?:reviewBody
|
-
We’ve knocked down false Facebook posts claiming that criminals are going door to door posing as coronavirus testers as a ruse for robbing people inside their homes. Now comes an image shared on a Facebook post that adds a new wrinkle. It appears to be a photograph of a flyer for residents of an apartment complex. The headline on the flyer, with a grammatical error, says: Do no open your door!!! Below it are illustrations of two people in hazmat suits. The flyer says people in hazmat suits are going door to door in Stockton, California, posing as health department officials who want to check the temperatures of residents or check them for COVID-19. They will enter your home and physically attempt robbery, or they may ask you important personal information to steal your identity, the poster says. Stockton, in California’s Central Valley, has a population of more than 300,000 . The flyer advises people to call Stockton police if they witness such a scam. The phone number listed is the main non-emergency number for the department. In smaller print at the bottom of the poster, it reads Thank you — Courtyards Management and Staff. It is dated March 18, 2020. The image was posted on Facebook the next day by a person who wrote: This is happening in Stockton. 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.) On the same day this claim was posted, Massachusetts State Police announced in response to a similar claim on Facebook that at least one such incident may have occurred in central Massachusetts. But Stockton Police public information officer Joe Silva told PolitiFact on March 26, 2020, that police are aware of the social media rumors about his town and that they are false. No reported incidents of that happening in our city, he said. Police departments around the country have warned citizens that coronavirus testing is not being done door to door, so people who encounter strangers offering testing this way have reason to be suspicious. But several of the online posts warning about robbers going door to door in various cities have proven to be just rumors. So, why are such posts being made, and shared? Many social media users respond to news that brings high levels of anxiety and fear, said Niklas Myhr, a marketing and economics professor at Chapman University in Orange, California, who calls himself the social media professor. Their motives could range from a genuine willingness to help those in need, to more opportunistic ones such as taking advantage of emotionally vulnerable people. The algorithms of social media platforms quickly pick up on signals of content being engaging and makes it more available in broader circles, Myrh said. The person who posted the flyer image on Facebook told PolitiFact that he did so after a friend sent him a picture of the flyer; the friend had seen the flyer on the door of a house he was working on. Anyone in their right mind would do the same thing as a precaution to protect others from harm, he said via Facebook Messenger. Our ruling A Facebook post shows an image of a flyer claiming that people wearing hazmat suits are offering coronavirus tests as a ruse to get in homes and rob people in Stockton, Calif. Police in Stockton say they’ve received no such reports. We rate the statement False.
(en)
|