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  • 2020-10-01 (xsd:date)
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  • Biden accused of wearing wire during presidential debate (en)
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  • Social media posts shared thousands of times accuse former vice president Joe Biden of wearing an earpiece to receive instructions from his team during the first presidential debate. This is unproven; the campaign denied it, and photos allegedly capturing wires related to the earpiece in fact appear to picture a rosary and a crease in his shirt. Joe Biden was wearing a wire, he was being fed information through an earpiece, claims a September 29, 2020 Facebook post on the night of the first presidential debate. Below, screenshots of the Cleveland, Ohio debate show dark areas on Biden’s left wrist and chest that the post identifies as microphone components. It claims these were used to feed responses to the Delaware politician, whom he considers too incoherent to be able to debate appropriately on his own. Screenshot of a Facebook post taken on September 30, 2020 Other users uploaded low-resolution videos of the same segment on Facebook, making similar claims. The day of the debate, Trump’s communications director Tim Murtaugh published a statement in which he declared that Biden had refused to go through a pre-debate hearing device search. Joe Biden’s handlers several days ago agreed to a pre-debate inspection for electronic earpieces but today abruptly reversed themselves and declined, Murtaugh said in the statement, which also claimed that Biden’s team had asked for multiple breaks during the debate, and that Barack Obama’s vice president refused to undergo a drug test. Of course he’s not wearing an earpiece and we never asked for breaks, Biden deputy campaign manager Kate Bedingfield told a Washington Post reporter the same day in response to Murtaugh’s statement. Team Biden spokesman Andrew Bates confirmed Bedingfield’s statement in an email to AFP. Beau’s rosary The first image shows something peeking out of Biden’s left sleeve, as he raises his hand to cough, which posts identify as the microphone end of a wire. Screenshot of a CNN video The moment can be found in CNN’s footage of the debate at 3 minutes and 40 seconds, or on this ABC News footage at 2 hours 8 minutes and 19 seconds. However, the black spot is not a mic, but part of a rosary that the former VP wears in memory of his son Beau Biden who died of brain cancer in 2015 . It’s Beau’s rosary, Team Biden spokesman Bates said. Biden mentioned that his younger son Hunter bought rosaries for Beau and his dad in Mexico on the Megyn Kelly Today show in November 2017 . I have not taken off the rosary Beau was wearing when he passed, since then. It's my connection with him, he said at the time, after the camera zoomed in on his left wrist. Screenshot of a YouTube video A crease on low resolution The second image shows a thin black line briefly appearing on Biden’s white shirt, on the right side of his chest, after the Democrat scratches his right shoulder. Screenshot of a YouTube video This segment can be found on CNN’s footage starting at 34 minutes and 40 seconds, and on CSPAN’s footage at one hour two minutes and 22 seconds. Screenshot of a YouTube video However, watching the entire segment instead of only the screenshot shows that the thin line is not a wire but a crease, caused by the movement of Biden’s shirt as he scratches his shoulder. It disappears once a movement causes the shirt to stretch again. Biden called Trump’s behavior during the debate a national embarrassment, while on the campaign trail in Ohio. He defended his family against attacks , particularly when Trump raised his son Hunter’s past drug abuse . Polls show Trump trailing Biden by 6.5 points. The president and his campaign team frequently attempt to portray Biden as too old and senile to serve, whether in ads or by using the nickname Sleepy Joe. Online disinformation has exploited that theme, for example when a viral doctored video allegedly showed the Democrat sleeping. This fact check is available at IFCN’s 2020 US Elections FactChat #Chatbot on WhatsApp. Click here for more.EDIT: The headline and first paragraph of this story was updated on October 5, 2020. (en)
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