Did Trump post 'the KING decides' what war crimes are? Here's the truth
Trump allegedly wrote, "When I say something is LEGAL, it's LEGAL. Very simple."
Trump allegedly wrote, "When I say something is LEGAL, it's LEGAL. Very simple."
As we have repeatedly reported, the claim that she married her brother lacks credible evidence.
Snopes reviewed the records Bloomberg reporter Jason Leopold obtained in a Freedom of Information Act lawsuit against the FBI and DOJ.
Though research on moisture-electric generators, which create energy from ambient humidity, exists, the tech isn't ready for real-world use yet.
Podcaster Tim Pool's chart significantly overstated the difference in crime rates between Democrat-led and Republican-led cities.
The rumor was vague in details, but that's probably because those details didn't exist.
Since the killing of activist Charlie Kirk, his widow has become the target of numerous claims of varying accuracy.
A new California law will use a "5-step test" to determine which children need booster seats while riding in a car.
Critics have questioned the meaning of Hegseth's tattoos ever since U.S. President Donald Trump announced his nomination.
The fictional story came from Scottish Aye, a satirical Facebook account.
The Palestinian-American representative has been the subject of numerous rumors based on her religious identity and background.
Users' posts indicated they truly believed the fake image authentically showed the first lady kissing the late convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein.
The suit described crimes supposedly committed by the three men as having an "identical" modus operandi to those of Jeffrey Epstein.
The setting of Rockstar's long-awaited game takes inspiration from Miami.
The basketball legend is known for remaining quiet on political matters.
Real pictures and videos exist of this trash panda getting sloppy — don't fall for the AI-slop version.
The claim, which didn't cite when or where NASA supposedly admitted this, came from a frequent purveyor of misinformation.
"My name is Walter Briggs and I am 99 years old, and I am the man that went viral for getting baptized after being an atheist my whole life."
The homeland security secretary made the claim as her department ramped up immigration enforcement action in Minneapolis.
The memo ordered a "re-review" of applications for migrants from 19 countries who arrived on or after Jan. 20, 2021.