2/ If you had to visit the locations where the incidents happened, at night and alone, the creepiest location would be walking into the woods behind the church where they found the skull. Next creepiest would be walking in the dark to the creek where they found Alonzo's body.
3/ Although the house of terror in the backyard alone would also be terrifying...
4/ If I had to choose one case to be solved, it would be tough. The episode about Alonzo comes to mind, but so does the episode about the mom named Sandy.
5/ I think one of the creepiest parts of any of the episodes was episode 6 when the woman noted there used to be a well, but it was filled. And we don't know why or what happened to it.
6/ I'm interested to know if anyone lives in the house of terror now, and if so, how they do it. It would be extremely scary to sleep there, knowing what happened. How do you enjoy that backyard?
7/ The show is doing a great service by presenting all of the facts and interviews, and in some cases making it obvious who likely committed crimes.
8/ Lastly, I'm not looking forward to the next 6 episodes. The first 6 were creepy enough. I know I won't be able to resist though. I hope the mysteries can be solved.
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A brand new parody Twitter account that paid for verification and chose the display name of ESPN's Adam Schefter tweeted Josh McDaniels was fired. The credible-looking tweet received nearly 10,000 engagements. Twitter suspended the account after two hours. snopes.com/fact-check/jos…
THREAD: Here are the stories I've published so far for @snopes on #ElectionDay.
First, here are data+sources for each election year going back to 2000 showing all votes did NOT used to be counted by election night. Share with conspiracy-prone friends. snopes.com/fact-check/ele…
Second, a false rumor about Sharpie pens and Illinois ballots was going around on Twitter this morning.
The Illinois State Board of Elections (@illinoissbe) tweeted the facts: "Sharpies are an approved ballot marking device for many voting systems." snopes.com/fact-check/sha…
Third, here are the facts about today's Maricopa County vote-tabulation machine issues, which a spokesperson referred to as "minor."
PLUS: Here's how people in the Arizona county can track their ballot online and confirm that their vote was counted. snopes.com/news/2022/11/0…
1/ Facebook and @Meta continue to allow false and potentially defamatory posts about @Jeopardy host @missmayim to be promoted as paid ads on its platform, despite the fact that we notified the company last week. The company is profiting off of these ads. snopes.com/news/2022/04/0…
2/ All of the ads use the same text. Despite this, Meta, which brings in billions in revenue every quarter, is seemingly unable or unwilling to set something up to automatically flag ads that use these words: "Jeopardy fans are up in arms over the allegations pending against..."
3/ We've reported on the matter twice. The false ads lead to CBD scams. Here's our first story. snopes.com/fact-check/may…
1/ A brief thread. In the aftermath of the Rittenhouse verdict, meet "Renata Trump," a Facebook account with the username "renata.lewandowski.3." The account is an admin in the group named AMERICA NEEDS PRESIDENT TRUMP. The group's founder is deceased. snopes.com/news/2021/11/1…
2/ In another Facebook group named James Woods for Gov of California, a user named Drastic Bombastic posted "USA!" about the acquittal. The same account previously published election disinformation and likes a majority of Russian-language pages in Belarus. snopes.com/news/2021/11/1…
3/ Over in the Phillippines, three accounts run the Facebook pages named I Support Law Enforcement Officers and I Support The 2nd Amendment. The pages published posts that said "Not Guilty!" and linked to a sketchy website named Daily News Blitz. snopes.com/news/2021/11/1…
(THREAD) YouTube has removed multiple verified channels named “Fox News” and “Fox News Alert” following an Oct. 1 Snopes investigation that found they were pumping out disinformation to millions of subscribers. These channels were not managed by Fox News. snopes.com/news/2021/10/0…
1/ All of the YouTube channels posted long video clips from Fox News Channel. However, the thumbnails were altered to make it look like U.S. President Joe Biden was either dying or going to jail and that former U.S. President Donald Trump was coming back. snopes.com/news/2021/10/0…
2/ This was similar to a debunked QAnon conspiracy theory that led to federal authorities worrying of potential violence from Trump supporters when such disinformation inevitably failed to come true.
(THREAD) Ahead of the #60Minutes interview with the Facebook whistleblower, know this:
We contacted Facebook multiple times ahead of Jan. 6 to warn about violent rhetoric in a group with members that planned on taking matters into their own hands. snopes.com/news/2021/02/1…
1/ Facebook did not respond to us, despite multiple attempts to reach the company for comment.
We contacted the company warning them of the violent rhetoric and organizing that we saw, and we sent our emails in the days both before and after Nov. 3, which was Election Day.
2/ The New York Times later reported that a man named Keith Lee “spent the morning of Jan. 6 casing the entrances to the Capitol.” During the riots, he carried a bullhorn. “Mr. Lee called out for the mob to rush in, until his voice echoed from the dome of the Rotunda.”