ReportWire

Tag: fake

  • Trump ‘leaked’ audio about Epstein, Venezuela isn’t real

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    Days after the capture of Venezuelan leader Nicolás Maduro, a viral audio clip appears to show President Donald Trump yelling at advisers to stop the release of the sex offender Jeffrey Epstein’s files. 

    “Leaked Donald Trump audio about the Epstein files and Venezuela,” reads the caption of a Jan. 5 Facebook post sharing the purported recording that drew over 2 million views.

    “(We’re) not releasing the Epstein file, f— Marjorie Taylor Greene, I don’t care what you do, start a f—— war, just don’t let them get out. If I go down, I will bring all of you down,” Trump appears to say. 

    A reporter can then be heard asking Trump if he is all right, to which Trump says, “I feel great, I was shouting at people because they were stupid about something.”

    That part of the recording is authentic. But the first part — about Epstein and Greene — isn’t.

    The fake audio matches the audio in a TikTok video from Nov. 18, 2025, before the U.S. captured Maduro on Jan. 3. Fact-checkers from Lead Stories and Snopes found a similar version of the audio first published Nov. 5, 2025 by the @fresh_florida_air TikTok account, which is no longer available. The archived version of that video shows a Sora watermark, which is OpenAI’s video-generating platform. With the launch of Sora 2 on Sept. 30, 2025, the tool can generate audio-only results. 

    The TikTok account, @fresh_florida_air, posted another version of the “leaked” audio that featured a Sora watermark that said @bradbradt31. PolitiFact searched for that username on the Sora app, but that account is also unavailable. 

    The TikTok user, @fresh_florida_air, told Snopes that the videos were AI-generated. “My intent is creative expression, not presenting anything as factual,” the user said. 

    The second part of the audio clip in the Facebook post that features a reporter asking Trump if he’s OK is real, but it was taken out of context. On Nov. 17, 2025, a reporter questioned why the president sounded hoarse. A longer version of Trump’s response reveals he said he had been shouting during trade talks with a foreign country. Trump was not being asked about a leaked audio or the Epstein files. 

    Our ruling

    A viral Facebook post claims to show “leaked Donald Trump audio about the Epstein files and Venezuela.”

    The audio was created with artificial intelligence. 

    PolitiFact found the first part of the clip was generated with OpenAI’s video-generating platform, Sora. 

    The second part of the clip is real but it’s from November 2025, before Maduro was captured by the U.S. government. At that moment, Trump was not being asked about leaked audio or the Epstein files. We rate this claim False.  

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  • This 2023 Rob Reiner tweet isn’t real; it was fabricated

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    A day after director Rob Reiner and wife Michele Reiner were found dead in their California home, a purported tweet from the Hollywood star resurfaced on social media.

    “Until Trump goes to prison I will no longer be posting on Twitter,” read an image of what looks like a Jan. 20, 2023, post from Reiner on the platform that has since been renamed X. “I’ve had it with the insults and put downs.” 

    It goes on to use expletives directed at “MAGA.”

    Conservative influencer Laura Loomer was among the social media users to share the image online.

    “Rob Reiner was a loser,” Loomer said in a Dec. 15 X post, after Reiner’s son had been arrested in connection with his parents’ death. “Naturally, his son was also a loser, and he got addicted to drugs and allegedly murdered his parents.”

    Her comments followed President Donald Trump criticizing Reiner as “deranged” and linking the director’s death to his liberal political beliefs. Reiner’s son, Nick, has been charged with first-degree murder in the killings. Police have said nothing about a motive and they haven’t mentioned the director’s political ideology.

    (Screenshot of Loomer’s X post.)

    Rob Reiner was a vocal critic of Trump, but the tweet Loomer posted was fabricated. 

    Searching the Wayback Machine’s archives, we found no posts from Reiner’s verified X account that called for Trump to go to prison in 2023. We also discovered no credible news reports about Reiner pledging to boycott Twitter until Trump went to prison, though we found multiple fact-checks of the altered post. 

    Reiner did publish a post on Jan. 20, 2023, at the same time that appears in the fabricated image: 9:23 a.m. 

