Fact check: False YouTube video promises $10,000 to ‘detain’ Pope Francis
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In a viral YouTube video circulating on Facebook and Twitter, a man with a brown suit jacket, wire-frame glasses and a neat, gray mustache emerges from behind the camera and takes a seat.
“Hello, this is Kevin Annett Eagle Strongvoice and it’s November the first,” he says. “I’ve just received a breaking news announcement.”
An arrest warrant for Pope Francis was issued by the “International Common Law Court of Justice,” Annett says in the Oct. 31 video, which accumulated more than 135,000 views within one week. He claims the court is promising amnesty and a $10,000 reward to anyone who can find and detain the pope.
The supposed warrant charges the pope with “personal complicity in child rape, torture and trafficking, ritual killing … and other crimes perpetrated by the Church of Rome.”
But trying to “detain” the pope will not earn a $10,000 reward. The International Common Law Court of Justice does not exist.
The Wall