Fact Check

California Named After Fictional Isle of Black Women Who Kept Griffins as Pets?

California's queen was named Calafia, according to some claims.

‘Wanted’ Posters for Health Care CEOs in NYC: Here’s What We Know

Although it is unknown who put up the posters and why, the NYPD confirmed they exist.

Facebook posts – No, the NFL did not suspend the referees after the Steelers-Eagles game

“The referees in the (Dec. 15) game between the Philadelphia Eagles and the Pittsburgh Steelers have been suspended after the match revealed that the officials overlooked numerous errors by the Eagles.”

A month-by-month look at the misinformation that caught our attention in a busy news year

A contentious presidential election, two devastating hurricanes, the Baltimore bridge collapse: It was a busy news year, and where news goes, misinformation follows. Here’s a look at claims that caught our attention each month in 2024.

‘The Truth Matters’

During my time at FactCheck.org, I’ve saved a lot of emails and more than a few handwritten notes from grateful readers. I’ve taped some...
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19 false or misleading Pam Bondi rumors, investigated

Bondi's DOJ tenure has given rise to widespread misinformation — much of it directed at the attorney general herself.

Continued questionable spending of opioid funds

The fire department recently used $1,761 of opioid settlement...

Trump admin gets sharp rebuke as judge outright terminates high-profile deportation case



An immigration judge has axed the Trump administration's deportation case against Mohsen Mahdawi, a Columbia University graduate student and pro-Palestinian activist, marking another major legal blow to the government's crackdown on college campus demonstrators in recent weeks.

The judge terminated the case after determining the government failed to properly authenticate a crucial document, The Wall Street Journal reported, citing Mahdawi's legal team. The 35-year-old Palestinian green-card holder faced charges of posing a "foreign-policy threat" to the U.S. following his detention in April at a citizenship interview in Vermont.

"I am grateful to the court for honoring the rule of law and holding the line against the government’s attempts to trample on due process," Mahdawi said.

Mahdawi arrived in the U.S. in 2014 after growing up in a West Bank refugee camp. He organized demonstrations at the Ivy League institution during the administration's spring campus crackdown targeting what it characterized as antisemitism and extremist ideology. He was among several high-profile activists detained and accused of threatening national security through their activism.

Though the dismissal prevents immediate deportation, the administration retains options to appeal or refile charges. Mahdawi's case follows the recent dismissal of charges against Tufts student Rumeysa Ozturk, who spent weeks in detention after police arrested her on a street, claiming she posed a deportation risk for co-writing a pro-Palestinian opinion piece.

Pro-Trump Mayor Accused of Illegally Voting as a Noncitizen: ‘Did I Do Something Wrong?’

A Kansas mayor who has supported President Donald Trump for years is now facing years behind bars after state prosecutors said he voted as an illegal immigrant.

The post Pro-Trump Mayor Accused of Illegally Voting as a Noncitizen: ‘Did I Do Something Wrong?’ first appeared on Mediaite.