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On Feb. 2, 2021, a picture was shared on Facebook that showed former U.S. President Donald Trump sitting at a desk while video conferencing. The Facebook user who shared it hinted that the photograph depicted Trump planning a military coup to take back the White House subsequent to moving to his Mar-a-Lago Club in Palm Beach, Florida, after his term in office expired on Jan. 20. The text accompanying the photograph in that Facebook post read: This is Trump’s office in Mar-a-Lago. Look who he’s talking to. Another commenter said of the picture, The military is in control and we know who the real POTUS is and that he'll be back!: On Jan. 17, the same Facebook user also posted that the U.S. military was occupying certain cities: That Facebook user also posted false information about election fraud and said that the former president won in a landslide victory. All of these ominous headlines and comments suggesting hinting that the military would take part in a coup to help get Trump back into the White House were false and misleading, though. The photograph of Trump in Mar-a-Lago had nothing to do with the 2020 election or a 2021 military coup, as it was taken on Christmas Eve in 2017 and captured President Trump's extending Christmas greetings to the U.S. armed forces. The White House tweeted the picture at the time with a caption stating that Trump spoke with all five branches of the military: On the same day, the Associated Press documented the president's 2017 Christmas Eve activities: In sum, a picture taken in 2017 did not show Trump planning a military coup in 2021. For that reason, we rate this claim as being miscaptioned.
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