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In March 2016, several warnings circulated on Facebook stating that methamphetamine supplies, and the ingredients used to create meth for recreational drug use, could be contaminated with the virus for the deadly disease Ebola. While the most popular version of this Facebook message claimed that the Ebola contamination affected meth users in Hot Springs, Arkansas, other iterationsmentioned various locations that included cities in the states of California, Oklahoma, Texas, Washington and Kentucky: Regardless of the locations mentioned in these warnings, they all featured nearly verbatim language and a generic Breaking News Alert graphic — the hallmark of fake news hoaxes. While police departments may appreciate drug users' voluntarily turning their meth in due to fears of Ebola contamination, these messages are an obvious jape. The exact origins of the joke warnings are unclear, but we did find at least one police department Facebook page that reproduced one of them. On 23 March 2016, the Grayson Police Department posted on Facebook that their warning had been tongue in cheek and that the ruse resulted in no arrests:
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