The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

‘News’ site made up words attributed to Tom Price

- By Joshua Gillin PolitiFact

A fake news story pegged to a real forum with U.S. Health and Human Services Secretary Tom Price falsely quotes him as saying it’s better for cancer patients to die than to waste taxpayer money.

“Tom Price: ‘It’s better for our budget if cancer patients die more quickly,’” reads the headline on a March 16 post on USPOLN.com. The post was flagged by Facebook users as potentiall­y being fake news, but it has been shared on the site more than 75,000 times.

USPOLN.com is a site we’ve written about in other fact-checks and identifies itself as “a U.S. political news and hybrid news/satire platform on the web.”

Other than that, there’s no indication the story is almost entirely fabricated. The domain is registered to an address in Kosovo. The site didn’t respond to our queries via email.

The story — which, again, is fake — is actually from a March 16 post on Politicops.com, a different fake news site. That site is related to the site Newslo.com, which refers to itself in a disclaimer as “the first hybrid news/satire platform on the web.” The Politicops.com site is registered to an administra­tor named Eli Sompo, at an address in Israel.

What makes Newslo.com-related stories especially confusing is that they use a small piece of

real news or quotes by real people and build fake stories around them. They feature a pair of buttons that allow readers to highlight the true parts of their stories, so readers conceivabl­y can know the difference. But on other sites without the buttons, there’s no way to know.

In this case, the disorienti­ng details are compounded because the “facts” of the Politicops.com story are plagiarize­d directly from a news article on RawStory.com. That piece recounted an exchange about Medicaid between Price, a former Republican congressma­n from Georgia, and a man at a CNN town hall event. Price represente­d the 6th Congressio­nal District, mostly in Cobb County, before he was tapped by President Donald Trump to spearhead health care reform.

Brian Kline, who said he voted for Trump, noted he was using Medicaid, the federal health program for the very poor, to be treated for cancer. Kline asked Price why he wanted to stop the expansion of Medicaid as outlined in the Affordable Care Act. Price said he considered the entire program to be riddled with problems.

The back-and-forth illustrate­d that Price does want to draw back access to Medicaid. The fake comments in the made-up story, however, echo a real accusation made in 2009 by former U.S. Rep. Alan Grayson, a Florida Democrat, during debate on the Affordable Care Act. Grayson admonished GOP opposition to the bill by saying on the House floor that “If you get sick, America, the Republican health care plan is this: Die quickly.”

But Price did not use the words Politicops.com attributed to him or say the budget would benefit more from cancer patients who gave up and died.

We rate the statement Pants On Fire!

 ?? J. SCOTT APPLEWHITE / ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? President Donald Trump and Health and Human Services Secretary Tom Price arrive on Capitol Hill on March 21 to rally support for the Republican health care overhaul.
J. SCOTT APPLEWHITE / ASSOCIATED PRESS President Donald Trump and Health and Human Services Secretary Tom Price arrive on Capitol Hill on March 21 to rally support for the Republican health care overhaul.
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