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Facebook post uses fake photo of ambushed LA deputy, says NFL honors anti-police protesters
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The Los Angeles Sheriff’s Department has released neither the names nor photos of the ambushed officers.
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The photo does not show one of the victims.
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The NFL did not honor any protester or movement that called for the death of the ambushed police.
A Facebook user shared a post that says the National Football League is honoring an organization that chanted, "We hope she dies," outside the hospital where two ambushed Los Angeles deputies were undergoing surgery. The post included a photo of a person it said was the victim.
This post was flagged as part of Facebook’s efforts to combat false news and misinformation on its News Feed. (Read more about our partnership with Facebook.)
In the name of supporting the police, this post feeds a narrative of racial and political division, and nothing about it is accurate — including the photo.
On Sept. 12, a gunman walked up to a parked police car, opened fire and ran. Two sheriff deputies, a man and a woman, were badly injured. Anti-police protesters gathered outside the St. Francis Medical Center in Lynwood, Calif., where the two officers were being treated.
Some protesters yelled, "We hope they die."
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With those basic details as context, everything else about the post is false.
Here is the post’s full text:
"Last night in California, a 6-year-old boy begged God to save his mother’s life after she was ambushed and shot, unprovoked, while sitting in her police car. Today, the NFL will honor and praise the organization that stood out outside his mother’s hospital chanting, ‘we hope she dies.’ Make no mistake, Anyone who watches football today, purchases NFL merchandise or supports these teams in any way has blood on their hands. Shame on you. #BackTheBlue"
One of the deputies shot is a 31-year-old mother. The accompanying photo of the Facebook post is not her.
It is of Breck Worsham, who promotes herself on the web as the Patriotic Blonde.
On her Facebook page, Worsham disavowed the use of her picture.
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"I was just made aware that a post has been circulated on social media using my photo as the officer who was shot in Compton, California over the weekend," Worsham wrote Sept. 14. "I don't know how that happened but it sickens me."
The Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department said that it hasn’t released the names of either officer, so we don’t know personal details, such as whether the woman has a young son.
As a league, the NFL marked the movement against police killings of unarmed Black people by adding "Lift every voice and sing," a song known as the Black National Anthem, before the start of each game.
Individual NFL teams and players marked the first day of the season in different ways. Some players took a knee as the national anthem played. Some wore shoes or shirts that said, "End racism," or "No justice, no peace." Both slogans are common within the Black Lives Matter movement, but in no way did any player or the NFL honor the protesters outside the Los Angeles hospital.
The sheriff’s department said it has tied no organization to the protesters who gathered outside the hospital.
We rate this post False.
Our Sources
Blogger, Facebook post, Sept. 13, 2020
CBSN Los Angeles, Anti-Police Protesters Yell ‘We Hope They Die’ Outside Hospital Where Wounded Deputies Were Taken, Sept. 14, 2020
CNN, Here's how NFL Sunday games highlighted racial inequality in the US, Sept. 13, 2020
Breck Worsham, Facebook post, Sept. 14, 2020
Interview, Deputy Trina Schraeder, Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department, Sept. 14, 2020
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Facebook post uses fake photo of ambushed LA deputy, says NFL honors anti-police protesters
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