.
Born in Bellevue, Washington, Hutchins graduated from Pepperdine University in 2017 with a degree in economics and finance.
She stepped down as class president during her junior year to focus on her gender transition. Unlike the left’s obsession with identity politics, she prioritized personal growth over public posturing.
Hutchins met Jenner in 2015, introduced by a mutual hairstylist and makeup artist. “We got really close as friends,” Hutchins said on Juicy Scoop in 2020. Her pragmatic conservatism shines here—networking through shared contacts, not chasing woke clout.
Their bond grew fast, with Hutchins appearing on Jenner’s E! series “I Am Cait,” which chronicled Jenner’s post-transition life. “(Jenner) made it so much more real for (Hutchins,) like normal and successful people do this,” she told Pepperdine researchers. Yet, the show’s Hollywood gloss often clashed with her grounded outlook.
By 2017, Hutchins had become Jenner’s manager, stepping into a chaotic financial scene. “So much money was being thrown everywhere,” she noted on Juicy Scoop. Her no-nonsense approach cut through the liberal elite’s wasteful haze, proving her mettle.
Post-graduation, Hutchins founded Lumasol, a sunscreen company, showcasing her entrepreneurial drive. While the left peddles victimhood, she built a business from scratch. Her hustle was a rebuke to progressive entitlement.
Hutchins also emerged as a vocal Trump supporter, acting as a surrogate for his 2024 campaign. She posed with Trump at Mar-a-Lago in February 2024, captioning it, “The energy, passion and commitment for our movement to Save America has never been greater!” Her fervor for MAGA stood firm against coastal elitism.
She attended Trump’s election night watch party on November 5, 2024, and later the Starlight Ball for his inauguration on January 20, 2025, alongside Jenner.
“I love this family as if they were my own,” she declared. Her loyalty to Trump’s vision contrasted sharply with Hollywood’s sanctimonious lectures.
The fatal crash occurred on a Malibu road when Hutchins’ ATV struck a moving car. The impact sent her and the vehicle tumbling down a 350-foot ravine. Emergency responders pronounced her dead at the scene, a grim end to a vibrant life.
No other injuries were reported, and Jenner’s whereabouts during the incident remain unknown. Caitlyn has stayed silent on Hutchins’ death, an odd quiet from someone so close. The absence of a statement fuels speculation, but conservatives respect privacy over gossip.
Hutchins’ path—from Pepperdine to Trump’s inner circle—defied the left’s narrative of transgender victimhood. She embraced her identity without demanding society bend to it. Her life was a testament to individual grit, not collective whining.
Her work with Jenner revealed a keen mind for business, restructuring a “financial s—tshow,” as she bluntly put it. “Nobody was really running the show,” she said, stepping in where others faltered. That candor cut through Hollywood’s pretension like a knife.
As a Trump surrogate, Hutchins brought a fresh face to the MAGA cause, unapologetic yet relatable. “I will keep fighting for America in any way I am told,” she vowed in November 2024. Her death robs conservatives of a voice unafraid to challenge woke dogma.