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stated on May 25, 2022 in a Facebook post:

CNN is recycling crisis actors in reports about a man dying in Afghanistan in 2021 and at the Uvalde, Texas, school shooting in 2022.

Pants on Fire!
By Samantha Putterman
May 27, 2022

No, CNN didn’t report that the same man died in Afghanistan and Uvalde

If your time is short

  • A bogus tweet from accounts masquerading as CNN falsely asserted that the same man died in multiple events. CNN did not make these reports.

  • The name used to identify the man in the photo, Bernie Gores, is fake. The image shows a video gamer.

See the sources for this fact-check

Attempts to discredit tragic events like mass shootings can come in many different forms. One popular tactic is claims about “crisis actors” — people who take part in a supposed conspiracy by pretending to be a victim of an event.

Sometimes, these posts target actual victims, like they did in the wake of the 2018 school shooting in Parkland, Florida. Other times, they drag in people who have nothing to do with the event.

This is what happened with one man’s image, which has been used multiple times to make false claims that CNN is recycling crisis actors in its coverage of major breaking news events.

His photo was used yet again in the wake of the May 24 Uvalde, Texas, elementary school shooting.

“See this guy died twice, once in Afghanistan in 2021 and then again yesterday at the fake elementary school shooting,” one Facebook post said. 

The user told people to “wake up” and said, “CNN is always sloppy and recycle the same crisis actors.”

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 post features side-by-side images of what it says shows a man named Bernie Gores. The image on the left shows a post from an individual (not CNN) claiming that he died protecting students in the Uvalde shooting. 

The image on the right shows a screenshot of a bogus August 2021 tweet from “CNN Afghanistan,” an account with the handle @CNNAfghan, announcing Gores was killed.

CNN crisis actor POF fb post
Figure 1: CNN crisis actor POF fb post

We debunked previous claims that CNN made this report — the @CNNAfghan Twitter account wasn’t authentic and has long been suspended. Posts using the same picture also falsely claimed that Gores was the first American casualty in Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.

That, too, is wrong. The photo used in the fake tweets is of a video gamer named Jordie Jordan. In August, Reuters found that the image was of the YouTube gamer and podcaster. We conducted a reverse-image search that showed the photo on Wikitubia, a Wikipedia-type page for YouTubers, that identifies the person as Jordan.

The name Bernie Gores has appeared online since at least August 2020. Back then, the same photo of Jordan was featured as Bernie Gores, a person missing in Lebanon after a fuel explosion in Beirut. That was a hoax, and so is this. 

We rate it Pants on Fire.

Our Sources

Facebook post, May 25, 2022

PolitiFact, Fake news accounts spread false information about journalists in Afghanistan, August 17, 2021 

Reuters, Fact Check-Fabricated story about a journalist killed in Kabul, Aug. 18, 2021 

Tin Eye, reverse-image search, May 26, 2022

Wikitubia, Jordie Jordan, Accessed May 26, 2022 

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