FBI didn't say 'Pizzagate' is real; post distorts details of Texas arrest | Fact check
The claim: FBI announced ‘Pizzagate’ is real
A Nov. 24 Instagram post (direct link, archive link) shows a Washington pizza parlor at the center of a frequently debunked conspiracy theory.
"The FBI just announced this week that 'Pizzagate is real,'" reads part of the post's caption. "Pedophiles connected to an elite pedophile ring are actively being pursued and arrested."
The post was liked more than 700 times in five days. A similar version was liked more than 1,000 times before it was deleted.
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An FBI spokesperson says the bureau made no such announcement. The claim originated on a website known to spread misinformation.
No statements from FBI about ‘Pizzagate’
"Pizzagate" refers to a conspiracy theory propagated by the far-right conspiracy movement QAnon that first emerged ahead of the 2016 presidential election. It asserted Hillary Clinton and other high-ranking Democrats were involved in a child sex trafficking ring operating out of a pizza restaurant in Washington.
News outlets, including The Washington Post and The New York Times, have repeatedly debunked the conspiracy theory.
The text in the post's caption is nearly identical to the first paragraph of a story posted Nov. 23 by The People’s Voice, a website known to publish misinformation. That story cites the Nov. 13 arrest of a Texas man and claims the FBI made the purported announcement about “Pizzagate” in court documents related to his arrest.
The man was arrested on child pornography charges and used the term “pizza” as a code word for child sexual abuse materials, according to the federal complaint against him.
But the FBI did not make any announcements that legitimize the “Pizzagate” conspiracy theory, said Connor Hagan, a spokesperson for the bureau’s office in Texas that handled the man’s arrest. The federal complaint does not mention "Pizzagate" or anything about a wider sex trafficking conspiracy.
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“FBI Houston has made no statements regarding ‘Pizzagate’ related to this case,” Hagan told USA TODAY in an email.
No reputable media outlets have reported that the FBI confirmed the validity of the conspiracy theory. The headline in the post placed the phrase "Pizzagate is real" in quotation marks, but there is no credible evidence that anyone from the FBI actually said it.
A search of the website where the FBI posts its news releases showed the word “pizza” appeared in two announcements, both in 2017. One detailed the sentencing of a North Carolina man who opened fire inside the Comet Ping Pong pizza parlor in 2016 and claimed he was rescuing child sex slaves; the other outlined the guilty plea from a Louisiana man who, three days after that shooting, threatened a different Washington pizzeria.
The term “cheese pizza” has been previously used on 4chan and other online forums as slang for “child pornography,” The New York Times reported in 2016.
The People's Voice, previously known as NewsPunch, has repeatedly published fabricated stories, many of which USA TODAY has debunked. USA TODAY has also debunked several claims rooted in “Pizzagate,” including those asserting that celebrities including Ellen DeGeneres and Oprah Winfrey were on house arrest for child sex trafficking and that Vice President Kamala Harris was involved in the conspiracy theory.
USA TODAY reached out to The People’s Voice and to the social media user who shared the post but did not immediately receive responses.
Our fact-check sources:
Connor Hagan, Nov. 29, Email exchange with USA TODAY
USA TODAY Document Cloud, Nov. 13, Clinton Harnden FBI Complaint
The Eagle, Nov. 14, College Station man arrested by FBI for alleged possession of child pornography
FBI, accessed Nov. 30, Press Releases
Internet Archive, Nov. 30, Press Releases
The New York Times, Dec. 10, 2016, Dissecting the #PizzaGate Conspiracy Theories
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This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Post baselessly claims FBI said 'Pizzagate' is real | Fact check