Grant, 50, was wounded in the August shooting, which killed 22 — but the rest of his story doesn’t add up, El Paso police now say. Surveillance video of the massacre showed Grant in “an act of self-preservation, nothing more, nothing less,” police said in a statement on Wednesday.

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“It’s just that what he said is not truthful,” El Paso Police Sgt. Enrique Carrillo told KVIA. “We saw his actions ... and it’s not like he described.”

The White House never checked out Grant’s story with El Paso police, Carillo told the Washington Examiner.

Although Grant traveled to D.C., he didn’t get his commendation from Trump, who handed it to Grant’s mother instead. That’s because the Texas man was detained by the Secret Service before the ceremony, ABC News reported, over an open arrest warrant.

In a statement, the Secret Service confirmed “a White House visitor with an arrest warrant was temporarily detained” Monday, although they declined to name the person. El Paso police told ABC News it was Grant, although it’s unclear what charges he faces.

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Grant’s family didn’t immediately return a message from The Washington Post late on Wednesday. The White House also has not responded to the El Paso police department’s allegations.

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Grant first described his bottle-throwing bravery in an interview with CNN host Chris Cuomo days after the Aug. 3 shooting. Lying in a hospital bed with tubes sprouting from his nose, Grant choked up describing the attack.

“I saw him popping people off,” Grant said. “To deter him, I started just chucking bottles. I just started throwing random bottles at him. I’m not a baseball player, so one went this way and one went that way.”

But then, Grant said, one bottle got close enough to catch the attention of the alleged shooter, later identified by police as Patrick Crusius, a 21-year-old allegedly inspired by anti-immigrant hatred.

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“That’s when he saw me,” Grant said. “He just — boom, boom, boom, boom, boom — just started firing off rounds at me.”

Grant was hit twice near the rib cage, the El Paso Times reported. His family told the Times that he spent two days in a coma before waking up at the hospital.

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Grant’s story was widely shared after Cuomo’s piece aired, and he later met Texas Gov. Greg Abbott (R). On Monday, he was among five El Paso survivors invited to the White House for an event that also honored six police officers who responded to a mass shooting in Dayton, Ohio.

“We welcome 11 extraordinary American heroes,” Trump said to open the ceremony.

Carillo said El Paso police would have shared their concerns about Grant’s story, had they been consulted.

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“Nobody bothered to check with us,” Carrillo told the Examiner. “They would have been informed, as I am telling you now, that our detectives reviewed hours of video and his actions did not match his account.”

The police spokesman emphasized Grant hadn’t done anything wrong during the attack — he simply hadn’t tried to distract the shooter as he claimed.

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“We are not demeaning his reaction which are of basic human instincts, but they amount to an act of self-preservation and nothing above that,” Carillo told the El Paso Times.

Police did say they were surprised at how widely the video evidence differed from Grant’s telling.