    “Until Trump is Indicted for leading a Deadly Insurrection to Overthrow the United States Government, our Democracy will not be restored,” that tweet said.

    The fake tweet isn’t new. In 2023, Reuters fact-checked claims it was real, and concluded that the image was likely created by altering Reiner’s post about the “deadly insurrection.” 

    Reiner’s X account no longer exists but Reuters reported at the time that Reiner responded to the fake post, saying “this is not my account.”

    We rate claims this is an authentic post from Reiner False.

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  • Portland Woman Accused Of Selling Fake Gold – KXL

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    PORTLAND, Ore. – Portland police is asking for the public’s help identifying additional victims in an alleged counterfeit gold scheme involving a local woman accused of defrauding people out of more than $40,000.

    Christina L. Duncan, 37, of Portland, was arrested Tuesday, Aug. 19th, during a controlled transaction at a Northeast Portland coffee shop. Officers coordinated the operation with one of the victims, and Duncan was taken into custody without incident.

    She was booked into the Multnomah County Detention Center on charges including first-degree aggravated theft, seven counts of theft by deception and identity theft.

    The investigation began in July after a man reported buying more than $22,000 in fake gold from a woman during four transactions in December 2023. Detectives later identified Duncan as the suspect and believe she also defrauded at least five other individuals, selling an additional $21,500 worth of counterfeit gold.

    Investigators believe more victims may exist.

    More about:

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    Grant McHill

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  • ‘Nobody Wants This’ Review: Fake Podcasting, Icks, and a Hot Rabbi

    ‘Nobody Wants This’ Review: Fake Podcasting, Icks, and a Hot Rabbi

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    Jodi Walker and Nora Princiotti fire up the mics to recap Nobody Wants This, the Netflix romantic comedy series starring Kristen Bell and Adam Brody. They discuss why it’s a rare case where a rom-com works better as a TV show, the intoxicating chemistry between Bell and Brody, and how the show dismantles the concept of the ick (1:12). Along the way, they talk about what it gets right (and wrong) in its portrayal of podcasting (42:58). Later, they examine some of the storytelling decisions that ultimately felt flat (52:51).

    Hosts: Jodi Walker and Nora Princiotti
    Producer: Kai Grady
    Additional Production Support: Justin Sayles

    Subscribe: Spotify

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    Jodi Walker

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  • Fake firefighter with a garden hose refuses to leave deadly blaze, NC cops say

    Fake firefighter with a garden hose refuses to leave deadly blaze, NC cops say

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    The North Carolina man is accused of interrupting firefighters’ efforts to put out the blaze.

    The North Carolina man is accused of interrupting firefighters’ efforts to put out the blaze.

    Getty / iStock image

    A fake firefighter with a garden hose refused to leave the scene of a deadly blaze in North Carolina, officials told news outlets.

    Early March 27, the Morganton Department of Public Safety said its crews were called to the fire and spotted a 37-year-old man wearing a New York City Fire Department outfit.

    “When firefighters first arrived, a neighbor was on-scene, dressed in FDNY turnout gear and attempting to put out the fire with a garden hose,” police wrote in a news release. “Morganton firefighters began to take over suppression efforts; however, the male refused to vacate the property.”

    The neighbor also is accused of interfering as crews tried to start battling the fire, which had “fully engulfed” the home. He was taken into custody “after multiple commands,” according to the public safety department.

    A woman was found dead in the burned home, though her name hasn’t been released pending the notification of family members, Chief Jason Whisnant told the Hickory Daily Record and WJZY.

    The man was arrested and reportedly faces multiple charges, including “resist, delay, obstruct public officer” and “impersonating a firefighter/medical personnel.” He is scheduled to appear in court April 18.

    An investigation into the fire was ongoing as of March 27, officials said.

    Morganton’s public safety department didn’t immediately share additional details with McClatchy News. The town is roughly a 75-mile drive northwest from Charlotte.

    Simone Jasper is a reporter covering breaking stories for The News & Observer and real-time news in the Carolinas.

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  • ‘This is a game changer’: Ahead of Amazon Prime Day, a new law makes it harder for online sellers to hawk fake or stolen products

    ‘This is a game changer’: Ahead of Amazon Prime Day, a new law makes it harder for online sellers to hawk fake or stolen products

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    Shopping online has just gotten safer.

