The Trentonian (Trenton, NJ)

A look at what didn’t happen this week

- Find all AP Fact Checks here: https://www.apnews.com/tag/ APFactChec­k

NOT REAL: Whataburge­r files for bankruptcy; all locations to close by August 1.

THE FACTS: The Texas-based fast food chain has taken to social media to quash a series of false stories claiming it was going out of business. When clicked, the stories inform the reader that the headline is a prank. Neverthele­ss, Whataburge­r posted messages on Facebook and Twitter on Wednesday saying the article “is a hoax” and “we aren’t going anywhere.”

NOT REAL: UNREAL: A Drastic INCREASE Of Monthly Payments — Social Security Recipients Delighted

THE FACTS: Stories posted by several conservati­ve-leaning sites credit President Donald Trump with boosting Social Security payments earlier this year. A cost-of-living adjustment for Social Security payouts with a 0.3 percent increase did go into effect in January, but it was announced in October , weeks before Trump was elected.

NOT REAL: Italian Investigat­ors Confirmed: Obama Used Fake Birth Certificat­e

THE FACTS: A story based on former Arizona sheriff Joe Arpaio’s conclusion that former President Barack Obama’s Hawaiian birth certificat­e is a forgery has been shared by several conservati­ve-leaning websites. The account doesn’t elaborate on the supposed Italian investigat­ion. Hawaii officials have repeatedly confirmed Obama’s citizenshi­p. In 2012, they said Arpaio’s allegation­s are “untrue, misinforme­d, and misconstru­e Hawaii law.”

NOT REAL: Pence Calls Gays To Voluntaril­y Quit Jobs With God-Fearing Employers “So We Can Avoid Laws That Reject Them”

THE FACTS: This article from the Newslo group of admitted satire sites first published in November claims that during an interview with Fox News, thenVice President-elect Mike Pence called on gays to quit working so they won’t get fired by conservati­ve employers. There’s no evidence such an interview exists. Newslo bills itself as “the first hybrid News/Satire platform on the web.”

NOT REAL: A Man Just Caught A Giant Great White On the Great Lakes!

THE FACTS: This story about a fisherman catching a massive great white shark in Lake Michigan has been floating around in online circles for more than a year. It claims the U.S. Coast Guard commented that the fish could explain the disappeara­nce of hundreds of people. Coast Guard spokesman Chris Yaw tells the AP the agency never said such a thing and the story is a work of fiction.

This weekly fixture is part of The Associated Press’ ongoing efforts to fact-check claims in suspected false news stories.

 ?? ERIC GAY — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE ?? This Thursday file photo shows a Whataburge­r restaurant in San Antonio, Texas. The Texas restaurant chain said on social media Wednesday that a story shared online that claims it would be going out of business on Aug. 1 is a hoax.
ERIC GAY — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE This Thursday file photo shows a Whataburge­r restaurant in San Antonio, Texas. The Texas restaurant chain said on social media Wednesday that a story shared online that claims it would be going out of business on Aug. 1 is a hoax.

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