Was the Secretary of Agriculture Arrested?

Agriculture Secretary Tom Vilsack (Picture by Kevin Dietsch/Getty Pictures)

A viral article from Actual Uncooked News claims that the navy arrested U.S. Agriculture Secretary Thomas Vilsack on April 26, “after connecting him to the calculated destruction of a dozen agricultural processing amenities throughout the US.” The Actual Uncooked News story claims a rise in fires throughout agricultural processing vegetation was half of a bigger, deliberate plan to create a meals scarcity. 

Each these claims are false. Vilsack was not arrested, and as Lead Tales and Reuters reported, meals processing vegetation haven’t suspiciously caught fireplace and are usually not linked to a plan to intentionally trigger a meals scarcity. 

A spokesperson for the US Division of Agriculture instructed The Dispatch Truth Verify through e mail that the declare that the navy arrested Vilsack is fake.

Vilsack has additionally been energetic on Twitter, tweeting from his official account because the alleged arrest on April 26. He tweeted as not too long ago as Monday morning. 

Actual Uncooked News, which has a historical past of publishing baseless tales about arrests and executions, shows a disclaimer on its web site: “Info on this web site is for informational and academic and leisure functions. This web site incorporates humor, parody, and satire. We have now included this disclaimer for our safety, on the recommendation on [sic] authorized counsel.”

We have now beforehand truth checked a number of false tales from Actual Uncooked News, together with the declare that Navy SEALs pledged loyalty to Donald Trump and arrested Hillary Clinton on March 4, 2021, and that Dr. Anthony Fauci was arrested by U.S. particular forces final month. We additionally reported on the viral story {that a} Navy pilot’s touchdown mishap was because of a COVID-19 vaccine response. 

In case you have a declare you wish to see us truth verify, please ship us an e mail at factcheck@thedispatch.com. If you need to counsel a correction to this piece or another Dispatch article, please e mail corrections@thedispatch.com.

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