    The INFORM Consumers Act, which went into effect Tuesday, aims to limit the sales of stolen and counterfeit products on e-commerce platforms. 

    The measure, which requires e-commerce sites to verify and disclose information about their high-volume third-party sellers, was passed into law following a lobbying campaign to address counterfeit products after being left out of the bipartisan Chips and Science Act last year.

    All online marketplaces, including eBay, Etsy, Poshmark and Amazon’s third-party sales platform, will now be required to collect information from high-volume sellers, defined as those selling 200 items or more totaling at least $5,000 over the previous 12 months. These third-party sellers must submit information such as a government-issued ID, a bank-account number, a working email address and phone number, and a taxpayer identification number. 

    Customers will also be able to find the verified contact information for bigger third-party sellers — those with sales of over $20,000 a year — and to get in touch with them outside of the e-commerce platform. In the past, consumers often had to engage within the platform operator in order to communicate with a seller. 

    Those bigger sellers will also have their full names and physical addresses listed on their product pages in addition to their contact information, according to the Federal Trade Commission’s business guide

    “This is a game changer,” said Teresa Murray, director of the consumer watchdog office at U.S. PIRG, a nonprofit that lobbies on behalf of the public interest. “For bad guys, stealing items has generally been the difficult part. Selling things online once you’ve stolen them is easy. We hope that with the INFORM Act, it’s not nearly as easy in the future.”

    ‘The only people opposing this may be thieves.’


    — Teresa Murray, U.S. PIRG

    The act goes into effect just weeks before Amazon Prime Day, when the world’s biggest e-commerce site rolls out discounts for Prime members. This year, Prime Day will be held over two days, on July 11 and 12.

    Picks: Amazon Prime Day is July 11-12. You’ll need the $139-a-year Prime membership to access the deals, but is it actually worth it?

    Also see: Amazon sued by FTC, which alleges people were ‘tricked and trapped’ into Prime subscriptions

    Several e-commerce platforms, including Amazon and eBay, supported the INFORM Consumers Act. TechNet, a national network of technology CEOs and senior executives representing what it calls the innovation economy, wrote to leaders in Congress last December, saying the law would improve consumer safety and increase transparency. 

    In a statement provided to MarketWatch, eBay
    EBAY,
    +2.32%

    said it “fully supports transparency and is committed to a safe selling and buying experience for our customers. We were proud to support” the law “to protect consumers from bad actors who seek to misuse online marketplaces, while also ensuring important protections for sellers. We are fully prepared to comply with the new law.”

    Etsy
    ETSY,
    +3.45%

    said it “has long been supportive of the INFORM Act passing into law, as a balanced and thoughtful approach to make the ecommerce landscape safer for both consumers and sellers.” In a statement provided to MarketWatch, the company said, “We are taking appropriate steps to comply with the INFORM Act requirements.”

    Amazon
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    +1.45%

    and Poshmark, owned by South Korea–based Naver Corp.
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    ,
    did not immediately respond to MarketWatch requests for comment.

    Some analysts, however, said the new law lacks stronger protections that were included the SHOP SAFE Act, an earlier bill that did not get passed by Congress. The INFORM Act, they noted, does not hold online platforms liable when a third party sells harmful counterfeit products or when the platform has not followed certain best practices. 

    “Notably, the legislation is supported by Amazon and other marketplaces as it’s seen as a watered-down bill that would head off more stringent legislation like the SHOP SAFE Act,” Ben Koltun, director of research at Beacon Policy Advisors, wrote in a note last year.

    So how can consumers spot counterfeit or stolen items? A guide from PIRG has tips, such as keeping an eye out for products with suspiciously low prices or featuring misspellings or mislabeling or low-quality, photoshopped photos in their listings.

    PIRG also cautions consumers about purchasing medications online. Always check the legitimacy of online pharmacies, it says. 

    “Many online marketplaces haven’t been doing enough to protect consumers from sellers who appear to be peddling stolen or counterfeit goods,” Murray said. “The only people opposing this [new law] may be thieves.”

    Victor Reklaitis contributed.

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