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Trump posts video of Obama being arrested on Truth Social. It is fake


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  • President Donald Trump shared a fabricated video of former President Barack Obama’s arrest on Truth Social.
  • The video appeared after Director of National Intelligence Tulsi Gabbard claimed the Obama administration manipulated intelligence about Russian interference in the 2016 election.
  • A Senate Intelligence Committee report backed the findings of the intelligence agencies that found Russia interfered to support Trump in the 2016 election.

President Donald Trump reposted a video on Truth Social that showed a fake, artificially rendered scene of former President Barack Obama being arrested.

The July 20 post on social was a TikTok video by an account named “neo8171,” with a montage of Democratic elected officials saying “no one is above the law.” While it is unclear where the clips were from, Democrats have used that phrase when talking about Trump’s criminal cases, including an arrest in Georgia and a felony conviction in New York.

The video then shows Pepe the Frog, a popular internet meme that was added to a hate symbol database during the 2016 election.

As “YMCA” starts to play, the video shows Trump and Obama sitting in the Oval Office, and an artificially rendered scene shows FBI agents dragging Obama out of his chair and cuffing his hands behind his back. The fake video then shows Obama in an orange jumpsuit in jail. A representative for Obama declined to comment about the fake AI video.

#ArrestObama trends on Truth Social after Tulsi Gabbard claims

On July 18, Director of National Intelligence Tulsi Gabbard issued a press release saying she had evidence that the Obama administration after the 2016 election produced “politicized intelligence that was used as the basis for countless smears seeking to delegitimize President Trump’s victory.”

In 2020, a Republican-led, bipartisan Senate Intelligence Committee backed the conclusion of the intelligence agencies that found Russia interfered in the 2016 presidential election in favor of Trump. Trump had long said the investigation into his campaign was a hoax.

Ranking Member on the Intelligence Committee Rep. Jim Himes, D-Connecticut, said Gabbard’s new claim is a “dangerous lie,” while speaking on CBS News’ “Face the Nation with Margaret Brennan,” on July 20. He said Gabbard is using a “sleight of hand” by focusing on intelligence about Russia’s failed voting infrastructure manipulation rather than Russia’s meddling to discredit Trump’s 2016 Democratic opponent Hillary Clinton.

Appearing on Fox News’ “Sunday Morning Futures,” Gabbard said she intended to send her findings to the Department of Justice and the FBI for criminal referral. Trump also shared excerpts from Gabbard’s interviews to Truth Social.

“As is always the case, President Trump was right about the Obama-Biden administration’s clear involvement in the greatest witch hunt in American history and the genesis of the decade-long hoax saga that tore our nation apart and undermined the will of the people,” White House spokesperson Harrison Fields said in an emailed statement. “The President and his entire administration are committed to unearthing wrongdoing and holding any individual accountable for this gross abuse of power and blatant conspiracy against President Trump and his supporters.”

Pepe the Frog became political, then hate symbol, during 2016 election

The frog doodle in clown accessories that flashes in the video is known as Pepe the Frog, and its appearance in Trump’s social media posts has sparked interest before.

Pepe the Frog started as a character from a comic series, “Boy’s Club” by Matt Furie in 2005, according to Know Your Meme.

While the somewhat sad-looking frog did not have racist or antisemitic origins, its proliferation through the internet as a meme led to its adaptation into something of a symbol for single men who felt they were on the social outskirts, Know Your Meme editor Brad Kim told the New York Times in 2016. But Kim said it became political when Trump shared a Trump-ified version of Pepe in October 2015.

“Pepe plugged into the ideology of the alt-right because it was a reaction against the people they call ‘normies,'” Kim told the New York Times. “Pepe had been a symbol of the disenfranchised, social outcasts. It was Trump’s natural audience.”

In 2016, the Anti-Defamation League added Pepe the Frog to its list of hate symbols, though the organization notes many uses of this meme are still not rooted in bigotry or hate.

“The number of ‘alt right’ Pepe memes has grown, a tendency exacerbated by the controversial and contentious 2016 presidential election,” Pepe’s ADL page states. “However, because so many Pepe the Frog memes are not bigoted in nature, it is important to examine use of the meme only in context.”

Contributing: Kevin Johnson, Kristine Phillips, USA TODAY

Kinsey Crowley is the Trump Connect reporter for the USA TODAY Network. Reach her at kcrowley@gannett.com. Follow her on X and TikTok @kinseycrowley or Bluesky at @kinseycrowley.bsky.social.

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