Facebook posts
Facebook posts
stated on May 30, 2022 in a Facebook post:

"Florida man on drugs kills imaginary friend and turns himself in.”

Pants on Fire!

No record of a Florida man turning himself in for murdering his ‘imaginary friend’

By Yacob Reyes
June 1, 2022

If your time is short

  • The mugshot in the Facebook post belonged to a man arrested for a crime distinct from the details included in the post. A spokesperson for the Jacksonville Sheriff’s Office found no record that such an incident occurred.

See the sources for this fact-check

We may have all seen the “Florida man” make his way onto our social media platforms. And each account of his exploits are often more bizarre than the last. 

But as amusing as these anecdotes are, they’re not always true.

“Florida man on drugs kills imaginary friend and turns himself in,” read a May 30 Facebook post. The purported headline ran alongside an image of a glossy-eyed man, furrowing his eyebrows and pouting his lip. 

The 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.)

The Facebook post seemed to derive its headline and mugshot from an article that appeared on Moron.com, a parody news site, in 2015. The story, which listed “MORON” as its author, provided further information on the facetious crime. 

It said, partly, that a man named Geoff Gaylord stabbed his imaginary friend repeatedly with a kitchen knife and turned himself into the Jacksonville Sheriff’s Office, where he demanded to be punished. 

Gaylord was later arrested and found to have been intoxicated, the article said. 

But PolitiFact found no record that such an arrest ever happened.  John Medina, a Jacksonville Sheriff’s Office spokesperson, said he could not find an incident that matched the scenario described in the Facebook post. 

A TinEye search revealed that the mugshot used in the post appeared online in 2011, years before the purported arrest. 

A Snopes reporter traced the picture in the Facebook post to a Florida resident whose  photo appeared on WTSP-TV’s now-defunct mugshot gallery.

The crime included in the Facebook post is as imaginary as Gaylord’s make-believe companion. We rate this claim Pants on Fire! 

Our Sources

Facebook post, May 30, 2022

Snopes, Florida man turns himself in for murdering imaginary friend, May 13, 2015

Moron, Florida man turns himself in for murdering imaginary friend, May 12, 2015

Email interview with John Medina, spokesperson for Jacksonville Sheriff’s Office, June 1, 2022